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Don advocates better citizens’ welfare to tackle insecurity

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A Professor of Political Science, Adele Jinadu, has urged governments in Nigeria to focus on youth empowerment and improved citizens’ welfare to tackle the root causes of insecurity.

Jinadu spoke on Sunday at the First Anniversary Lecture of The Apex Club House of Lagos, under the theme “Nigeria’s Security Challenges and the Way Forward,” held at the Nigerian Air Force Officers’ Mess, Kofo Abayomi Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.

Jinadu outlined key steps to reverse the security crisis, noting that Nigeria must redefine national security around human welfare, justice, and inclusive governance.

He said, “The country must invest massively in social protection, education, health, and youth development; rebuild trust between state and citizens through fairness and constitutional reforms; reform policing, enhance accountability, strengthen local conflict-resolution systems, and address structural inequalities fueling agitation and violent extremism.”

Jinadu said Nigeria’s failure to grasp the real meaning of security had led to decades of misguided policies, escalating violence, and the weakening of national cohesion.

The professor and Non-Resident Senior Fellow at the Centre for Democracy and Development, Abuja, said Nigeria’s security problems are rooted in the country’s distorted political foundations, poor governance culture, deep inequality, and structural injustices that have fueled citizen frustration and violent resistance across regions.

Jinadu said Nigeria had, for decades, equated security with regime preservation and coercive force, rather than the welfare and protection of citizens.

He noted that insecurity in Nigeria is not merely about terrorism, banditry, or crime but a product of the state’s inability to guarantee human security, which he described as the protection of people from chronic threats such as poverty, unemployment, marginalisation, and social injustice.

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Drawing from the work of Indian economist and philosopher Amartya Sen, Jinadu stressed that development is freedom, and that Nigeria must expand access to political, economic, and social freedoms if it seeks lasting stability.

The professor traced the roots of insecurity to Nigeria’s constitutional evolution from the 1954 Lyttleton Constitution to post-independence arrangements. He stressed that structural imbalances, ethnic mistrust, and the manipulation of political power had produced cycles of resentment, secessionist agitations, militia violence, and inter-group distrust.

According to him, Nigeria’s post-1970s democratic experiments and military interregnums worsened tensions, weakening state institutions and entrenching a political culture where “a few privileged actors capture resources while the masses remain excluded.”

He linked the rise of terrorism, banditry, kidnapping, political assassinations, armed herder-farmer clashes, and communal conflicts to structural deficiencies.

He described human security as the non-negotiable foundation for economic growth, political stability, and national unity.

At the event, the Chairman, Board of Trustees of The Apex Club House, Air Chief Marshal Oluseyi Petinrin (retd.), in his remarks, described the lecture as timely, noting that no nation can progress without first securing its people.

Petinrin, a former Chief of Defence Staff, said Nigeria’s security agencies must be better equipped—not just with weapons but with intelligence, training, and collaboration with communities.

He urged political leaders to implement expert recommendations rather than repeatedly convene conferences while insecurity worsens.

During the panel session that followed, which featured Prof. Samuel Oni, Dr. John Abolurin, and Dr. Tony Ofoyetan, the discussants highlighted the need to decentralise the security architecture, improve inter-agency coordination, invest in data-based intelligence, and confront socio-economic inequalities driving violence.

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They also warned that unless Nigeria adopts a holistic, citizen-centered approach to security, the cycle of criminality, ethnic conflict, separatist tensions, and terrorism could intensify.

Insecurity in Nigeria has ranged from terrorism, banditry, and kidnapping to communal clashes.

Violence in the North-East, North-West, and Middle Belt in particular has, over the decades, left many dead, displaced thousands, and affected livelihoods even amid government efforts to tackle the menace.

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Three bodies recovered, five rescued as bus plunges into Oyo river

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The Oyo State Fire Services Agency has recovered three bodies and rescued five persons after a commercial bus plunged into the Ariyo River along Amunloko Road in Ona-Ara Local Government Area of the state on Wednesday.

The incident was confirmed in a statement issued on Thursday in Ibadan, the state capital, by the Special Adviser to Governor Seyi Makinde on Fire Services and Chairman of the agency, Moroof Akinwande.

Akinwande said the agency received a distress call at about 3:38 pm through a resident, Fadeke Yusuf, reporting that a vehicle had fallen into the river in the area.

According to him, firefighters were immediately deployed to the scene to carry out rescue operations.

He explained that upon arrival, the rescue team discovered that a Suzuki commercial bus with number plate OSUN LEW 484 XA, carrying eight passengers, had lost control and plunged into the river.

Five occupants were rescued alive and rushed to Ona-Ara Private Hospital in the Jegede area for treatment, while three others were recovered dead.

The remains of the deceased were handed over to a team of policemen from the Ogbere Divisional Headquarters led by ASP Aishat Ibrahim.

Akinwande attributed the accident to reckless driving.

