Author: Daily Post Nigeria

  • Reps demand probe into Bauchi farmers–herders clash that killed nine

    Reps demand probe into Bauchi farmers–herders clash that killed nine

    The House of Representatives on Tuesday called for a thorough investigation into the recent farmers–herders clash in Lanzai and Dosho communities of Darazo Local Government Area of Bauchi State, which reportedly left nine persons dead.

    The resolution followed the adoption of a motion of urgent public importance sponsored by the member representing Darazo/Ganjuwa Federal Constituency, Rep. Mansur Manu Soro.

    Moving the motion, Soro said the violence, which occurred last Wednesday, led to the death of nine persons, injuries to several residents, destruction of property, and the burning of about 50 residential huts.

    He said the incident had displaced many families and exposed women, children and the elderly to severe humanitarian conditions.

    The lawmaker expressed concern over the recurring nature of farmers–herders conflicts across the country, noting that such clashes continued to threaten national security, agricultural productivity and economic development.

    He said, “The incident has displaced numerous families, exposed vulnerable persons including women, children and the elderly to severe humanitarian conditions and heightened tension among affected communities.”

    Soro stressed the need for swift intervention by security agencies and humanitarian organisations to prevent further escalation of the crisis and restore confidence among residents.

    He also warned that failure to investigate the violence and bring perpetrators to justice could encourage reprisals and further attacks.

    Following the adoption of the motion, the House urged the Inspector-General of Police to deploy adequate investigative and intelligence resources to the affected communities to identify, apprehend and prosecute those responsible for the violence.

    The lawmakers also called on the Director-General of the Department of State Services to intensify intelligence gathering, threat assessment and early warning operations in the affected areas and neighbouring communities.

    The House further urged the National Emergency Management Agency and the North-East Development Commission to provide emergency relief materials, temporary shelter, food supplies, medical assistance and psychosocial support to victims of the crisis.

    It also called on the Federal Government, through the North-East Development Commission (NEDC), to support the reconstruction of residential structures, community facilities and livelihoods destroyed during the violence.

    The House also urged the Federal Ministry of Livestock Development and the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security to accelerate the implementation of sustainable livestock management, grazing control, ranching development and farmer–herder dispute resolution frameworks in the area.

    The House mandated its Committees on Police Affairs, National Security and Intelligence, Emergency and Disaster Preparedness, and the NEDC to ensure compliance with the resolutions and report back within six weeks.

    The lawmakers thereafter observed a minute’s silence in honour of the victims and extended condolences to the people of Lanzai and Dosho communities through the Bauchi State Government.

    Reps demand probe into Bauchi farmers–herders clash that killed nine

  • Nwifuru Urges Curriculum Reform, Demands Industry-Relevant Courses In Schools

    Nwifuru Urges Curriculum Reform, Demands Industry-Relevant Courses In Schools

    Ebonyi State Governor Francis Nwifuru has called on the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) to liaise with relevant authorities to redesign Tertiary Education curriculum to graduate productive students.

    The Governor lamented that Tertiary institutions offer courses that do not produce students who are self reliant.

    Emphasizing the need to move away from rhetoric and engage in a campaign of excellence in education across various universities in the country, the Governor maintained that it will instill in the students the consciousness and reality of life outside the classroom.

    The Governor made the call when he received, in his office on a courtesy call, the new leadership of the Nigerian Students, NANS.

    “No statistical data to guide admissions processes is made available, especially from the industry.

    “The labour market is very toxic depending on how you make it as students. NANS should therefore join the call for strict compliance to industry-relevant courses, because the idea of graduating students without industry relevant courses has expired”.

    Insisting that the new leadership of NANS should leave a legacy, the Governor stressed on courses that will decongest the labour market, achieve academic excellence as well as violence and cult free university campuses in the country.

    He applauded the Students body for closing ranks, working in pursuit of a common goal.

    “I am happy that there is unity among you. No factions, because since factionalisation began, nobody has had the capacity to speak for NANS. This position needs capacity to deliver and I am happy you are delivering”.

    The Governor urged the students to lend their support to President Tinubu’s re-election because his reforms have benefitted the Nigerian Students.

