Author: Daily Post Nigeria

  • 2027: Why opposition may face problems, hindrances in next year’s election – Jega

    2027: Why opposition may face problems, hindrances in next year’s election – Jega

    A public affairs analyst, Mahmud Jega, has identified the only hindrance of the opposition ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    Speaking during an interview on Arise Television’s ‘Prime Time’ on Monday, Jega said the splitting of the opposition may be a hindrance to achieving their goal in the next year’s elections.

    According to him, if the split opposition fields a presidential candidate each, it would make the fight very difficult for them.

    “There is still a big problem. The opposition forces, a month or two months ago, said they will give the ruling APC a big fight next year by uniting, especially that meeting that they had in Ibadan, Oyo State, where they now said they will present one opposition candidate.

    “However, it looks like apart from the ADC people, who are still pulling in one direction, the two governors left in the PDP; that’s Bauchi and Oyo states, appear to have joined one small party where they are pushing, and it looks like possibly they are the ones who are trying to draw former President Goodluck Jonathan back into the race.

    “Now if the opposition present three different candidates; possibly Obi-Kwankwaso in the NDC, Atiku-Amaechi in the ADC, and then Jonathan and maybe Bala Mohammed, that will make the fight very difficult,” he said.

    2027: Why opposition may face problems, hindrances in next year’s election – Jega

  • 2027: Kogi West elders warn APC against internal crisis

    2027: Kogi West elders warn APC against internal crisis

    Kogi West Elders Assembly (KWEA) has raised concerns over what it described as growing cracks within the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kogi ahead of the 2027 general elections. In a statement jointly signed by prominent leaders from the district, Mallam Mustapha Ohinoyi, Prof. David Ikupeleye, and Dr. Segun Ehinlafa, made available to newsmen on […]

    The post 2027: Kogi West elders warn APC against internal crisis appeared first on Tribune Online.

  • Xenophoba: Not just South Africa, other countries treat Nigerians differently – Ordinary President

    Xenophoba: Not just South Africa, other countries treat Nigerians differently – Ordinary President

    The host of Brekete Family, a Human Rights Radio and Television programme, Ahmed Isah, popularly known as “Ordinary President,” has revealed how the world treats Nigerians differently amid the ongoing Xenophobic attacks in South Africa.

    Speaking on the Brekete Family programme on Tuesday, Ordinary President also pointed out how Nigeria gave asylum to South African freedom fighters.

    Recall that South Africans have killed a handful of Nigerian, Ghanaian, and other African nationals in the recent xenophobic attacks.

    Reacting to the development, Ordinary President said, “See what they are doing to Nigerians in South Africa.

    “Other nationals from other countries like Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Tanzania, even countries that share common boundaries with them [South Africa]. They are humiliating them.

    “Let it not be like they are singling out only Nigerians; that is why they are doing it to other African countries.

    “See the approach to other nationals and the approach to Nigerians; you can see the anger and bitterness. The same South Africa that we contributed money to, so that they could regain their freedom.  

    “South Africans were coming to Nigeria to school on scholarship, their freedom fighters who narrowly escaped will come to Nigeria, and we will give them asylum.

    “But Nigerians, let me let you people know, it’s not only South Africa, but almost every country around the world is doing something to Nigerians that they can’t do to other nationals.

    “If you go to Canada, go to their prison and check which nationals are more. If you go to India, go to their prison and check, and go to other countries. Nobody seems to be bothered because of the ineffective leadership we have in this country [Nigeria],” he said.

    Xenophoba: Not just South Africa, other countries treat Nigerians differently – Ordinary President

  • Kogi West: Youth leader backs Sam Aro for Senate

    Kogi West: Youth leader backs Sam Aro for Senate

    A youth leader in Kogi West, Oladele John Nihi, has endorsed Hon. Aro Samuel Bamidele (aka Sam Aro) for the Kogi West Senatorial seat, describing him as a strong advocate of youth empowerment and grassroots development. In a statement issued on Monday, Nihi said Sam Aro possesses the vision and leadership qualities needed to represent […]

    The post Kogi West: Youth leader backs Sam Aro for Senate appeared first on Tribune Online.

