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As North’s religionists fritter away Tinubu’s goodwill

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This piece is six months late. Way back, I had planned to use it to warn a section of religionists of northern extraction not to fritter the fantastic opportunity they had under President Bola Tinubu. He had shown tremendous goodwill towards this section of religionists, doing his best to make them feel at ease against the backdrop of the Muslim-Muslim ticket, which they initially complained about. My decision to warn them was predicated on the activities of some among them. They go to foreign lands to demarket the President, demarket his administration, and demarket Nigeria with its more than 200 million people.

My plan to warn was also predicated on my observation that their drive to get sanctions re-imposed on Nigeria over what they tagged genocide of people of one religion would one day hit some raw nerves in the Tinubu administration. The president’s officials might get exasperated and change their attitude towards this section of religionists for demarketing their superior. And the President, too, might take a dislike to the activities of such people and turn his back. A similar scenario consisting of wild accusations leveled against the state government over insecurity occurred under Malam Nasir El-Rufai, the immediate past governor of Kaduna State. Such wild accusations were the actual origin of the nature of his administration’s relationship with a section of Kaduna State.

While I was waiting for the opportunity to do a piece on this matter, the President made a statement on insecurity, which some had tagged religious persecution. In the course of his visit to Imo State recently, he said, “They lie all over the place that we have religious persecution. Our Muslim brothers and sisters, our Christian brothers and sisters are united. No religious persecution in Nigeria, it is a lie from the pit of hell.” I imagine “they” in his comment refers to foreigners who shout religious persecution, or Nigerians who globetrot to sell genocide tag to foreigners. From the President’s choice of words, I concluded that the demarketing campaign was getting to exasperate him. At this rate, he may change his mind on how he treats this section of North’s religionists, who are making his task more difficult than it already is.

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Without doubt, the President had superior information on what was going on, particularly in the North-Central zone. Locals know some things, but officers in the intelligence agencies know more, and they report to the President. I guessed it was the reason the President issued the statement he did just before he travelled to Benue State the last time. After another round of violent attacks, he said locals should reconcile their differences and give peace a chance. The Secretary to the Federal Government, George Akume, an indigene of Benue, said a similar thing at the time. It was because they had information regarding the real perpetrators, or their proxies, in that particular attack. Nonetheless, the President was told during his Benue visit that every attack that had ever happened there was an act of genocide. Everything was genocide in a situation where I had written for 10 years about attacks between rival tribes of the same religion in Benue State. The President didn’t argue with anyone on that occasion because he knew what he knew. But this ongoing effort to demarket him and his government to foreign governments is another matter. No leader would fail to find it annoying in the long run, especially now that the US says it’s sanctioning Nigeria.

Since June 2023, I concluded that if the President and the First Lady, Senator Oluremi, previously believed narratives about persecution of only members of one religion before they took office, intelligence reports that they subsequently saw convinced them otherwise. Now, the President knew who did what, what led to it, where the arms came from, and how everything was often swept under the “suspected Fulani herdsmen” narrative prevalent in the media. While he was in Benue State, the President said he expected the army to have arrested perpetrators of the attacks. Later, we saw the names of those who facilitated weapons for the attackers. They were mostly locals, people of the predominant religion in Benue State.

While I was explaining the complex nature of insecurity in the North in the course of the past 10 years, I never doubted in my mind that a time would come when the truth of the claim about religious persecution would be made known. Now, many in government who must have frowned at my position in those years are saying something different. Journalists and others who had been silent are now speaking up when they hear of US sanctions.  I’m surprised any Nigerian would know of attacks in the north-east, north-west, and north-central, yet believed the narrative that only people of one religion were being targeted. Many educated fellows in the south who repeated the false narrative that only herders were responsible for all the insecurity in Nigeria shocked me, and I did mention some of them on this page in the past. I think this is predicated on our general disposition to reach conclusions before we see all the facts, the tendency for selective amnesia, selective empathy, as well as blind religious sentiments that drive many.

I think the President has done so much for a section of religionists in the north, but he’s not been appreciated. This is seen in the manner some rubbish his government to the outside world. Worse, there’s a lack of awareness on the part of the religionists involved that they may be squandering the goodwill they enjoy with the President. As a result, this administration might complete in 2031, and these religionists might still find themselves in the same spot regarding the issues that matter to them. Meanwhile, this is the time they should work closely with the President and his top officials to get a few things on their list done. Like other Nigerians they have an agenda, they should have focused on the agenda under this willing President. Instead, they expend time persuading foreigners to buy the genocide tag, which is what they called insecurity. How this provides practical solutions to problems in their communities remains a question no one is answering.

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One of the earliest things the president consciously did for this section of North’s religionists was to appoint one of them as Chief of Defence Staff. That he’s now been removed is the reason I state that this piece is six months late.

I wish I had made the point that I make here while he was still in office. For the former CDS did his best to attend to issues which mattered to his people. And I had planned to ask his people to make the most of his stay in that position while he was there. In Kaduna State, where the outgone CDS came from, fewer attacks were reported in the troubled parts. It was because he paid that area more attention. I had wanted to urge traditional and religious leaders here to devise approaches that would guarantee permanent peace. At the same time, they had a CDS who was willing to assist them to the maximum. Instead, while he was in office, some focused on talking to the US Congress. Now, their own is no longer in the saddle.

The next danger is that with the manner some refuse to sit and find local solutions, the two terms of the President might pass, and this section of North’s religionists wouldn’t consolidate on the gains made in their areas under the current administration. Many of them still don’t get the point that insecurity is local, there’s no general solution, and each area in each state has to identify and deal with the sources of its own problem. They’ve also not accepted the fact that local government councils need all the funds coming from the FG to fight insecurity effectively.