    The National President of NANS Comrade Akintoye Babatunde Afeez, who led the delegation alongside the Senate President, Comrade Ibeabuchi Onyia explained that they are impressed by the Governor’s sterling performance especially in human capital development and infrastructure blended governance.

    “In May this year, we were elected as the executive of NANS. We are here to show solidarity, because we have heard what you are doing for us as students.

    “We have heard your stories of empowerment, empowering our students with huge sums to support their education”.

    Afeez stated that Governor Nwifuru has broken the jinx in education, visible in his establishment of new specialized universities.

    “We have also seen and noted your huge interests and investments in the new ICT University Oferekpe, how you are building a world-class university.We thank you very much for what you are doing for the students.

    “We are very proud of how you have been securing our schools.

    “We are supporting this government because of the policies of the Federal Government. Policies like NELFUND and ASUU not going strike”.

    Assuring of sustained collaboration, the NANS President said President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Nwifuru have done well and will be re-elected for a second term in office come 2027.

    Nwifuru Urges Curriculum Reform, Demands Industry-Relevant Courses In Schools is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • SDP faults INEC’s move to challenge court judgments on election timetable

    SDP faults INEC’s move to challenge court judgments on election timetable

    The Social Democratic Party (SDP) has criticised the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for deciding to appeal court rulings that struck out parts of its timetable for the 2027 general elections.

    Speaking after a meeting between INEC and leaders of registered political parties in Abuja on Tuesday, SDP National Chairman, Prof. Sadiq Gombe, said the commission should not challenge the judgments because they would give political parties and candidates more time to prepare for elections.

    Gombe said, “INEC has no right to appeal the ruling because of the timing of the election and so on.”

    He added that the judgments would create more opportunities for campaigns and allow candidates who lost party primaries to still exercise their political rights.

    While insisting that INEC was free to pursue the appeal, he said, “We don’t feel there is any need for INEC to appeal that. But it also has the right to.”

    On the party’s leadership crisis, Gombe said the SDP remained open to reconciliation with members of the rival faction led by former National Chairman Shehu Musa Gabam.

    According to him, the party’s constitution provides room for discipline and reconciliation.

    Gombe also maintained that leadership disputes are internal matters for political parties and not for INEC to decide. He said, “INEC doesn’t determine who should be the chairman of a political party. It is the party itself.”

    His comments came after INEC announced it had appealed two Federal High Court judgments that questioned aspects of its 2027 election timetable.

    The electoral body said it was seeking clarification on important legal issues, warning that changes to the timetable could affect the smooth planning and conduct of elections.

    SDP faults INEC’s move to challenge court judgments on election timetable

  • Why I’ll never stop attacking Peter Obi – Abure

    Why I’ll never stop attacking Peter Obi – Abure

    Derecognized factional National Chairman of the Labour Party, Julius Abure, has said he will continue to criticise former presidential candidate, Mr Peter Obi and Abia State Governor Alex Otti over their alleged roles in the party’s lingering leadership crisis.

    Speaking on Channels Television’s Politics Today on Tuesday, Abure accused Obi and Otti of disrupting the peace that previously existed within the party.

    According to him, the crisis began when both leaders allegedly established what he described as an illegal caretaker committee in Umuahia, which he said had become a major challenge to the party’s leadership.

    Abure maintained that discussions about the Labour Party crisis would inevitably involve Obi and Otti because of what he described as their central role in the dispute.

    He further alleged that the Labour Party was stable before Obi joined the party, adding that the former Anambra State governor contributed to the internal crisis before leaving for the National Democratic Coalition, NDC.

    The Labour Party chieftain also claimed that Obi and his allies were creating similar challenges within the NDC, advising the coalition’s leadership to remain vigilant.

    Abure said: “Now, let me, let me put it very clearly. Governor Alex Otti and Peter Obi destabilised the tranquillity of the party.

    “You will recall that the party was running smoothly without major disagreement in the party. It was Peter Obi and Alex Otti who went to Umuahia to set up this illegal caretaker committee that have become an albatross to the leadership of the party.

    “Therefore, because the crisis is still lingering, we cannot stop talking about it because each time you talk about the crisis in the Labour Party, the names that feature prominently is Peter Obi and Alex Otti.