  • Pride of Nigeria – Sultan of Sokoto celebrates Afenifere leader, Fasoranti at 100

    Pride of Nigeria – Sultan of Sokoto celebrates Afenifere leader, Fasoranti at 100

    The Sultan of Sokoto and President-General of the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, NSCIA, Muhammad Sa’ad Abubakar, has described elder statesman and leader of Afenifere, Reuben Fasoranti, as a pride of Nigeria and a national asset.

    Celebrating Fasoranti on his 100th birthday, Abubakar said the contributions of the elder statesman to nation-building remain invaluable.

    A statement signed by Prince Bashir Adefaka, on behalf of the Sultan of Sokoto, noted that Pa Fasoranti’s “remarkable longevity and enduring relevance across different phases of Nigeria’s political history before, during, and after the era of the late Chief Obafemi Awolowo, stand as a testament to a life of exemplary service and leadership.”

    The Sultan praised the centenarian statesman for his immense contributions to education, governance, and national development, particularly highlighting his pioneering role as first principal of Anglican Grammar School, Iju-Itaogbolu in Akure North in 1957, as well as his service as Commissioner for Finance in the administration of the late Chief Michael Adekunle Ajasin in the old Ondo State.

    According to the Sultan, “Chief Reuben Fasoranti has served Nigeria with distinction and dedication. Having contributed immensely to the greatness of this country, it is only fitting that Nigeria continues to honour and celebrate him as one of its most distinguished elder statesmen.”

    He added that Nigerians who believe in the unity, peace, and progress of the country should continue to celebrate and pray for the elder statesman, while asking God to grant him continued strength and good health.

    “We join his family, associates, admirers, and all lovers of peace and unity in congratulating him on this remarkable milestone. We pray that Almighty God continues to bless him and make him a greater blessing to Ondo State, where he has made significant contributions to nation-building, and to Nigeria as a whole,” the Sultan said.

    Pride of Nigeria – Sultan of Sokoto celebrates Afenifere leader, Fasoranti at 100

  • NPFL: Shorunmu takes interim charge at Abia Warriors 

    NPFL: Shorunmu takes interim charge at Abia Warriors 

    Former Super Eagles goalkeeper, Ike Shorunmu will take temporary charge of Abia Warriors for the remainder of the season, DAILY POST reports.

    Shorunmu was directed to take charge of the team by the club’s management following the suspension of head coach, Imama Amapakabo, and his assistant, Bethel Orji.

    Amapakabo, and Orji were ordered to steer clear of all club engagements following Abia Warriors’ 2-0 home defeat to Kun Khalifat FC on Sunday.

    The defeat effectively ended the club’s chances of securing a continental ticket.

    DAILY POST recalled Abia Warriors also lost to Ahudiyannem FC in the semi-final of the Abia State FA Cup.

    The Umuahia club will be away to Warri Wolves in their last game of the season.

    NPFL: Shorunmu takes interim charge at Abia Warriors 

  • Release El-Rufai, opposition voices should be heard – Buhari’s ex-aide to Nigeria Govt 

    Release El-Rufai, opposition voices should be heard – Buhari’s ex-aide to Nigeria Govt 

    Lauretta Onochie, former media aide to the late ex-President Muhammadu Buhari, has called for the immediate release of a chieftain of the African Democratic Congress, ADC, Nasir El-Rufai from detention.

    Onochie said El-Rufai’s continued detention under questionable circumstances only shows public suspicion that the machinery of state is being weaponised against opposition figures.

    Posting on X, she noted that the voices of opposition must be heard and not silenced.

    She wrote: “In every democracy, opposition voices must be challenged with ideas, not silenced with prison walls. When political participation becomes grounds for persecution, democracy itself is placed on trial.

