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Beyond politics: Fubara’s reignition of governance, Rivers’ development drive

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Government, in political theory and practical governance, is the central instrument through which authority is exercised, laws are enacted, resources are distributed, and collective aspirations are pursued. Beyond the outdated notion of government as a mere custodian of law and order, modern political thought is unequivocal: government is a development agent-a deliberate vehicle for social transformation, economic progress, and human advancement.

Measured by this standard, the true worth of government is not found in the thickness of its law books or the size of its bureaucracy, but in its capacity to improve the material and moral conditions of the people. Government, therefore, must plan, regulate, provide and coordinate development, mobilising resources, building infrastructure, investing in human capital, and creating institutions that allow society to thrive.

Development itself transcends economic growth. It speaks to access to education, healthcare, employment, justice, security and dignity. In this context, development is not charity, nor an optional policy preference; it is a moral and constitutional obligation of the state.

Nigeria’s Constitution makes this duty explicit. Section 14(2)(b) of the 1999 Constitution declares that “the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.” This provision elevates development from political rhetoric to binding responsibility. Any government that fails to deliver security, infrastructure, healthcare, education and economic opportunity has abdicated its most fundamental mandate.

It is on this constitutional and moral foundation that the Rivers State Government under Sir Siminalayi Fubara has anchored its governance philosophy since assuming office, treating development not as a slogan, but as a duty.

As a development-driven administration, the Fubara government understands that the purpose of power is service; to secure lives, promote welfare, and drive sustainable growth through equity, inclusion and deliberate upliftment of neglected communities.

Accordingly, between Wednesday, December 10 and Tuesday, December 23, 2025, Rivers State did not merely witness the inauguration and flag-off of projects. What unfolded was the emphatic reawakening of governance, a decisive return of purpose, momentum and constitutional order.

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It was a defining two-week stretch that muted cynicism, punctured propaganda, and sent an unmistakable message across the state and beyond: the Fubara administration is back, focused, firm, and fully committed to its development mandate.

This historic rollout of projects across the six local government areas of Ahoada-East, Ahoada-West, Ogba-Egbema-Ndoni, Ikwerre, Emohua, Obio-Akpor and Port Harcourt City marked the full restoration of purposeful governance after a brief disruption of democratic order. It also highlighted the timely, fatherly and stabilising intervention of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, whose actions restored calm, legality and constitutional governance in Rivers State.

With democracy steady once again, Fubara wasted no time in redirecting power to its rightful purpose, service to the people. In one sweeping development tour, the administration commissioned and flagged off strategic roads, housing, health and civil service welfare projects spanning urban and rural communities alike. These were not ceremonial optics; they were targeted investments designed to unlock economic potential, restore dignity and secure the future.

From the extension of the dualised Ahoada-Omoku Road, the Egbeda-Omerelu Link Road, Ikwerre-Igwuruta-Airport Internal Roads, to the bold Airport Bypass and Toll Gate Project, the administration demonstrated a clear understanding that roads are more than asphalt-they are arteries of commerce, security and unity.

Flagship housing initiatives, such as the Greater TAF City Housing Estate and the Permanent Secretaries’ Quarters in Elimgbu, reinforced a simple truth: decent shelter is foundational to productivity, integrity and social stability. Also, the commissioning of the Ahoada Zonal Hospital reaffirmed healthcare as a non-negotiable pillar of the administration’s agenda.

These tangible achievements arrived amid claims by detractors that state resources were being squandered and mismanaged without feasible development to showcase. Fubara’s response was neither defensive nor rhetorical. It was visible and undeniable; concrete, steel, bridges, housing units and hospital wards, proof that governance in Rivers State is delivering.

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At the inauguration of the 28.4-kilometre dualised Ahoada-Omoku Road in Obite, the governor reminded the people that the project fulfilled a campaign promise. Having completed the first phase under former Governor Nyesom Wike, he pledged to extend it to Omoku if elected alongside President Tinubu. That pledge, he declared, has now been honoured. Beyond politics, the road’s strategic value lies in boosting economic activity across the Orashi axis and strengthening security.

At the 12-kilometre Egbeda-Omerelu Link Road inauguration, Fubara laid bare his governing philosophy, “Peace first, development follows.” He stressed that no society can grow in an atmosphere of violence, urging communities to choose dialogue over conflict. Awarded in October 2024 and delivered in record time, the road symbolised a government that listens, responds and delivers.

Decisive leadership was again evident at the flag-off of the 7.1-kilometre Airport Bypass and Toll Gate Road and the inauguration of the Ikwerre-Igwuruta-Airport Road. For decades, host communities endured hardship passing through airport grounds. The politically tense airport blockade of last year became a turning point. Governor Fubara’s response was comprehensive: dialogue, restoration of services, and a permanent infrastructural solution.

The bypass permanently separates community movement from airport operations, guaranteeing peace, security and uninterrupted flights. Together with over 19 kilometres of airport-area roads, the project rebrands Port Harcourt’s gateway and restores Rivers State’s image.