    “They are the cause of the crisis in the party, and that’s why we have continued to talk about it, not until the crisis in the party is finally resolved and dusted. We cannot stop talking about it.

    “After refusing to allow us have peace and tranquillity in the Labour Party, before he joined the Labour Party, the Labour Party was peaceful. There was no crisis in the party. He created crisis in the party and left for NDC.

    “And now let me put it this way, the same way they created crisis in the Labour Party is the same way they are creating crisis in the NDC. That’s why I have only just said that the NDC leadership should be aware. I’m happy that they are gradually taming them and gradually controlling them, so that they will have peace in that party.

    “There is nothing wrong in giving advice to other leaders of other political party. After all, we are looking forward to having a Nigeria that works. We are working towards having good governance in the country, and therefore it is our responsibility as a participator in this process to continue to give advice even to government, to other political parties, and to even government agencies. There is nothing wrong.”

    Why I’ll never stop attacking Peter Obi – Abure

  • Nenadi Usman intruder in Labour Party – Abure

    Nenadi Usman intruder in Labour Party – Abure

    Embattled factional National Chairman of the Labour Party, Julius Abure had accused the interim chairman of the party, Nenadi Usman as an intruder in the party.

    Abure said this on Tuesday when he featured in an interview on ‘Politics Today’, a programme on Channels Television.

    He was speaking on the Labour Party divisions and 2027 politics.

    “I need to make it very clear that I am not an interloper in Labour Party. If there is any intruder in Labour Party, I think it is Senator Nenadi Usman that is the interloper.

    “In any event, the final court has not taken a decision on the matters of Labor Party. You recall that after the convention that was held in 2024 in Nnewi, Anambra state, the Federal High Court made a pronouncement that the convention was valid.

    “The court also asked INEC recognize Labor Party under my leadership. The matter went to the Court of Appeal, and the Court of Appeal affirmed same.

    “And then Nenadi Usman appealed to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court said it was an internal affair of the party, and we have been working very closely with INEC after that decision,” he said.

    Nenadi Usman intruder in Labour Party – Abure

  • Benue Assembly extends suspension of ex-speaker, former majority leader

    Benue Assembly extends suspension of ex-speaker, former majority leader

    The Benue State House of Assembly has extended the suspension of ex-Speaker Aondona Dajoh and former Majority Leader Saater Tiseer by an additional three months pending the determination of separate court cases instituted by the duo against the legislature or the withdrawal of the suits.

    The resolution was reached during plenary on Tuesday, presided over by the Speaker, Berger Alfred, following a motion of urgent public importance moved by the Majority Leader of the House and member representing Kwande West State Constituency, Thomas Dugeri, and seconded by the Deputy Chief Whip, Simon Gabo, representing Mata State Constituency.

    The House subsequently adopted the motion and resolved that the suspension of the two lawmakers should remain in force for another three months pending the outcome of the judicial process or the withdrawal of their respective cases against the Assembly in line with the law governing the institution.

    Also during Tuesday’s plenary, the Benue State Sports Marketing, Gaming and Lotteries Bill, 2026, scaled through second reading on the floor of the House.

    Following its consideration, the Speaker, Alfred Emberga, referred the bill to the Joint House Committees on Finance, Youth and Sports for further legislative scrutiny.

    Earlier, in his opening remarks marking the commencement of the First Sitting of the Fourth Legislative Session, the Speaker of the Benue State House of Assembly, Emberga, welcomed members back from recess and urged them to remain committed to their legislative responsibilities.

    He noted that the recess afforded lawmakers the opportunity to engage with their constituents and participate in political activities, including party primaries ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    The Speaker described the Fourth Legislative Session as a defining phase in the assembly’s tenure and charged members to focus on issues that directly impact the welfare of the people.

    He identified security and peacebuilding, economic resilience, infrastructure development, enhanced revenue generation, effective oversight of ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs), and greater citizen participation in the legislative process as key priorities for the session.

    According to a statement by the Chief Press Secretary to the Speaker, Zape Upaa, Emberga urged members to sustain harmonious collaboration with other arms of government while remaining steadfast in making laws that reflect the aspirations and yearnings of the people of Benue State.