    “Mallam Nasir El-Rufai has now spent months in custody over what many Nigerians believe are politically motivated and trumped-up charges.

    “Even more disturbing are reports that the path to his freedom comes with political conditions: return to the APC or abandon active politics entirely.

    “That is not justice. That is coercion. That is political intimidation dressed up as due process.”

    She noted that Nigeria cannot claim to be a democratic nation while dissenting voices are punished for refusing to bow.

    Onochie insisted that the right to political association, opposition, and participation is guaranteed in every constitutional democracy.

    She maintained that no citizen should have to negotiate freedom in exchange for political surrender.

    “If there is a credible case against him, let it be heard openly, fairly, and speedily before a competent court. But continued detention under questionable circumstances only deepens public suspicion that the machinery of state is being weaponised against opposition figures.

    “This is bigger than Nasir El-Rufai. It is about the soul of Nigerian democracy. It is about whether citizens are still free to disagree, contest power, and speak without fear.

    “Mallam Nasir El-Rufai must be released immediately even if on bail pending the fair determination of his case.

    “A democracy that jails opposition voices today may have no opposition left tomorrow. A nation without opposition, is a nation under dictatorship,” she added.

    Release El-Rufai, opposition voices should be heard – Buhari’s ex-aide to Nigeria Govt 

  • NESG warns of persistent debt risk as public debt-to-GDP hits 40.6%

    NESG warns of persistent debt risk as public debt-to-GDP hits 40.6%

    The Nigerian Economic Summit Group has raised concerns over Nigeria’s rising debt burden, warning that the country faces persistent fiscal risks as the public debt-to-GDP ratio climbed to 40.6 per cent.

    The warning was contained in the group’s latest economic review released on Monday, in Abuja, where the NESG noted that although the debt level remains below some international thresholds, the growing cost of servicing the debt continues to pose a major threat to economic stability.

    According to the group, Nigeria’s increasing dependence on borrowing amid weak revenue generation could worsen pressure on public finances if urgent reforms are not implemented.

    The NESG stated that, “Nigeria’s debt sustainability concerns remain elevated due to weak revenue performance and rising debt servicing obligations”.

     They stressed that fiscal authorities must prioritise revenue expansion and prudent spending.

    The group also urged the Federal Government to intensify efforts at boosting non-oil revenue, improving tax administration and encouraging private sector investment to reduce reliance on borrowing.

    It further warned that persistent inflation, exchange rate volatility and low productivity growth could compound the nation’s economic challenges if not properly managed.

    The NESG, noted that consistent implementation of fiscal and monetary policies would be critical to restoring investor confidence and achieving long term economic growth.

    NESG warns of persistent debt risk as public debt-to-GDP hits 40.6%

  • Famadewa’s Appointment: What Exactly Is Homeland Security?

    Famadewa’s Appointment: What Exactly Is Homeland Security?

    A personal reflection on the appointment of Major General Adeyinka A. Famadewa (Rtd) as Special Adviser on Homeland Security.

    President Bola Tinubu’s appointment of retired Major General Adeyinka A. Famadewa as Special Adviser on Homeland Security is, on its face, a welcome development. Nigeria needs every serious mind it can find in the fight to secure lives, communities, farms, highways, schools, markets and borders.

    First, congratulations are in order. Major General Adeyinka A. Famadewa (Rtd) comes into office with a serious security pedigree, a background in intelligence coordination, and a reputation for understanding the machinery of the Nigerian security state. In a country under daily pressure from terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, communal violence, cyber threats, arms trafficking, and weak border management, no reasonable person should dismiss the importance of strengthening internal security coordination.

    Nigeria needs capable hands. It needs steadier thinking. It needs less rivalry and more coherence. So the new appointee deserves a fair hearing, professional goodwill, and the nation’s best wishes.

