Category: Uncategorized

  • Laughable, inflated – ADC blasts APC over alleged 11 million membership claim

    Laughable, inflated – ADC blasts APC over alleged 11 million membership claim

    The African Democratic Congress, ADC, has accused the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, of misleading Nigerians with what it described as “inflated and unverifiable” claims of having up to 11 million members.

    According to the National Publicity Secretary of the party, Bolaji Abdullahi, on Monday, the figures being circulated by the APC were not backed by any verifiable membership register, warning that such claims could be used to shape public perception ahead of the 2027 general elections.

    He said, “We are very clear about this. We are building a political party that is based on certain principles, one of which is transparency. We cannot go around forming figures because we want to deceive Nigerians.

    “What the APC is doing would have been amusing and laughable if we didn’t know it is to set the stage for the rigging of the 2027 general elections by claiming that they have 11 million votes.

    “What they are doing is to put it in your head to think, ‘Oh, that is 11 million votes guaranteed.’ It’s all lies. They should produce a verifiable membership register submitted to INEC.

    “We challenge them that if they indeed claim that they have 12 million members, they should produce the membership register and let Nigerians check if they actually have 12 million members. They don’t have 12 million members. It’s all lies.”

    This comes less than 48 hours after President Bola Tinubu emerged as the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate after defeating Stanley Osifo in the party’s presidential primary election.

    Tinubu polled 10.99 million votes to defeat his only rival, who scored 16,504 votes in the APC presidential primaries held across 8,809 wards in the country.

    Laughable, inflated – ADC blasts APC over alleged 11 million membership claim

  • Police arrest 24 suspects after raiding criminal hideouts in Imo forests

    Police arrest 24 suspects after raiding criminal hideouts in Imo forests

    The Imo State Police Command, in intensified operations, has arrested 24 suspects in different locations within bushes in Owerri West LGA for various criminal offences.

    The operation that led to the arrest of the suspects is in line with proactive security measures put in place by the State Commissioner of Police, CP Audu Garba Bosso, to nip in the bud the alleged kidnapping and violent incidents reported in parts of Owerri West LGA of the state.

    According to the command’s spokesperson, Henry Okoye, the latest operation was carried out by operatives of the Owerri Urban Division, led by the Area Commander, Michael Abatam, in collaboration with vigilantes of the State Security Organization, as they embarked on an intensive combing operation across forested areas within Eziobodo, Ihiagwa, Nekede, and Okomochi communities.

    Okoye informed that the operation involved the deployment of over 250 police personnel and vigilante operatives in search of suspected criminal hideouts and black spots within the forested areas, with the aim of completely eradicating criminal activities and restoring public confidence in the affected communities.

    The command’s spokesperson hinted that during the operation, a total of 24 suspects were arrested from different locations within the forests.

    Some of the arrested suspects include 21-year-old Jonah Abotu, 22-year-old Abel John, 40-year-old Ibrahim Ubande, 28-year-old Peter Samuel, 20-year-old Kabiru Yahaya, 22-year-old Yahaya Adamu, and others.

    He added that exhibits recovered from some of the suspects include weeds suspected to be cannabis sativa, over six unregistered motorcycles, and other incriminating items.

    The suspects have been transferred to the Command’s Violent Crime Response Unit (VCRU) for thorough investigation and possible prosecution in accordance with the law.

    Reacting to the arrest of the suspects, the Commissioner of Police described the operation as successful as he reaffirmed the command’s commitment to sustaining aggressive operations against all forms of criminality across the state.

    He urged residents to remain security-conscious and promptly report any suspicious persons or activities to the nearest police station or through the command’s emergency lines: 0803 477 3600 or 09116606669.

    The commissioner further assured the public that such operations would be sustained across the state until all criminal elements are completely flushed out of their hideouts.

    Police arrest 24 suspects after raiding criminal hideouts in Imo forests

  • EPL: We will no longer be mocked – Arsenal fans  parade in Abia

    EPL: We will no longer be mocked – Arsenal fans  parade in Abia

    Leaders and members of Arsenal Football Club supporters in Aba on Monday took over major streets of the city to celebrate the team’s victory in the 2025/2026 Premiership season.

    The Arsenal fans, who were dressed in red and white full club attire, waved flags and loudly sang Arsenal songs in jubilation.

    The city-wide march, which commenced from Osisioma Flyover on the Enugu-Aba-Port Harcourt Highway, moved to other parts of Aba, with other enthusiastic fans joining the celebration.

    The supporters, who were led by Chukwujama Obinna Obi Daddy and Okechukwu Michael George, said the breaking of the 22-year Premiership jinx was a milestone.

    “This is a moment for every Gooner in Abia to show pride and unity. Arsenal’s victory belongs to the fans, and we want Aba to feel the red and white spirit,” they said.

    Speaking about his club’s victory, Elijah Udenwa, Chairman of the Radio Fans Association, Abia State chapter, said, “The wait is over for Arsenal.”

    Another leader of Arsenal fans in Umuahia, Chukwuemeka Igu, said the mocking of Arsenal by Chelsea and other rival football fans is over, noting that “we shall never be mocked again.”

