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PDP consensus deal shatters as Lamido rejects Turaki as chairman

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Barely weeks to its national convention, fresh cracks have emerged in the Peoples Democratic Party as former Jigawa State Governor, Sule Lamido, rejected the endorsement of Tanimu Turaki (SAN) as the party’s consensus candidate for National Chairman.

The disagreement has again thrown the opposition party into fresh tension and set the stage for a courtroom battle, even as Turaki’s camp pushes ahead with its campaign.

This comes as the party suspended the screening of aspirants for its 2025 Elective National Convention, earlier scheduled for Tuesday (today), citing unforeseen circumstances.

The decision — coming less than a month before the much-anticipated convention — has raised concerns within the party and among political observers about possible internal challenges and the implications for the opposition’s preparations.

In a statement on Monday, Chairman of the National Convention Organising Committee and Governor of Adamawa State, Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri, announced the postponement, saying a new date would be communicated soon.

“The National Convention Organising Committee (NCOC) of our great party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has put on hold the screening of aspirants for the 2025 Elective National Convention, earlier scheduled for Tuesday, October 28, 2025, due to unforeseen circumstances,” the statement read.

The committee expressed regret over the delay and appealed for understanding among aspirants and members while efforts continue to address the issues that prompted the postponement.

“A new date will be communicated once fixed. The NCOC regrets any inconvenience caused by the postponement. All aspirants and members of our party should note the foregoing and be guided accordingly,” it added.

Fintiri assured that the committee remains committed to ensuring a transparent and credible process leading to the convention.

“The NCOC remains focused on delivering a credible, hitch-free 2025 Elective National Convention on Saturday, 15th to Sunday, 16th November, 2025, in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital,” he stated.

The PDP’s 2025 Elective National Convention — billed to hold in Ibadan — is expected to draw top party leaders, governors, and stakeholders from across the country as the opposition party seeks to reorganise its national leadership ahead of the 2027 general elections.

On Monday, former Jigawa State Governor and PDP chieftain Lamido threatened to take legal action against the party if he was not granted access to purchase nomination forms ahead of the forthcoming national convention scheduled for November 15 and 16 in Ibadan, Oyo State.

Lamido, while speaking with journalists in Abuja after his attempt to obtain the PDP National Chairman nomination form proved unsuccessful, disclosed that both the party’s National Secretary, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, and the National Organising Secretary, Umaru Bature, were not involved in the matter.

In their brief remarks, Anyanwu and Bature disclosed that as party officials, they have not come across any nomination forms since the commencement of preparations for the upcoming convention.

However, North’s consensus candidate for the PDP National Chairman and former Minister of Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs, Turaki, formally submitted his nomination form, pledging to entrench fairness, discipline, and stability within the party if elected at the forthcoming national convention.

During its 102nd National Executive Committee meeting held on August 25 in Abuja, the PDP agreed to zone its 2027 presidential ticket to the South while allocating the position of National Chairman to the North.

Following this decision, northern leaders met over the weekend and further micro-zoned the chairmanship position to the North-West.

Subsequently, northern PDP governors, led by Adamawa State Governor, Ahmadu Fintiri, along with other party leaders, endorsed Turaki as the consensus candidate for National Chairman from the North.

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However, some northern stakeholders reportedly loyal to Lamido and led by the party’s National Organising Secretary, Umar Bature, expressed dissatisfaction, alleging that they were not consulted before the endorsement.

In a separate development, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, is reportedly supporting his ally and former Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom, for the same position.

Lamido, who arrived at the secretariat with his supporters shortly after 11 am, said he was surprised to find most offices locked, with no officials available to attend to him.

Although the National Convention Organising Committee, chaired by Adamawa State Governor Ahmadu Fintiri, is currently operating from the PDP’s annexe office at Legacy House, Maitama, Lamido insisted that the forms should have been made available at the party headquarters as required by its constitution.

He said, “Well, let me be very clear. You see, the PDP is a family of wonderful Nigerians who share a similar commitment to Nigeria and democracy. So, coming here is like coming home to the family. There’s nothing new about it.

