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Govs budget N525bn for security as killings spread

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States across Nigeria earmarked a combined N525.23bn for security votes and related operations between 2023 and 2025, according to an analysis of figures extracted from their approved budget documents.

The states’ budgets are contained in Open States, a BudgIT-backed website that serves as a repository of government budget data.

The massive vote, intended to bolster security nationwide, raises critical concerns about the efficacy of these measures, as citizens remain increasingly vulnerable to the tide of violence.

Although the responsibility for ensuring the safety of lives and property lies with the Federal Government, the increasing wave of kidnapping, robbery, and other forms of violence has compelled many state governors to set up their own internal security strategies to combat the menace.

However, these efforts have not yielded the desired results as criminals continue to operate with impunity, terrorising the citizens.

The analysis is based on the budgets of 32 state governors, as Gombe, Kebbi, Niger and Yobe did not clearly disclose their allocations for security vote.

The PUNCH also observed that Ekiti did not clearly disclose this allocation in its 2025 approved budgets, which means the total figure should be higher than N525.23bn over the three years analysed.

Further analysis shows that states approved N150.47bn for security votes in 2023, rising to N164.07bn in 2024, before sharply increasing to N210.68bn in 2025.

The year-on-year growth shows that states added about N13.60bn to their security vote budgets in 2024, a rise of roughly 9.04 per cent over 2023, and then increased spending by a much larger N46.61bn in 2025, representing a jump of about 28.4 per cent over the 2024 level.

Compared with 2023, the amount budgeted in 2025 was higher by more than N60bn (about 40.01 per cent increase), highlighting how security vote allocations expanded rapidly within just three fiscal years.

The aggregate figures are driven by a handful of states with particularly large security vote provisions.

Borno State recorded the highest total over the three years at N57.40bn, reflecting the continuing cost of counterinsurgency and security operations in the North East.

Anambra State followed with N42.57bn, boosted by a sharp rise from N184.90m in 2023 to N17.28bn in 2024 and N25.10bn in 2025.

Delta State ranked next with N38.44bn, while Benue State posted N36.87bn over the period, with its allocation rising each year from N9.27bn in 2023 to N12bn in 2024 and N15.60bn in 2025.

Other high spenders included Ondo with N31.72bn, Zamfara with N31.40bn, Edo with N29.21bn, Adamawa with N27.00bn and Bauchi with N25.41bn.

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At the lower end of the scale, Rivers disclosed just N210m over the three years, while Akwa Ibom recorded N624m and Ekiti only N3.1m, showing wide disparities in how states reported or prioritised security vote spending.

In 2023, the highest security vote was recorded by Bauchi, which approved N17.39bn, narrowly ahead of Delta at N17.15bn. Bayelsa followed with N11.12bn, while Adamawa and Benue posted N9.95bn and N9.27bn, respectively.

Borno also ranked among the leading states that year with N8.92bn, reflecting the ongoing security challenges in the state.

The pattern shifted in 2024, when Zamfara emerged as the biggest spender with N17.40bn, followed closely by Anambra at N17.28bn and Borno at N15.65bn. Edo approved N12.87bn while Benue budgeted N12bn, keeping it among the top tier of states in terms of security vote allocations. Delta also remained high at N10.65bn.

By 2025, security vote spending had widened sharply. Borno topped the list with N32.83bn, far ahead of the rest.

Anambra followed with N25.10bn, while Oyo recorded an unusually large jump to N20.09bn, compared with just N26.5m in 2023 and N5.46m in 2024.

Benue posted N15.60bn, Ondo approved N11.50bn, and Edo set aside N11.35bn, with Delta maintaining its level at about N10.65bn.

The analysis also shows major fluctuations in some states’ allocations across the period. Bauchi fell sharply from N17.39bn in 2023 to just N12.8m in 2024 before rising again to N8bn in 2025.

Kano dropped from N2.10bn in 2023 to N11.93m in 2024 before rebounding to N5.62bn in 2025.

Ogun increased from N114.70m in 2023 to N2.20bn in 2024 and N2.80bn in 2025, while Anambra moved from a relatively small figure in 2023 to one of the largest allocations in the country by 2025.

Although Gombe, Kebbi, Niger and Yobe were not captured in the analysis, a regional breakdown of the figures shows that the North East accounted for the largest share of disclosed security vote spending over the three years, with a combined N113.78bn from Adamawa, Bauchi, Borno and Taraba, excluding Gombe and Yobe, which did not publish clear figures.

The region approved N39.12bn in 2023, N25.09bn in 2024, and N49.57bn in 2025, with the sharp rise in 2025 driven mainly by Borno’s N32.83bn.

The South East followed with N102.59bn from Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo. The region’s allocations rose from N21.07bn in 2023 to N39.55bn in 2024 and N41.97bn in 2025, largely on the back of Anambra’s surge in disclosed security spending.

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States in the South South budgeted a combined N98.36bn over the period, with N35.13bn in 2023, N34.02bn in 2024 and N29.21bn in 2025. The zone’s totals were driven mainly by Delta, Edo and Bayelsa, while Rivers reported relatively small amounts.