    But goodwill is not the same thing as silence. This appointment raises hard but necessary questions: What exactly is ‘Homeland Security’ inside Nigeria’s existing security architecture? Where does this office sit in relation to the Office of the National Security Adviser, the Ministry of Defence, the armed forces, the police, the DSS, NSCDC, immigration, customs, NEMA, and state-level security platforms?

    Is this a genuinely new coordination node, or simply another advisory silo inside an already crowded and fragmented system? In security governance, titles matter less than remit, authority, and measurable outcomes. If the boundaries of the office are unclear, then the appointment may create more paperwork than protection.

    Where Does Homeland Security Sit In Nigeria Today?

    That is the first institutional question the presidency should answer plainly. Nigeria does not have a fully developed homeland security architecture in the way the term is often understood elsewhere. What Nigeria has instead is a dense patchwork of bodies with overlapping responsibilities: the Office of the National Security Adviser for strategic coordination; the military services for external defence and increasingly internal deployments; the Nigeria Police Force for core internal law enforcement; the DSS for domestic intelligence; the NIA and DIA for external and defence intelligence; NSCDC for critical national assets and civil defence; immigration and customs for border functions; NEMA and other emergency structures for disaster response; and a growing layer of governors, ad hoc task forces, vigilante arrangements, and informal community security actors.

    That means the phrase ‘Homeland Security’ can become either useful or dangerous. Useful, if it forces Nigeria to think of security as the protection of people, communities, infrastructure, borders, cyberspace, supply chains, and public confidence across institutions. Dangerous, if it becomes a fashionable label without legal clarity, operational boundaries, budget discipline, or accountability. Nigeria does not need another elegant office in Abuja whose main output is meetings, memos, and inter-agency competition. It needs a function that removes duplication, closes response gaps, and helps convert scattered intelligence into fast protection for citizens.

    If this new role is to make sense, it should be defined as a coordinating and performance-driving office focused on domestic threat prevention, inter-agency fusion, crisis anticipation, protection of critical infrastructure, border risk reduction, and subnational early warning. It should not become a parallel NSA, a shadow interior ministry, or an extra command post without command responsibility. In other words, the question is not whether the title sounds important. The question is whether the office solves a problem that existing institutions have failed to solve.

    What Can Famadewa Bring That He Did Not Bring Before?

    This is the second hard question, and it is a fair one. Public reports on the appointment note that Famadewa previously served as Principal General Staff Officer to the National Security Adviser between 2015 and 2021 and played a key role in establishing the Intelligence Fusion Centre at the Office of the National Security Adviser. That matters because the presidency is effectively appointing someone who already knows the system’s wiring diagram. He cannot plead ignorance about where coordination breaks down. He has seen the silos from the inside.

    That background is either his greatest strength or his greatest test. It is a strength because he understands the rivalries, bottlenecks, incentives, reporting chains, and politics that often prevent agencies from sharing information in real time. It is a test because Nigerians are entitled to ask: if these coordination ideas were already visible years ago, why did they not produce a fundamentally different security outcome? What will now be different: structure, authority, political backing, operating doctrine, technology, or accountability?

    The most persuasive answer he can give is not rhetorical. It is practical. He should not try to sell himself as the discoverer of a brand-new theory. He should instead present himself as the official who will finally move from concept to execution. If he helped design fusion, then his mission now should be to make fusion real beyond Abuja: from national intelligence centres to theatre commands, from theatre commands to police formations, from federal agencies to state actors, and from classified reporting to field-level prevention. The country does not need another diagram of coordination. It needs coordination that can be felt in markets, highways, farms, schools, rail lines, border communities, and digital networks.