“Secondly, because we are now going into a convention, and by the party constitution, the sale of forms is normally at the party headquarters, I came here to purchase my own form.

“Well, I went to the office of the National Organising Secretary, which is normally the office where the forms are sold, and the office was locked. I think it was officially locked, you know, because of his own position. So, I met him with the Secretary of the party, Senator Samuel Anyanwu.

“I said, ‘Look, I’m here to buy the form.’ Both of them said they had no idea where the forms were — not even how they were printed or the kind of forms they were. They had no idea where they were being sold. So, I found it a little bit weird that the custodian of the system, who is the National Organising Secretary, was also being locked out. So, they may not be able to go into the office.”

Lamido said he was unaware of any such announcement, describing the matter as a family affair without controversy or division.

He explained that he went to Wadata Plaza based on tradition, but since the process is now handled by the Convention Committee led by Governor Fintiri, he may have to go to Adamawa to get the form.

He added, “No, the closing date for the sale of forms has been extended. In any case, all decisions of the party must be made by the NEC. You know, any change of date or time must be approved by the NEC. But somehow, I think the entire function of the NEC has been taken over by individuals. Therefore, we’ll find out how it’s going to work out.

“I am an optimist. You know, it’s a family thing. We’ll never fight, no matter what, because we want to win the election. If we fight, we’ll lose. You know, our opponents are outside, the APC and their evil system. APC, not PDP. So, if you don’t have an organised house with a very, very organised force, how do you fight it out?

“That is why I am trying to buy the form. And if I don’t get the form, I will go to court simply. The PDP should be able to organise its own house, to run the party based on its policies, doing the right thing at all times. The only way we can win is by having a party that is disciplined. If the party is not organised, if we don’t follow our own constitution and procedures, how do we win elections?”

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Lamido stated his primary goal is to see the PDP rebuilt into a stable and united family capable of staying focused on the larger mission of rescuing Nigeria and Nigerians from the APC.

The PDP chieftain rejected the governors’ consensus arrangement, stating that it was reached without any form of consultation.

Lamido stated, “If there are consultations, there can be consensus. But if there are no consultations, then we are not united on board. I mean, the zone which I come from has never met.

“We were supposed to meet on Wednesday, and I think the Governor of Zamfara booked the hall at the Hilton for us from the North West to meet, to be able to come out with that kind of understanding. But then, to pre-empt our meeting, they fixed a meeting for Tuesday. So, we never met. The zone never met. That’s the problem.”

Earlier, while receiving former Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido at the PDP National Secretariat, the party’s National Secretary, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, denied knowledge of the whereabouts of the nomination forms and vowed to ensure that the alleged forgery of his signature was thoroughly investigated.

He stated, “On the issue of forgery, I have established that it is under investigation, and so I don’t want to comment on that. I don’t want to go into that because the issue of forgery is not something that can be swept under the carpet. But I can tell you, I will get to the end of it.”

Speaking on preparations for the convention, Anyanwu confirmed his intention to contest for election but lamented that neither he nor other top officials had seen the nomination forms.

“On the convention, I have the intention to run for the election, but we don’t know where the forms are. We have agreed on the zoning arrangement that the positions in the South should remain in the South and those in the North should remain in the North. So, there is no issue regarding micro-zoning that they are talking about.

“Usually, how it is done in a political party, when I wanted to contest as Secretary, I printed posters and went from state to state to canvass for votes. So, when you buy a form, you move to the states and canvass for delegates to vote for you. I have never seen this kind of arrangement before, where even the National Secretary of the party has not seen the colour of the form — whether it is white, red, or black.”

In his brief remarks, the National Organising Secretary, Bature, corroborated Anyanwu’s account, saying he too had not seen the forms since the process began.

“I have not seen the forms since the process started, even as the Organising Secretary of the party,” Bature said. “I learned that Governor Fintiri’s committee is in charge.”