    Benue Assembly extends suspension of ex-speaker, former majority leader

  • NWFL playoff: Why Rivers Angels lost to Abia Angels – Blankson 

    NWFL playoff: Why Rivers Angels lost to Abia Angels – Blankson 

    Rivers Angels head coach, Tosan Blankson, has blamed missed chances for his team’s defeat to Abia Angels.

    Abia Angels defeated Rivers Angels 1-0 in a matchday two fixture of the Nigeria Women Football League, NWFL, at the Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium , Port-Harcourt on Monday.

    Winner David’s 26th minute header proved decisive in the encounter.

    Blankson expressed disappointment with the outcome of the game.

    “Sometimes football is cruel, the girls failed to deliver despite their efforts,” Blankson stated in a post-match interview.

    “It’s a bad day for us as the strikers had enough chances but they couldn’t deliver.”

    Rivers Angels occupy fourth position on the playoff table with three points from two matches.

    NWFL playoff: Why Rivers Angels lost to Abia Angels – Blankson 

  • OPINION: The Twin Ecological Crises Of Cross River, Akwa Ibom States

    OPINION: The Twin Ecological Crises Of Cross River, Akwa Ibom States

    In the contentious, oil-rich landscape of Nigeria’s Niger Delta, Akwa Ibom and Cross River states are often viewed through different economic lenses. Akwa Ibom is the established, major oil-producing heavyweight, contributing the highest percentage to Nigeria’s crude revenue, hosting the massive ExxonMobil-operated Qua Iboe Terminal in Ibeno, and legally receiving the statutory 13% derivation fund alongside benefits from the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.

    Cross River, by contrast, sits outside this major oil-producing bracket. It does not enjoy the 13% derivation revenue, though it is currently navigating legal due diligence to formally establish its status within the oil-producing class.

    Yet, beneath these differing legal and financial balance sheets lies an undeniable geographical truth: these two states are brothers sharing the same coastline. And along that coastline, boundaries blur. The ecological devastation of oil extraction does not respect state lines; the residents of both Akwa Ibom and Cross River face a shared, suffocating environmental crisis that systematically dismantles their health, water, land, and livelihoods.

    The Localised Frontiers of Pollution

    In Cross River State, pollution is rife, driven by localised oil bunkering and systemic environmental lawlessness. In Calabar South, within the Essirebom community—an area historically marginalised and weaponised as a hideout for criminal syndicates linked to the theft and illegal refining of about 20% of Nigeria’s oil output—residents live in fear. This fear is so profound that community members refuse to name a Chinese firm operating nearby that indiscriminately dumps heavy metals into their waters, fearing severe negative repercussions.

    Yet, alternative narratives are emerging from the soot. The rise of Her Highness Elizabeth Nkama-Eyo, the first female Community Head of Essirebom and the leader of the fishers at Atanso Iyak beach, represents a powerful shift. Her leadership stands as a resilient counter-weight to the corporate and criminal degradation of her people’s ancestral waters.

    Across the state border, Akwa Ibom State represents the mature, dark reality of about 7 decades of oil extractive legacy. Oil was first discovered in non- commercial quantities in Akwa Ibom in 1953 at Ikot Akpa Ekpo in present Akpat Enin Local Government Area. It was in the late 1950s that commercial extraction of oil officially began in the state. In the Ibeno Local Government Area, frequent oil spills have been linked to major multinational and domestic players—including ExxonMobil and now Seplat, Shell, Chevron Field, Sterling Oil Exploration & Energy Production Company Limited, Network Production and Exploration, Savannah Energy etc —have utterly devastated the ecosystem.

    Today, these communities face a new threat: corporate divestment. International oil companies are offloading their onshore assets and exiting the region without addressing decades of ecological damage. This tactical move blatantly ignores international law and human rights obligations, passing billions of dollars in environmental remediation costs to new asset owners who lack the financial capacity to clean it up, effectively leaving the host communities stranded without justice.