He added that officials of the Oyo State Road Traffic Management Authority from the Ona-Ara Division and the Chairman of Ona-Ara Local Government, Glorious Temitope, were present during the rescue operation.

The fire service boss urged motorists to drive with caution and adhere strictly to road safety rules to prevent avoidable accidents.

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UN urges stronger action to end violence against women, girls

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UN Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, has warned that violence against women and girls continues to be fuelled by war, militarisation and entrenched inequality, urging governments to move beyond condemnation and take decisive action.

Speaking at a high-level meeting marking five years of the UN Group of Friends for the Elimination of Violence against Women and Girls, she said conflicts around the world are exposing women and girls to severe and lasting harm.

The UN deputy chief spoke on the sidelines of the ongoing 70th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women at UN Headquarters in New York on Thursday.

CSW is the United Nations’ principal global body dedicated to promoting gender equality and the rights and empowerment of women.

Established in 1946 by the UN Economic and Social Council, the Commission plays a central role in setting global standards on women’s rights and reviewing progress on gender equality

According to the UN, more than 4,500 cases of conflict-related sexual violence were verified in 2024, although the true number is likely far higher due to stigma, fear and collapsed reporting systems.

The deputy secretary-general pointed to alarming patterns in several crises. In Sudan, UN experts have reported widespread sexual violence and attacks on women human rights defenders.

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a child has been reported raped every half hour, while in Haiti, sexual violence against children surged dramatically in recent years.

Mohammed stressed that women must be central to peace processes and political decision-making, warning that lasting peace cannot be achieved while women and girls remain excluded and unprotected.

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In a related development, UN human rights chief Volker Türk said he was appalled by the devastating impact on civilians of increasing drone attacks in Sudan, amid reports that more than 200 civilians have been killed by drones since March 4 alone, in the Kordofan region and White Nile state.

“It is deeply troubling that despite multiple reminders, warnings and appeals, parties to the conflict continue to use increasingly powerful drones to deploy explosive weapons with wide-area impacts in populated areas,”  the High Commissioner said.

He renewed his call for both sides in the brutal civil conflict between rival militaries to fully abide by international law, “particularly the clear prohibition on directing attacks against civilians and civilian objects and infrastructure, and against any form of indiscriminate attacks.”

In West Kordofan, at least 152 civilians have reportedly been killed by Sudanese army drone strikes, including at least 50 when a market and a hospital were hit.

Attacks on two separate markets in Abu Zabad and Wad Banda on  March 7 left at least 40 civilians dead, and a lorry carrying civilians was struck allegedly by a SAF drone on 10 March, reportedly killing at least 50 civilians.

In South Kordofan, at least 39 civilians were reportedly killed, including 14 in the state capital Dilling, in heavy artillery shelling by the Rapid Support Forces and allied SPLM-North between 4 and 5 March.

Many homes, schools, markets and health facilities were damaged or destroyed in the attacks, compounding the impacts on civilians and local communities.

The High Commissioner also expressed alarm at the recent expansion of the conflict to White Nile state, which has come under heavy attack by RSF militia drone strikes since 4 March. A secondary school and a health clinic in Shukeiri village were hit on 11 March, reportedly killing at least 17 civilians, one of them a health worker.

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“It will soon be three full years since the senseless conflict in Sudan began, devastating millions of lives and livelihoods. Yet the violence, fueled by these new technologies of war, simply keeps spreading,” Türk said.

The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the 70th session of the Commission on the Status of Women, which opens on Monday, will end on March 19.

Representatives of Member States,  UN entities, and ECOSOC-accredited non-governmental organisations from all regions of the world, including Nigeria, are attending the session.

The priority theme of the session will be ensuring and strengthening access to justice for all women and girls, including by promoting inclusive and equitable legal systems, eliminating discriminatory laws, policies, and practices, and addressing structural barriers.

NAN

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Trump says Iran’s new supreme leader alive but ‘damaged’

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President Donald Trump said that he thinks new Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, whose father, the former supreme leader, was killed ​on the first day of the US and Israel’s war on Iran, is alive but “damaged.”

Khamenei has not been seen ⁠by Iranians since his selection on Sunday by a clerical ​assembly, and his first comments were read out by a television ​presenter on Thursday.

“I think he probably is (alive). I ​think he is damaged, but I think he’s probably alive in some form, ‌you ⁠know,” Trump said in an interview on Fox News’ “The Brian Kilmeade Show.”

His remarks were published by Fox News late on Thursday.

In Khamenei’s first comments, he vowed to keep the Strait of ​Hormuz shut and ​called on ⁠neighboring countries to close US bases on their territory or risk Iran targeting them.

The US and ​Israel began attacks on Iran on Feb. 28. ​

Iran ⁠has responded with its own strikes on Israel and Gulf countries with US bases.

As the war approached the two-week mark, having ⁠killed thousands ​and shaken financial markets, the leaders ​of Iran, Israel and the United States all voiced defiance and have vowed to ​fight on.

Reuters/NAN

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