However, in a separate development, a PDP chieftain and ally of Turaki, Umar Sani, presented to journalists an acknowledgement slip confirming the submission of Turaki’s nomination forms for the position of National Chairman at the National Convention Organising Committee Headquarters, Legacy House, Abuja.

The development came just hours after Lamido claimed he was denied access to purchase the forms.

Sani, a North-West party leader and key member of Turaki’s camp, dismissed claims that Turaki’s emergence as the North’s consensus candidate lacked consultation, insisting that all stakeholders were duly carried along.

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He stated, “Today, being the 27th of October, 2025 — the final day for the submission of nomination forms — Kabiru Tanimu Turaki, SAN, has fulfilled all righteousness and has duly submitted the nomination forms and all other required documents. These forms have been duly acknowledged, a copy of which is here for you to see. So what we are awaiting now is for the party to invite Kabiru Tanimu Turaki for screening.

“First, let me say this: today is not a day for selling forms. Today is a day for the submission of forms. So if Sule Lamido went to Wadata Plaza looking for forms, he went to the wrong place, because the party has stipulated which day you are supposed to go and buy forms and which day you are supposed to submit them. So, we have just submitted ours.

“Also, there is a controversy between the decision of the governors and some stakeholders who endorsed Turaki as the consensus candidate and some other members from the same region who said they were never consulted and therefore do not agree with Turaki’s endorsement.

“Consultations have been done because there was a meeting. It was not something that was announced. A meeting was held with all the relevant stakeholders in all the states in the North, adequately represented. The Governor of Zamfara State was there, and the Governor of Adamawa State, Fintiri, was there. I’m sure most of you know the meeting, so I don’t have to spoon-feed you with the information. And in that meeting, even the Governor of Taraba, who was not there, was represented by a Senator. So they were all there, and the candidates were all there.”

Sani stated that the former minister had no fear of any contender, stressing that other aspirants who obtained nomination forms were equally entitled to exercise their rights within the party.

He said, “Well, let me start by telling you that Kabiru Tanimu Turaki is not afraid of anybody. He has not changed from the PDP. He knows the internal workings of the PDP. So, for anybody to believe that he is afraid of anybody, he is not afraid of anybody.

“He has been in this party for a very long time. He has never aspired to become a House of Representatives member, a Senator, or a Governor — only that he once aspired to become President. And even during that presidential bid, when he was defeated at the primaries in Port Harcourt, he still served as the Director of Administration and Finance of the Presidential Campaign Council. So, he is very much aware that he has a responsibility.

“He has always been in the party and has always made meaningful contributions where needed — legally, financially, and otherwise. Now, if he is entrusted with the responsibility of leading the party, he will put the PDP on a sound footing because he is neutral.

“This is what the governors are talking about. He is neither with Wike nor the Governors’ Forum. Turaki SAN will be fair to all; he will stabilise the party and ensure discipline. He is an independent-minded person, and we believe he will bring his wealth of experience, gathered over the years as both a legal practitioner and a former Minister of Special Duties — a position that demands versatility and balance in handling diverse responsibilities.”

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Opposition seeks credible polls as INEC releases timetable ahead of 2027

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Nigeria’s major opposition parties have expressed readiness for the 2027 general elections following the release of the timetable by the Independent National Electoral Commission, while demanding credible and transparent polls.

The Peoples Democratic Party, the New Nigeria Peoples Party and the African Democratic Congress said they were prepared to participate, but stressed that the integrity of the process would determine the legitimacy of the outcome.

According to INEC, the presidential and National Assembly elections will be held on February 20, 2027, while governorship and state Houses of Assembly elections are scheduled for March 6, 2027.

Campaigns for the presidential and National Assembly polls will run from November 18, 2026, to February 19, 2027. Governorship and state Assembly campaigns will begin on December 15, 2026, and end on March 5, 2027, 24 hours before the elections.

Political parties are expected to conduct primaries between July 1 and September 30, 2026, and submit their candidates’ lists between October 1 and October 31, 2026.

PDP declares readiness

The PDP National Caretaker Committee, aligned with the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, said the party was fully prepared for the elections.