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As such, no state governor in troubled northern states should hold on to the funds belonging to LGAs. In the President, there’s a willing leader who could assist them to achieve this. If LGAs had all their funds, they could utilise them to provide localised security surveillance, which the FG’s army and police could never provide sustainably. Instead of people here to advocate these things and work on them, their members globetrot to demarket Nigeria, after which they regularly call on the FG’s soldiers to secure them and their farmlands from destructive elements. I hope they realise soon that they’re about to fritter away a lifetime opportunity they have under President Tinubu.

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Senate names new minority whip as two more senators defect to APC

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The Senate on Wednesday appointed Senator Tony Nwoye as the new Minority Whip, following a fresh wave of defections that has further boosted the numerical strength of the All Progressives Congress in the upper chamber.

Nwoye, who represents Anambra North Senatorial District, was unanimously selected by the Senate minority caucus to fill the vacancy created by the exit of his predecessor.

His emergence comes on the heels of the defection of former Minority Whip, Senator Osita Ngwu, from the Peoples Democratic Party to the APC on Wednesday, one of several high-profile crossovers that altered the balance within the opposition ranks.

In a letter read on the floor by Senate President Godswill Akpabio, Ngwu said his decision was driven by the need to align with Enugu State Governor, Peter Mbah and President Bola Tinubu.

He also described the APC as the most stable political platform in the country.

Nwoye was elected into the Senate in 2023 on the platform of the Labour Party before defecting to the African Democratic Congress in late 2025, positioning him within the opposition bloc prior to his new leadership role.

The reshuffle in minority leadership came amid a broader pattern of defections that has steadily eroded the strength of opposition parties in the Senate since the inauguration of the 10th National Assembly.

In a related development, Senator Anthony Siyako Yaro, representing Gombe South, also announced his defection from the PDP to the APC, citing internal crises within the opposition party.

Similarly, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Accounts, Senator Aliyu Wadada, formally announced his defection from the Social Democratic Party to the APC.

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Wadada, who has also been endorsed as the APC consensus governorship candidate for Nasarawa State ahead of the 2027 elections, said he had previously aligned with the ruling party but completed the formal procedures of his defection on Wednesday.

Reacting to the developments, Senator Adams Oshiomhole commended the lawmakers, describing their defections as voluntary and consistent with constitutional provisions.

He said the increasing movement of legislators into the APC reflects growing confidence in the party’s leadership and the administration of President Tinubu.

With the latest defections, the APC’s strength in the Senate has risen to 91 lawmakers—further consolidating its dominance and tightening its grip on legislative proceedings as political realignments gather pace ahead of the 2027 general elections.

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Lagos clarifies sanitation modalities, warns defaulters ahead of April 25

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The Lagos State Government has provided further details on the reintroduced monthly environmental sanitation exercise, set to resume on Saturday, April 25, 2026, with movement restrictions and enforcement measures in place.

In a statement on Wednesday, the Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Tokunbo Wahab, said, “The exercise will hold every last Saturday of the month between the hours of 6:30 am and 8:30 am.

During this period, there will be controlled movement across the state to allow residents to carry out thorough cleaning of their homes, surroundings and drainage frontages.”

He stated that enforcement teams comprising officials of the ministry, Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency, Kick Against Indiscipline, Lagos Waste Management Authority, and local government sanitation inspectors would “conduct physical inspections during and after the sanitation window to ensure compliance,” warning that “defaulters will be sanctioned in accordance with the Lagos State Environmental Management and Protection Law of 2017.”

Wahab also stated, “LAWMA intervention trucks will go around to cart away bagged wastes generated during the exercise,” noting that “there will be rewards for the cleanest Local Government Area, Local Council Development Area, and the cleanest street as part of efforts to encourage healthy competition and community participation.”

He urged residents to cooperate with the initiative, saying, “We urge all residents to take ownership of this exercise and join hands with the government in building a cleaner, safer and more sustainable Lagos.”

The clarification follows the symbolic flag-off of the exercise along the Mushin–Agege Motor Road corridor on March 14, ahead of its full implementation later this month.

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The state government had earlier announced in March that the sanitation exercise would resume nearly a decade after it was suspended in November 2016 following a legal pronouncement restricting movement during the programme.

While some residents have welcomed the move, saying it could curb indiscriminate waste disposal and reduce flooding, others have raised concerns about enforcement, warning that movement restrictions could be abused and calling for sustained public education on proper waste management.

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Court remands suspected coup plotters in DSS custody

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The Federal High Court in Abuja on Wednesday ordered the remand of six defendants in the custody of the Department of State Services after they were arraigned on a 13-count charge bordering on alleged terrorism.

At the sitting, which commenced at about 1:46pm, the Attorney-General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi (SAN), informed the court that the charge was ready and sought leave to have it read to the defendants.

Proceedings were briefly stalled after the third defendant informed the court that his counsel was indisposed, while counsel to the sixth defendant said his client understood only Arabic and Hausa, prompting the court to stand down the matter to secure an interpreter.

When the court reconvened at about 2:18 pm, all six defendants took their pleas and denied the allegations, pleading not guilty to the 13 counts.

Following the arraignment, the prosecution applied for their remand in DSS custody and urged the court to grant an accelerated hearing of the case, a request that was not opposed by most defence counsel, although the first defendant’s lawyer indicated an intention to file a bail application.

Ruling, the trial judge ordered an accelerated hearing, directed that the defendants be remanded in DSS custody with access to their lawyers, and adjourned the matter till April 27, 2026, for commencement of trial.

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