Also, the inauguration of Phase One of the Greater TAF City Housing Estate’s 1,000 housing units stood as a triumph of resilience. Conceived during one of the most difficult moments in the state’s history and threatened by over 90 litigations, the project survived and triumphed. Fubara described it aptly: not just housing, but dignity, safety and stability. Aligned with President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Housing Agenda, the project complements the 1,000-unit federal housing estate already provided land to be sited in the state and moves it closer to reducing housing deficits and social vices.

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From the Obodhi-Ozochi Road and Bridge to the Ogbakiri Junction-Waterfront Road, the message was consistent: no community is forgotten. Projects inherited were not abandoned, but sustained and completed, not for politics, but for people.

The Permanent Secretaries’ Quarters in Elimgbu delivered one of the administration’s most strategic governance statements. By providing secure and dignified housing, the government is tackling corruption at its roots, insecurity, uncertainty and survival pressure. Fubara, himself a product of the civil service, made it clear: welfare is not charity; it is policy.

The commissioning of the 105-bed Ahoada Zonal Hospital crowned the tour. Serving the entire Orashi axis and beyond, the fully equipped facility stands as a referral centre and a pillar of President Tinubu’s national health agenda. The Governor’s message was unmistakable: wealth is meaningless without health, and development is incomplete without quality healthcare.

In just two weeks, the Fubara administration demonstrated clarity of vision, firmness of purpose and sincerity of leadership. Roads were opened, homes delivered, hospitals commissioned, workers empowered and communities reassured.

This was not governance by noise. It was governance by results. Rivers State has resumed its march forward. The pause is over. The engine is running. And under Sir Siminalayi Fubara, development is no longer promised; it is delivered.

Ibisaki Wille-Wills, a journalist with Radio Nigeria, writes from Rivers State

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Sand depletion threatens construction, food security — LASG

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The Lagos State Government has raised alarm over the growing sand depletion deposits across the state, warning that unchecked dredging activities could worsen construction costs, damage aquatic ecosystems and threaten food security.

“We need proper data. We need to know how many people are dredging, how much sand is being dredged daily, and what is left within those areas,” the Commissioner for Waterfront Infrastructure Development, Dayo Bush Alebiosu, said during the ministry’s two-year scorecard presentation at the annual ministerial press briefing held at the Bagauda Kaltho Press Centre.

Alebiosu said increasing demand for sand used in reclamation and infrastructure projects, particularly within the Lekki-Ajah corridor, had intensified pressure on available deposits across Lagos.

According to him, developers handling reclamation projects in Lekki and Ajah now source sand from communities as far as Ikorodu, pumping materials across distances of between 10km and 12km because deposits in closer locations are becoming exhausted.

He said the development confirmed fears that sand resources around Ajah were gradually running out, stressing that the state government has become more cautious in issuing dredging licences and permits.

The commissioner warned that the continued depletion of sand reserves could significantly increase the cost of construction and infrastructure delivery in Lagos, thereby placing additional pressure on housing and urban development.

He also linked indiscriminate dredging to threats to food security, especially in fishing communities that depend on healthy aquatic ecosystems for their livelihoods.

“It is putting food security at risk. We are encouraging people to consume more protein, such as fish, but whenever dredging disturbs aquatic life, fishermen are forced to work harder, and naturally, the cost of fish goes up,” he said.

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According to Alebiosu, aggressive dredging disrupts aquatic microorganisms and marine habitats, forcing fishermen to travel farther and spend more resources before making catches.

The commissioner further disclosed that host communities are increasingly facing infrastructural damage caused by heavy-duty dredging equipment and commercial activities associated with sand excavation.

He cited Ibese as one of the affected communities where roads and public infrastructure have reportedly deteriorated due to dredging operations.

Alebiosu said the Ministry of Waterfront Infrastructure Development remains the agency legally empowered to regulate dredging and sand dealing activities in Lagos State.

He added that the ministry collaborates with relevant agencies, including the Ministry of Environment and Physical Planning, as well as host communities, to tackle illegal dredging through monitoring, enforcement and whistleblowing mechanisms.

The commissioner also urged residents to support enforcement efforts by reporting illegal dredging activities, noting that some operators deliberately conceal their activities to evade detection.

“We cannot continue blaming foreigners alone. We must ask ourselves how they got there in the first place. They definitely have the connivance of some locals,” he said.

The Lagos State Government reaffirmed its commitment to stricter regulation of dredging activities to curb environmental degradation, protect waterfront communities and ensure the sustainable use of natural resources across the state.

A statement released later on Thursday by the Director, Public Affairs of the Ministry of Waterfront Infrastructure Development, Morenikeji Akodu, noted that commissioner warned that the increasing desperation for sand across Lagos was already exposing the dangers of over-exploitation of waterways and coastal resources.