In a statement, the committee’s National Publicity Secretary, Jungudo Mohammed, urged members and aspirants to remain focused, assuring them that internal disputes and pending litigations would be resolved ahead of the primaries window.

“The PDP is fully prepared to meet all constitutional and regulatory requirements within the stipulated timelines,” the statement read, while reaffirming the party’s commitment to offering what it described as credible leadership in 2027.

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Separately, the Tanimu Turaki-led National Working Committee of the PDP also declared readiness for the polls, provided INEC guarantees free, fair and credible elections.

Its National Publicity Secretary, Ini Ememobong, said, “Whenever INEC is ready for the elections, the PDP will be ready, provided it can guarantee free, fair and credible elections.”

NNPP faults election budget

The NNPP welcomed the timetable but urged INEC to use the intervening period to prepare for an election acceptable to Nigerians and the international community.

Speaking with Saturday PUNCH, the party’s spokesperson, Ladipo Johnson, expressed concern over the N873.778bn budgeted for the elections, describing it as excessive.

“What are they using that huge amount for? Are they building new mobile phone towers to transmit results? I don’t know what they budgeted N800bn for, but it sounds ridiculous,” he said.

ADC seeks real-time transmission

The ADC also welcomed the timetable but said the credibility of the elections would depend on transparent procedures, particularly the real-time electronic transmission of results.

In a statement, its National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, said while the early release of the timetable allows for proper planning, public confidence would rest on INEC’s commitment to transparency and technological integrity.

He urged the commission to clarify its readiness to adopt real-time transmission if legal amendments are enacted and called on the National Assembly to remove ambiguities in the Electoral Act.

“Nigerians have shown, time and again, that they are ready to defend the sanctity of their votes. What is now required is for the electoral umpire to match that civic vigilance with institutional clarity, operational transparency and administrative excellence,” he said.

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2027: Atiku, Fayose clash over Makinde’s Minna visit

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Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar on Thursday dismissed claims by former Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, over an alleged political deal involving Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State as “desperate” and “baseless.”

Fayose, however, threatened to expose details of the Minna meeting with former Head of State, Gen Ibrahim Babangida.

The reaction followed reports of a closed-door meeting between Atiku and Makinde at Babangida’s Minna residence, which sparked speculation about a possible 2027 political arrangement.

Following the meeting, Fayose claimed in a Wednesday statement that Makinde had offered to join the African Democratic Congress as Atiku’s 2027 running mate, promising N10bn to help the party get started and to deliver delegates to secure Atiku’s ADC presidential ticket.

Fayose concluded that the duo had fixed another meeting for Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to conclude negotiations.

Atiku, through his Senior Special Assistant on Public Communication, Phrank Shaibu, said he did not engage in any of the alleged horse-trading as alleged by Fayose.

He emphasised that no discussions took place regarding N10bn contributions or zoning arrangements.

“Our attention has been drawn to a reckless and malicious fabrication titled ‘Between Atiku and Makinde, Untold Story of What Happened in Minna Yesterday,’ attributed to one Peter Ayodele Fayose.

“Let it be stated clearly: the entire publication is a shameless concoction — a tissue of lies stitched together by a serial purveyor of political gossip whose relevance survives only on controversy, distortion, and cheap propaganda.

“At no time did former Vice President Atiku Abubakar engage in the imaginary horse-trading described in that laughable script.

“There were no negotiations over vice-presidential tickets. There were no discussions about N10bn contributions. There were no zoning manipulations. There were no delegate-delivery guarantees. And there is certainly no clandestine ‘Dubai meeting’ on any such agenda.”

The former vice president called on the public to dismiss the publication as completely unworthy of attention.

It continued, “The attempt to drag other political actors into this fabricated beer parlour tale does not elevate its credibility; it merely exposes the desperation behind it.

“His Excellency Atiku Abubakar’s political engagements are broad-based, principled, and national in scope — not the narrow, transactional theatrics invented in that publication.