    The Inconvenient Human and Ecological Costs

    Where corporate profits are lined, a devastating public health and economic crisis is actively ignored. Across both states, the medical consequences of oil pollution are documented and severe:

    The devastating cases of respiratory failure are rising every year. The continuous gas flaring has triggered chronic respiratory illnesses, leaving a majority of residents suffering from severe coughing and wheezing. High exposure to environmental hazards has led to rampant eye irritation, partial blindness, and reproductive health issues. Gastrointestinal diseases plague communities whose water sources are toxic.

    This toxicity falls directly from the sky. When it rains, these coastal communities are subjected to the “black rain phenomenon.” Massive amounts of soot and unburned hydrocarbons mix with precipitation, turning water bodies dark, giving them an offensive odor, and rendering them entirely unfit for human consumption. Rain is no longer a source of life; it is a recurring warning of an ecological collapse.

    For the traditional fishing communities that have thrived here for generations, the water has become a graveyard. Oil spills and gas flares have decimated the creeks and ancient breeding grounds of aquatic species. When oil coats the water, it destroys fishing nets and boats, costing fishermen hundreds of thousands of Naira in equipment they can no longer afford to replace due to a drastic drop in income.

    Forced into survival mode, many fishers have abandoned their heritage entirely to turn to petty trading. Others are forced into deeper, high-risk ocean waters, embarking on perilous voyages lasting over three days just to secure a fraction of their historical catch.

    Resistance: The Path to Resource Democracy

    In response to this institutional neglect, civil society is stepping into the vacuum. The Peace Point Development Foundation (PPDF), in partnership with the Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), is currently implementing a two-year project (August 2025 – July 2027) titled: “Building Community Rights Defenders in Niger Delta.” The project’s objective is to train and mobilize 100 community rights collectives across the region as a transformative pathway to climate justice.

    PPDF and HOMEF recognise a critical systemic flaw: despite the manifest dangers of flooding, pollution, deforestation, and biodiversity loss, Nigerian authorities continue to enforce neoliberal environmental policies that protect corporate extractivism at the expense of communities.

    The Nigeria Socio-Ecological Alternatives Convergence, which anchors this project, calls for a radical rethinking of environmental governance. It leverages powerful, community-derived frameworks—such as the Niger Delta Alternatives Convergence Manifesto (NDAC, 2022–2025) and the Nigerian Socio-Ecological Convergence (NSAC, 2024–2025)—to demand a shift toward community-led resource democracy, prioritising the rights of nature and people over corporate profit.

    By expanding the FishNet Alliance—a regional network of traditional fishers resisting destructive industrial fishing and pollution—into Cross River and Akwa Ibom, this initiative connects local youth, women, and fisherfolk to the broader Eco Defenders Network, providing them with the advocacy tools and capacity they have long been denied.

    Oceans Are Part of the Energy Solution

    Yet, resistance without a viable alternative is merely managing the symptoms of a dying economic model. For the coastal communities of Akwa Ibom and Cross River, the path toward true resource democracy and economic survival may lie right off their shores in the Gulf of Guinea: offshore wind energy. By pivoting from the finite, destructive extraction of offshore crude to harnessing the infinite kinetic energy of coastal winds, these states can pioneer a just energy transition that directly repairs the broken local economies.

    Transitioning to offshore wind energy offers a dual solution: it introduces a zero-emission power grid that can permanently eliminate the localised gas flaring and toxic “black rain” suffocating public health, while creating a new, sustainable maritime economy.

    Crucially, this shift does not demand that fishing communities abandon their heritage; instead, the infrastructure deployment, marine monitoring, and technical maintenance of offshore wind farms can provide thousands of localised, green manufacturing and maritime jobs, offering a generational alternative where the preservation of the environment is directly tethered to the prosperity of the people.

    Conclusion: A Shared Question for a Shared Fate

    Ultimately, the divergent legal statuses matter very little to the tides that wash up on their shared coastline. The crude oil that enriches the federal coffers and corporate executives leaves behind an identical wake of sickness, poverty, and ecological death in both Essirebom and Ibeno.

    As the brother states of Akwa Ibom and Cross River look to the future, they must confront the questions born of their shared fate:

    Can fiscal derivation funds truly compensate for a poisoned ecosystem? How long will the state and federal authorities prioritize a dying, extractive economic model over the lives of the coastal people who feed the nation?