    What Should His KPIs Be?
    No official KPIs had been publicly outlined at the time of writing, but if this office is to be meaningful, the presidency should publish clear deliverables. At a minimum, the Special Adviser on Homeland Security should be judged against the following performance indicators:

    1. Intelligence-to-action time: Has the gap between threat warning and operational response reduced?
    2. Inter-agency response quality: Are the police, DSS, NSCDC, armed forces, immigration, customs, and emergency services working from shared threat pictures in priority theatres?
    3. Protection of critical infrastructure: Are rail, power, telecom, oil and gas assets, ports, and digital systems better protected with measurable incident reduction?
    4. Kidnap and banditry disruption metrics: Are there fewer successful attacks on highways, farms, schools, and peri-urban communities in identified hotspots?
    5. Border risk management: Are arms smuggling, irregular crossings, and transnational criminal flows being disrupted more effectively?
    6. Subnational early warning: Do governors and local security structures receive actionable alerts early enough to prevent escalation?
    7. Civilian trust and safety outcomes: Do citizens feel safer, report threats more readily, and experience faster emergency response?
    8. Duplication reduction: Has the office helped eliminate overlapping mandates, repeated meetings, and bureaucratic turf wars?
    9. Accountability and review: Is there a quarterly public-facing scorecard, even if sensitive details remain classified?

    These KPIs matter because security success cannot be measured only by how many meetings were held, how many briefings were presented, or how many stern statements were issued. Real security governance is measured in prevented attacks, saved lives, restored mobility, improved trust, and reduced fear.

    Why Nigeria Must Throw Away The Old Playbook

    This is the larger point. Nigeria cannot continue to approach twenty-first century insecurity with a twentieth-century security imagination. The old playbook is too state-centric, too force-heavy, too centralised, too reactive, and too invested in institutional ego. It treats insecurity mainly as a matter of deploying more men, issuing tougher directives, or creating one more office whenever the old ones disappoint. But Nigeria’s threat environment is far more complex than that. Many of today’s threats live in the seams ; between federal and state authority, between intelligence and policing, between land borders and digital networks, between criminality and ideology, between climate stress and communal violence, between unemployment and recruitment into armed groups.

    A transformative security mindset would start from the citizen, not just the state. It would ask different questions: How safe is the farmer going to the field? How safe is the truck on the highway? How quickly can a distress signal move from a village to a response hub? How many communities have functional local early warning systems? How resilient are schools, hospitals, telecom networks, dams, pipelines, and data systems? Can the justice system convert arrests into credible prosecutions? Can technology support accountability instead of merely expanding surveillance?

    That new mindset would also accept an uncomfortable truth: kinetic response is necessary, but it is not sufficient. Nigeria needs a homeland security doctrine built on prevention, intelligence, policing reform, emergency management, border modernisation, cyber resilience, community legitimacy, strategic communications, deradicalisation where appropriate, and disciplined use of force. Security is not only about who carries a gun. It is also about who can connect data, anticipate risk, manage crises, earn public trust, and sustain lawful order.

    Is It Time To Consider Civilian Experts As NSA?

    The debate over who should serve as National Security Adviser is legitimate. Nigeria borrowed much of its presidential national security coordination concept from the American model, but it has not fully adopted that model’s flexibility. In the United States, the National Security Adviser need not be a retired general. The office has been held by academics, diplomats, lawyers, policy strategists and military officers. The U.S. National Security Council was created under the National Security Act of 1947, while the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs emerged in the early 1950s.

    The American model has produced figures such as Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Condoleezza Rice, John Bolton, Susan Rice, Jake Sullivan and, currently in an acting capacity, Marco Rubio.

    The lesson for Nigeria is not to copy personalities but to emulate the openness of recruitment. A modern NSA can be a retired military officer, but need not be. The best candidate should be the person with the strongest combination of strategic judgement, inter-agency management skills, presidential trust, geopolitical understanding, intelligence literacy, crisis discipline, democratic temperament and the ability to challenge groupthink.

    Indeed, appointing non-uniformed experts can sometimes help break the culture of securitisation that frames every problem through barracks logic.

    Nigeria has diplomats who understand regional politics, scholars who understand conflict systems, economists who understand criminal markets, technology experts who understand cyber threats, lawyers who understand rights and justice, and former intelligence professionals who understand quiet statecraft. The country should widen the pool. The security of over 200 million people is too important to be constrained by habit.