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“The story is not insider information. It is insider fiction — manufactured to mislead, distract, and provoke.

“It is unfortunate that certain individuals, long deprived of credibility and political gravitas, now attempt to manufacture relevance by inventing tales around serious national figures. Falsehood may trend for a moment, but it collapses under the weight of truth.

“Atiku Abubakar does not transact politics in secrecy, bribery, or transactional desperation as mischievously and irresponsibly portrayed.

“He remains focused on principled engagement and national redemption — not backroom theatrics designed by attention-seekers.”

Late on Thursday, in a reply to Atiku’s reaction on his X account, Fayose promised more details if the former vice president did not retract the statement.

He said, “I saw the response of one Paul Ibe, one of the media aides to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, to my release on what transpired at his (Atiku’s) meeting in Minna, with Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State, and I can’t but be amused.

“However, because of my respect for Atiku, I will want to assume that he did not authorise the press statement, and I expect that after seeing it, he will, within 48 hours, cause a rebuttal to be issued on it.

“Should Atiku not publicly disown the statement within the next 48 hours, I will have no option but to spill more beans (the facilitators and executioners) of the Minna meeting, particularly what was said about Wike) and by then, I will be doing so without any atom of respect for him. Till then, we keep our gunpowder dry.”

The development comes as the All Progressives Congress and the Peoples Democratic Party in Oyo State traded accusations on Thursday over Makinde’s alleged deal with Atiku.

While the Oyo APC alleged that the meeting formed part of a “political contract” that could expose the state’s finances ahead of the next general election, the PDP insisted there was no such deal.

The APC, in a statement released by its Publicity Secretary, Olawale Sadare, in Ibadan, the state capital, alleged that a political contract between Makinde and Atiku would make the latter fleece the financial resources of the state in the buildup to the 2027 election cycle, saying the plans would be resisted at all costs.

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The APC regretted that both Atiku and Makinde could allow selfishness and desperation to becloud the pricking of their individual conscience and dance on the grave of the PDP, which they literally strangulated to death in 2022 and 2023.

The statement said, “Atiku Abubakar, on his part, is desperate to be on the ballot again in 2027 to enable him set the record of a man who contested presidential elections for the highest record of time in the whole world and possibly keep himself busy at an advanced age.

“Besides, the former vice president has a penchant for making some southern governors sponsor his ill-conceived presidential ambition with their state funds, just like he did in 2023.

“Another reality is that Atiku has found a good ground to punish Makinde for his sins of 2019 and 2023, but unfortunately, the naivety in the Oyo governor would not allow him to read between the lines.

“The details of the betrayal game which Makinde played with his new godfather in the last two general elections are known to most pundits, and the fact that the victim (Atiku) would never let go is crystal clear.

“So, the latest political romance involving the duo would end up a disaster with Makinde being at the risk of being the worst loser or victim.”

The party said with the available records of billions of naira, which Makinde has taken from the treasury of the government and wasted on financing the hitherto comatose PDP, the Pacesetter State could not afford to open its vault to somebody like Atiku again.

“We say no to the payment of a N10bn down payment by Makinde to make him Atiku’s running mate on the platform of the African Democratic Congress, even as it is evident that he wants to remain in power after the expiration of his two-term tenure as a governor.

“He shall be vehemently resisted this time,” the APC publicity secretary insisted.

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The state PDP Publicity Secretary, Michael Ogunsina, however, described the APC allegation as reckless and unfounded.

He explained that the PDP remained focused on governance and the continued development of its dear state.

Ogunsina said no amount of propaganda, panic, or politically motivated fiction could distract the party from delivering for the people.

“Oyo PDP strongly condemns the reckless and unfounded allegations by the state chapter of APC regarding a phantom plot to ‘hand over the state’s vault ahead of the 2027 elections’.

“It is hardly surprising that the Oyo APC continues to parade misinformation, especially when one of their loudest ‘information merchants’ is a former two-term Ekiti State governor who has reduced himself to a self-appointed political gossip distributor.