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He also warned that the development pointed to mounting pressure on available sand deposits across the state and underscored the need for stricter regulation and proper monitoring of dredging activities.

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Flood alert: Kaduna steps up awareness as rains loom

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The Kaduna State Government has intensified public awareness and emergency preparedness efforts following forecasts by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency that the state may experience flooding during the 2026 rainy season.

The government said the move followed the release of the 2026 Seasonal Climate Prediction report by NiMet, which identified Kaduna among states likely to witness above-normal rainfall this year.

In a statement issued on Thursday, the Commissioner for Information and Culture, Ahmed Maiyaki, said the government had commenced coordinated sensitisation and disaster response initiatives to minimise the impact of flooding and protect lives and property.

According to the statement, rainfall in Kaduna State is expected to commence between May 19 and June 10, 2026, while cessation is projected between October 5 and October 21, 2026.

The statement further noted that the forecast indicated the possibility of a severe 21-day dry spell between June and August, a development that could worsen flooding and other environmental challenges.

“The Kaduna State Government is taking this forecast seriously. Early preparedness and public cooperation remain critical to reducing the impact of flooding on our communities,” Maiyaki stated.

He disclosed that the Ministry of Information and Culture, in collaboration with the Kaduna State Emergency Management Agency, had launched a statewide sensitisation campaign aimed at educating residents on flood prevention, mitigation and safety measures.

Maiyaki urged residents to clear drainage around their homes and business premises and desist from indiscriminate dumping of refuse into waterways.

He also advised residents in flood-prone communities to adopt preventive measures, including the use of sandbags and other local flood control measures.

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The commissioner appealed to traditional rulers, religious leaders, media organisations and civil society groups to support government efforts by promoting environmental sanitation and disseminating verified information to the public.

“The safety of citizens remains a top priority for the Kaduna State Government. We will continue to work with all relevant agencies and communities to ensure timely information dissemination and effective disaster risk reduction measures throughout the rainy season,” he added.

The statement further disclosed that KADSEMA had commenced vulnerability assessments in flood-prone communities, strengthened emergency response coordination and begun pre-positioning rescue materials and personnel in high-risk areas.

Flooding has remained a recurring challenge in several parts of Kaduna State and across the country during the rainy season.

In recent years, heavy rainfall has led to the destruction of houses, farmlands and public infrastructure in several communities, while hundreds of residents were displaced.

In 2024 and 2025, parts of Kaduna metropolis, Kafanchan, Zaria and some riverine communities witnessed severe flooding following torrential rains and poor drainage systems, prompting repeated warnings from emergency management agencies.

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Akwa Ibom doctors threaten N1bn lawsuit against EFCC over hospital raid

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The Nigerian Medical Association, Akwa Ibom State chapter, has said it will institute a N1bn legal action against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission over alleged assault on one of its members, Professor Eyo Ekpe, during a raid at the University of Uyo Teaching Hospital, Akwa Ibom State.

The association on Wednesday said the planned suit followed what it described as physical, emotional, professional and institutional damages suffered during the EFCC operation at the hospital on Tuesday.

It was gathered that EFCC operatives had stormed the UUTH while investigating a fraud case involving a suspect, a move the commission said was to verify a medical report submitted by the suspect.

The EFCC, in its explanation, said its operatives later visited the Chief Medical Director of the hospital “as a last resort to make further enquiries,” but claimed they were met with resistance, adding that the team eventually withdrew without disrupting hospital activities.

However, the NMA said the operation led to the alleged assault of Professor Ekpe, a cardiothoracic surgeon at the hospital.

Addressing a press conference in Uyo, the state NMA Chairman, Professor Aniekan Peter, said the decision to approach the court was part of resolutions reached at an emergency meeting of the association.

He said, “We observed that Prof Eyo Ekpe was apprehended within the premises of UUTH by masked EFCC operatives who physically assaulted him, beat him to the point of bleeding, handcuffed him alongside other doctors and hospital staff who attempted to intervene.

He also alleged that the NMA chairman was affected during the incident, saying, “Professor Peter, Akwa Ibom NMA chairman, was shoved and exposed to teargas when he approached the scene seeking clarification from the operatives.”

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The association described the hospital environment as “sacred” and said it should not be subjected to violent operations by security agencies.

It added, “We shall institute a legal action against the EFCC with a demand for damages in the sum of N1bn for the physical, emotional, professional and institutional damages caused.”

The communique, read by Assistant Secretary of the association, Dr Unyime Ndoh, and endorsed by Professor Peter and Secretary Dr Ighorodje Edesiri, said the association would not return to work unless its demands were met.

The demands include an apology to the affected doctors and identification and prosecution of those involved in the operation.

The NMA also said there was no prior formal invitation to Professor Ekpe or its leadership before the incident, describing the raid as “barbaric, degrading, inhuman and a gross violation of the sanctity of the hospital environment.”

The association further said it would not provide medical services to EFCC officials or their relatives until its demands are addressed.

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