    A mature republic should be able to separate operational command from strategic coordination. Civilian-led national security leadership, properly designed, can strengthen democratic accountability, reduce institutional capture, and broaden the range of ideas at the top.

    This is not an argument against military expertise. Nigeria absolutely needs military professionalism at the centre of security thinking. It is an argument against intellectual closure. A country facing hybrid threats should not limit itself to a single career pipeline when selecting its highest-level security policy coordinators.

    What Should The New Special Adviser Do First?

    1· Publish a short public doctrine note defining the scope of Homeland Security in Nigeria.
    2· Map overlap across federal security agencies and identify where mandates collide.
    3· Establish a 100-day action plan with a limited number of measurable priorities.
    4· Create a joint threat dashboard for domestic risks, with escalation triggers and response ownership clearly assigned.
    5· Drive fusion downwards; not only across elite federal agencies, but into states, border corridors, transport nodes, and critical infrastructure networks.
    6· Build a citizen-facing emergency and intelligence feedback loop that rewards timely reporting and protects informants.
    7· Insist on quarterly performance reviews chaired at the highest political level, so coordination failure has consequences.

    A Welcome… And A Challenge

    So yes, Major General Famadewa should be welcomed. He is entering office at a difficult time, and nobody should envy the burden on his desk. Nigeria needs every ounce of seriousness it can get. But welcome must not become uncritical applause. The presidency owes the country a clear answer about remit, fit, boundaries, powers, and outcomes. Without that clarity, ‘Homeland Security’ risks becoming one more room in Abuja where urgent problems go to change names.

    The best outcome would be this: that the new appointee uses his experience not to preserve the old architecture, but to challenge it; not to add another layer of ceremony, but to reduce fragmentation; not to defend inherited habits, but to replace them with mission-driven coordination; not to speak the language of security elites alone, but to restore the everyday security of ordinary Nigerians.

    Nigeria does not merely need more security offices. It needs a new security mindset; one that is integrated, accountable, preventive, technologically intelligent, locally informed, and human in its priorities. That is the real test of this appointment. And that is the standard by which the new Special Adviser should be judged.

    Famadewa’s Appointment: What Exactly Is Homeland Security? is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • ‘My life in danger’ – English Alhaji raises alarm after receiving calls from bandits [VIDEO]

    ‘My life in danger’ – English Alhaji raises alarm after receiving calls from bandits [VIDEO]

    Popular Nigerian digital creator, English Alhaji, has raised alarm after receiving bandits’ calls.

    English Alhaji raised an alarm in a video shared on his Instagram page.

    DAILY POST recalls that English Alhaji had a week ago commended the youth of Achepe community in Nasarawa State for repelling bandits’ attack.

    While faulting the youth for handing over some captured bandits to the military, English Alhaji said “Only mistake wey this people do, this youth of Achepe catch this people finish and handed them over to the military. 

    “Why? Why? Do you want the army to reintegrate them? Abi the once they integrate never do una? You want them to integrate more of the terrorist? Why handling them over to the military? Unalive this boys. You don catch them and collected the AK-47 rifle from them, kpai them. Why giving them to the police again? Youth of Achepe, una no do well for that one oo.”

    However, in a now trending video on his Instagram page, English Alhaji who stated that his life is in danger, shared a recorded WhatsApp video call he received from bandits threatening him for advising Nigerians to kill them.

    “Nigerians, so yesterday in the afternoon bandits called me on a video call. You can see the confidence, you guys are no longer hiding. They no longer cover their face, they’re everywhere. They got my WhatsApp number on my Facebook page. They turned their camera to show me ammunition. Na now I know the kind danger wey I dey.

    “They said why do I tell people to be killing them. One of them said this thing wey I dey tell people to unalive them when they catch them, don’t hand them over to the military, kpai them. They said what if they catch me, they will do that same thing to me”, he said.

    Watch the full video

    ‘My life in danger’ – English Alhaji raises alarm after receiving calls from bandits [VIDEO]