    The legal battles for oil-producing status in Cross River and the corporate divestment maneuvers in Akwa Ibom are two sides of the same coin. True justice for these states will not be found in the restructuring of oil revenues, but in a radical transition toward resource democracy. Until the rights of these communities and their natural environment are placed above corporate and political profits, the black rain will continue to fall on both sides of the border, suffocating the future of the Niger Delta.

    Isua-Ikoh, Umo Johnson is a Nigerian Environmentalist & Human Rights activist; Coordinator at the Peace Point Development Foundation (PPDF).
    Okoh Ene is the Coordinator at Uyo Iban Amplifier Initiative.
    The Our Oceans Conference will be taking place in Kenya, Mombasa from 16-18 June.

    OPINION: The Twin Ecological Crises Of Cross River, Akwa Ibom States is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Resume Work In 72 Hours Or Face EFCC, Umahi Threatens Contractors

    Resume Work In 72 Hours Or Face EFCC, Umahi Threatens Contractors

    The Minister of Works, Senator David Umahi, has issued a 72-hour ultimatum to contractors handling the rehabilitation of the Abuja-Lokoja highway to fully mobilise to the site or face possible prosecution by anti-graft and law enforcement agencies.

    Umahi warned that contractors who have received government funds but failed to deliver on their obligations would no longer be tolerated.

    To this end, the Minister declared that the Federal Government was prepared to involve the police and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to recover public funds and ensure project execution.

    “If you are holding the money of the Federal Government, you have to bring it out and do the job, or we start going to the police and the EFCC,” the minister said.

    Umahi, who spoke on Tuesday during an inspection tour of the road project alongside members of the Senate and House of Representatives Committees on Works, disclosed that President Bola Tinubu had already approved the release of funds for the project.

    He urged the affected contractors to honour their commitments by deploying equipment and personnel to the site immediately.
    “I’m giving you 72 hours to effectively deploy on this road and utilise the money. The President has graciously approved the funds, and everyone involved must fulfil their obligations,” he said.

    The minister also vowed to sanction Ministry of Works officials who fail to properly supervise projects under their watch, insisting that negligence and poor performance would no longer be tolerated.

    According to him, contractors and supervising engineers must not undermine the Tinubu administration’s commitment to infrastructure development through delays, substandard work or lack of accountability.

    Umahi, however, commended the progress recorded on some sections of the project and assured contractors that outstanding payments under previous agreements would be settled once the approved funds are released.

    He expressed concern over the deteriorating condition of the Abuja-bound carriageway, warning that more than 90 per cent of the lane has been damaged and could become completely impassable within months if urgent intervention is not carried out.
    The minister further directed contractors not to remove existing asphalt on any section of the highway without obtaining approval from the Ministry of Works.

    Resume Work In 72 Hours Or Face EFCC, Umahi Threatens Contractors is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Monthly allocation from FG enough to develop Oyo – ADC guber candidate

    Monthly allocation from FG enough to develop Oyo – ADC guber candidate

    Gubernatorial candidate of African Democratic Congress, ADC, in Oyo State for the 2027 general elections, Chief Adegboyega Adegoke, has declared that the monthly allocation the government is receiving from the Federation Account is enough to develop the state.

    Adegoke, who doubles as the Aare Egbe Omo Balogun of Ibadanland, made this declaration during his visit to Oyo federal constituency.

    Our correspondent reports that the federal constituency consists of Atiba, Afijio, Oyo West and Oyo East local governments areas.

    The ADC candidate while addressing the gathering, explained that the money the Oyo State government is receiving monthly is sufficient to facilitate development across all regions of the state

    Adegoke also declared that the autonomy for local governments will be his priority if elected governor.

    He said that this will help to ensure accelerated development in all parts of the state.

    The ADC candidate also promised to enhance traditional institutions by ensuring that they receive their 5 percent allocation as at when due.

    He pledged that he will not disappoint the people of the state when elected.

    “Local government administration is more proximate to the people, and if the elected local government executives possess the authority and financial resources to act, the grassroots will be the primary beneficiaries.

    “The allocation from the Federal Revenue Account to the state is sufficient to facilitate development across all regions of the state,” Adegoke said.

    Monthly allocation from FG enough to develop Oyo – ADC guber candidate