    EPL: We will no longer be mocked – Arsenal fans  parade in Abia

  • Bauchi SEC approves over 300% pay package for traditional rulers

    Bauchi SEC approves over 300% pay package for traditional rulers

    The Bauchi State Executive Council (SEC) met on Monday, chaired by Governor Sen. Bala Abdulkadir Mohammed, and approved a pay package increase of over 300 per cent for all traditional rulers in the state. The Council also placed them on the state payroll. The development followed the approval of a new remuneration structure for traditional […]

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  • Ogun govt presents staff of office to new Oludotun of Idotun community

    Ogun govt presents staff of office to new Oludotun of Idotun community

    The Ogun State Government on Monday presented the staff of office and instrument of appointment to Oba Adeyemi Ibikunle Opeaye as the new Oludotun of Idotun…

    The post Ogun govt presents staff of office to new Oludotun of Idotun community appeared first on Tribune Online.

  • UN alarm: Tinubu promised renewed hope but delivered hunger — Atiku

    UN alarm: Tinubu promised renewed hope but delivered hunger — Atiku

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has described the latest warning by the United Nations that nearly 35 million Nigerians could face acute hunger between June and August 2026 as a devastating global verdict on the catastrophic failure of the Tinubu administration. In a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication, Phrank Shaibu, […]

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  • FG, Turkiye sign MOU to deepen cooperation in solid minerals devt

    FG, Turkiye sign MOU to deepen cooperation in solid minerals devt

    The Federal Governments of Nigeria and the Republic of Türkiye have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to strengthen bilateral cooperation in the solid minerals sector, marking a significant step towards deepening economic collaboration between both countries. The agreement was signed on the sidelines of the Istanbul Natural Resources Summit (INRES) in Istanbul, Türkiye. Speaking […]

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  • Sallah: Police deploy personnel to Ogun prayer ground, market place, motor parks

    Sallah: Police deploy personnel to Ogun prayer ground, market place, motor parks

    The Ogun State Police Command says its has strengthened proactive security measures, assuring residents of the state of a peaceful, safe, and hitch-free El-Kabir celebration.

    The command’s spokesperson, DSP Oluseyi Babaseyi, in a statement on Monday said

    adequate personnel and operational assets were deployed to strategic locations in the state.

    Babaseyi noted that they were deployed to Eid prayer grounds, major highways, recreational centres, markets, motor parks, residential areas, and other identified public spaces. 

    According to him, the deployment aimed at ensuring visible policing, effective crowd control, early threat detection, and swift response to any emerging security concerns before, during, and after the celebration.

    He said, “Under the leadership of the Commissioner of Police, CP Bode Ojajuni, psc, FCSS, MNIPR, has strengthened proactive security arrangements across the State ahead of the 2026 Eid-el-Kabir celebration, with firm assurances of a peaceful, safe, and hitch-free festive period for all residents.

    “Acting on the directives of the Commissioner of Police, all Area Commanders, Divisional Police Officers, and Tactical Commanders have been placed on heightened alert and instructed to sustain aggressive patrols, stop-and-search operations where necessary, and ensure round-the-clock supervision of personnel within their areas of responsibility. 

    “They are also to strengthen collaboration with community leaders, transport unions, and other relevant stakeholders to enhance intelligence sharing and prevent any breakdown of law and order during the festive period.”

    The command appealed to members of the public to celebrate responsibly and remain security conscious throughout the season, urging parents and guardians to closely monitor the movement and activities of their children and wards.

    “Members of the public are advised to avoid any conduct capable of disturbing public peace, including thuggery, cult-related activities, reckless driving, and other forms of disorderly behaviour.

    “The Commissioner of Police, CP Bode Ojajuni, reassures residents of the Command’s unwavering commitment to proactive policing, peace, and the protection of lives and property across the State,” he added.

    Sallah: Police deploy personnel to Ogun prayer ground, market place, motor parks

  • Academia, industry collaboration key to national development — UNILAG VC

    Academia, industry collaboration key to national development — UNILAG VC

    The Vice-Chancellor of the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Professor Folasade Ogunsola, has declared that the sustainable growth of African universities relies on visionary private sector partnerships rather than government intervention alone. She spoke on Monday during the official commissioning of the new United Bank for Africa (UBA) building and Innovation Hub on the UNILAG campus. […]

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  • OPINION: Time To Reset Amukpe-Escravos Pipeline Sale Process,

    OPINION: Time To Reset Amukpe-Escravos Pipeline Sale Process,

    A respected voice has finally said the quiet part out loud.

    No more dancing around it. No more bureaucratic fog. Professor Okey Ikechukwu, Executive Director of the Development Specs Academy, sat for an interview on Arise News and delivered a prescription as blunt as a hammer. Suspend the Amukpe-Escravos pipeline sale process. Terminate it completely. Start over.

    His warning is simple. Proceeding on current terms means gifting away a vital national asset at a knockdown price. And the damage to governance and public trust will be neither small nor silent.

    He is right. And the candour is a breath of fresh air in a room that has been stuffy for too long.

    What should be clear to everyone at this stage is that this is no longer a simple commercial matter which can be massaged back to life with a procedural sleight of hand.