“When such a figure becomes the backbone of your intelligence gathering, confusion and cluelessness are inevitable.

“A party that relies on recycled bitterness and social media speculation as strategy cannot suddenly claim moral authority over the state’s finances.”

The party added, “Let it be stated clearly: Oyo is not anyone’s personal vault. Under Governor Makinde, the state’s resources are managed with transparency and accountability.

“Workers and pensioners are paid regularly, roads, schools, and health facilities are being upgraded across the state, including the recruitment of unemployed youths. These are tangible results that the people can see and verify.

“It is ironic that the same APC, under whose Federal Government Nigerians are battling crushing economic hardship, rising inflation and poverty, unstable electricity, and declining purchasing power, now pretends to be alarmed about Oyo’s finances.

“Charity, they say, begins at home. They should first fix the hardship their party has imposed on Nigerians before manufacturing imaginary scandals in Oyo.”

The party said it remained focused on governance and the continued development of the state, adding that no amount of propaganda, panic, or politically motivated fiction could distract it from delivering for the people.

“Oyo belongs to the people, not a rejected APC clinging to propaganda and recycled lies,” the PDP publicity secretary said.

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Tinubu To Sign Amended Electoral Act In February — Akpabio

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President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, on Tuesday, disclosed that President Bola Tinubu is expected to sign the amended Electoral Act into law by February, despite intensifying public outcry and nationwide protests over the controversial removal of the phrase “real-time” from clauses on electronic transmission of election results.

It was reports that Akpabio made the disclosure during Tuesday’s Senate plenary, while announcing an expansion of the Senate’s conference committee from nine to 12 members to align with the House of Representatives’ own delegation.

“We have raised our numbers from nine to twelve to match the figures from our colleagues in the House of Reps. We expect everything to be done in the next few days or in a week. The President is expected to sign this into law in February,” Akpabio stated.

The Senate President’s remarks come as protests under the banner of #OccupyNASS continued at the National Assembly Complex in Abuja, drawing civil society groups, opposition figures and human rights activists demanding electoral transparency.

Among those at the protest was Omoyele Sowore, former presidential candidate and leader of the African Action Congress (AAC), who accused the political elite of pushing regressive laws that undermine electoral credibility.

“This is an exposition that already existed. It is not new. That is why it is a surprise to everyone that this provision was yanked away from the Electoral Act that Akpabio and his friends are trying to put in place,” Sowore said.

He warned that Nigeria’s political class fears transparent processes that would expose their unpopularity.

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“These people cannot win in free and fair elections. But the people have a duty to demand processes that guarantee free, legal and transparent elections,” he added.

‘I Prefer Electronic Voting, Not Just Transmission’ — Sowore

While public concern has centred on the removal of “real-time” electronic transmission, Sowore said the focus should be expanded to electronic voting, insisting that election integrity begins at the point of voting, not just result collation.

He said, “My preference is not even electronic transmission of results, because what gets transmitted at the end of the day is what has already been manipulated. I am more interested in electronic voting.

“Whatever people think in their minds that can protect the integrity of their votes, we must defend and support it.”

Sowore also criticised the heavy security deployment at the protest venue, describing it as intimidation against citizens exercising constitutional rights.

He further stated, “It is their job to protect the country, not to attack peaceful protesters. I have warned them that if they try that, they are starting something they cannot predict how it will end.”

He noted the growing frustration among Nigerians, urging security forces to act professionally and avoid escalating tensions.

“Nigerians are very angry at this time, but security agents have a duty to maintain law and order, nothing more, nothing less,” he said.

Reaffirming his revolutionary stance, Sowore rejected gradual reforms, arguing that Nigeria’s problems demand sweeping political change.

Sowore added, “I’m not for baby steps. I’m a revolutionary. Nothing other than revolution will solve this problem. That has always been my position.”

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He described the protest at the National Assembly as a reflection of rising political consciousness among Nigerians.

He stated, “When we arrived here, you could tell this place was filled with silent revolutionaries. The giants in them began to awaken when they saw that we were together.”

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