    It has become a test. One of those quiet examinations Nigeria periodically faces. Can the country treat strategic assets with the seriousness they deserve? Or will old habits of convenience win again?

    The facts, stripped of ornamentation, are troubling enough.

    A transaction formally terminated in October 2024 is showing remarkable powers of resurrection. Terminated after missed payments. After breached conditions. After creative attempts to shift major risks.

    The original price tag hovered around $243 million.

    Independent valuations conducted in 2025 now place the same 40 per cent stake somewhere between $544 million and $641 million.

    That is not a minor market adjustment. That is nearly $300 million walking out the door in broad daylight. And no one is chasing after it.

    The pipeline itself refuses to play the role of distressed asset.

    With a capacity of 160,000 barrels per day and uptime consistently above 95 per cent, it has quietly become one of the more reliable evacuation routes in the Niger Delta. In a neighbourhood where theft and sabotage have turned other pipelines into expensive liabilities, this one keeps working.

    Financed by Nigerian banks and Afreximbank, with lenders still very much exposed, it continues to generate revenue. Day after day. Barrel after barrel.

    Selling a performing, revenue-positive national asset at yesterday’s price is not prudent divestment. Let us call it what it is: value destruction, plain and simple.

    To his credit, Professor Ikechukwu’s analogy lands with surgical precision.

    You do not revive a failed private land deal years later at the old price and expect to be celebrated for commercial brilliance. The seller would be rightly ridiculed. The buyer would be laughed out of the room.

    When the asset in question belongs to the Nigerian people, the stakes move from embarrassing to alarming. From a bad joke to a national wound.

    Lenders raised legitimate concerns right from the beginning. A proper termination should have triggered a clean, transparent restart anchored in current realities. That is how adults handle failed transactions.

    Instead, fragments of the collapsed deal linger like unwelcome guests who refuse to accept that the party is over. They hover. They whisper. They wait for attention to drift elsewhere.

    In Nigeria, where institutional memory is long and public suspicion is well-earned, such persistence inevitably raises eyebrows. And blood pressures.

    The broader signal this sends should worry anyone who cares about the credibility of ongoing oil and gas reforms.

    The sector is attempting to project transparency, competition, and seriousness to investors. That is the official story. Yet episodes like this risk sending the opposite message. That rules can become remarkably elastic when the right interests align. That yesterday’s failed price can somehow become today’s acceptable benchmark.

    Nigerians have seen this script before. They know the lines. They also know it never ends in their favour.

    Too often, strategic assets are handled with less care than a private citizen would extend to his own property. A man selling his car checks current market value. He does not accept last year’s offer from a buyer who could not pay. But somehow, when the asset belongs to the nation, the standards loosen.
    Local investors notice. Foreign investors notice. Lenders notice. And the average citizen, already weary of watching national wealth evaporate through mysterious processes, notices too.

    Nigeria is not in such desperate straits that it must offload critical infrastructure at fire-sale prices.

    Let that be exceedingly clear. The country has problems, yes. But it is not standing at a pawn shop counter, bargaining away the kitchen silverware for pocket change.

    If divestment must happen, then let it happen properly. At current market value. Through open and competitive bidding. Through a process capable of commanding both respect and optimal returns.

    Not through the backdoor. Not at a discount. Not with the ghosts of a failed deal still rattling their chains.

    The responsible path is clear and urgent.

    Conclusively close every remnant of the previous compromised process. Leave no loose ends. No ambiguity. No door slightly ajar for a second resurrection.

    Commission a fresh, independent valuation that reflects today’s operational strength and market conditions. Not last year’s numbers. Not the numbers that favour a particular outcome. The numbers that reflect what the asset is actually worth.

    Institute a new, transparent, and competitive process with clear rules and proper stakeholder alignment. Let everyone see how the game is played. Let the best bid win.

    Place national interest and long-term value preservation above administrative convenience. That last one is the hardest. It always is.

    Anything less simply confirms a damaging suspicion. The suspicion that due process in Nigeria is a flexible concept. Rigid for the weak. Remarkably accommodating for the well-connected.

    That suspicion has cost the country dearly in the past. It will cost it again if left unchecked.

    Professor Okey Ikechukwu has sounded the necessary alarm. The authorities would do well to heed it before another avoidable controversy further erodes confidence in how we manage assets that ultimately belong to all Nigerians.

    Because this is no longer just about one pipeline. It is about whether the phrases “due process,” “national interest,” and “value for money” still carry any real weight when serious strategic assets are on the table. Or whether they have become decorative phrases, rolled out for press statements and abandoned when the real decisions are made.

    In the stewardship of critical infrastructure, failed processes should not enjoy endless resurrections. Especially not at the expense of the nation.

    So, no more second chances. Not for this pipeline. And certainly not for the dangerous precedent it risks entrenching. It is time to reset the Amukpe-Escravos Pipeline sale process.

    ■ Mohammed Abubakar, an energy sector analyst, writes from Abuja.

    OPINION: Time To Reset Amukpe-Escravos Pipeline Sale Process, is first published on The Whistler Newspaper