The North Central recorded N76.57bn across the three years from Benue, Kogi, Kwara, Nasarawa and Plateau, with N22.97bn in 2023, N25.27bn in 2024 and N28.33bn in 2025. Niger was not included because no clear figure was disclosed in its approved budgets.

In the North West, disclosed allocations from Jigawa, Kaduna, Kano, Katsina, Sokoto and Zamfara amounted to N70.77bn, comprising N19.02bn in 2023, N26.13bn in 2024 and N25.62bn in 2025, with Kebbi excluded due to non-disclosure.

The South West recorded the lowest disclosed three-year total at N63.16bn, but its spending profile changed sharply in 2025. The zone approved N13.16bn in 2023 and N14.00bn in 2024, before surging to N35.99bn in 2025, driven largely by Oyo’s N20.09bn and Ondo’s N11.50bn, alongside steady allocations from Lagos, Ogun, Osun and Ekiti.

The development comes amid renewed concerns over the unrelenting wave of killings, kidnappings, and destruction of properties across the country.

In Nigeria, security votes are special monthly allocations of public funds reserved by federal and state governments for security-related purposes.

Officially, the funds are intended to cover sensitive operations such as intelligence gathering, crisis response, and other emergencies that demand swift action without bureaucratic bottlenecks.

However, the secrecy surrounding their disbursement has long attracted criticism.

Analysts argue that, rather than enhancing public safety, security votes often double as political war chests or channels of personal enrichment for state governors.

Speaking earlier to The PUNCH, the National Coordinator of the Coalition of Northern Groups, Jamilu Charanchi, questioned the essence of the controversial allocation.

He noted that despite the reportedly huge sums disbursed, citizens in the North still faced worsening insecurity, dilapidated roads, failing hospitals, poor electricity supply, and a lack of access to quality education.

“What is a security vote? What are they doing with the security vote? Don’t we still have killings in the North? Don’t we still have bad roads, dilapidated structures and hospitals? Governments cannot provide health care services to their citizens.

“They cannot provide education. They cannot provide road infrastructure. Electricity is questionable. What are they doing with the money? What are they doing with the security vote?” he asked.

Charanchi further stressed that poverty was at the root of insecurity in the region, alleging that governors benefit from the current state of affairs.

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President Bola Tinubu, at a security conference, said a well-governed state is better equipped to address internal challenges and should not depend on federal agencies for safety.

He averred that the sorry state of the local government system has contributed to the developmental setbacks and the country’s inability to tackle the prevailing security threats.

“Sadly, the state of our local government system in Nigeria is a cause of concern, as its degradation and incapacitation have continued significantly and have contributed significantly to our developmental setback and our inability to effectively address the prevailing national security threat.

“We find ourselves trapped in a paradoxical situation where the very areas most affected by security classes are rendered powerless and unable to mount any meaningful resistance or defence.

“Local governments are the frontline defenders against insecurity, as they are closest to the people and possess intimate knowledge of their community’s needs and challenges. This is why some are advocating for community policing as a panacea to end security challenges,” he noted.

In December 2025, organised labour called on state governments and local government authorities to take greater responsibility for tackling Nigeria’s worsening insecurity, warning that the failure to act decisively is draining household incomes and restricting citizens’ freedom of movement.

Chairperson of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Lagos Chapter, Comrade Funmi Sessi, earlier said insecurity had gone beyond isolated incidents and now affects daily life and economic activity.

She said while security is often discussed as a federal issue, states and local governments must play a more active role because of their closeness to communities.

“States and local governments cannot fold their arms. They are closest to the people, they understand the terrain, and they receive security-related allocations. Nigerians deserve to see concrete results,” Sessi said.

Vice Chairman of the NLC Lagos Chapter, Comrade Olapisi Ido, also said insecurity persists partly because subnational governments have failed to translate funding into effective action.

“State governments receive special security allocations. The question Nigerians are asking is simple: what are they using the money for?” Ido said. “People are dying daily, and communities are living in fear.”

He said labour expects states and LGAs to invest more in intelligence gathering, community engagement, surveillance and rapid-response mechanisms.

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Navy deploys ships, helicopters against maritime crimes

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The Nigerian Navy has deployed 10 ships, two helicopters, and other assets in a special operation to stamp out maritime crimes, including piracy, sea robbery, and illegal trafficking within the Gulf of Guinea.

The Navy said the assets will engage in anti-illegal trafficking of arms and drugs, anti-crude oil theft operations, anti-illegal, unregulated and unreported fishing, and search and seizure procedures, among others.

The Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Idi Abbas, disclosed this while flagging off the operation codenamed ‘Exercise Obangame Express 2026’ aboard the Nigerian Navy Ship KADA in Onne, Rivers State, on Sunday.

Abbas, who was represented by the Chief of Naval Operations, Naval Headquarters, Rear Admiral P.E. Effah, said the exercise was initiated in 2010 by the United States Navy in collaboration with the navies of the Gulf of Guinea nations.

He said the annual exercise had served as a strategic platform for advancing coordinated maritime security operations in the region over the years.

The CNS stated, “It remains a critical instrument for fostering unity of effort, enhancing interoperability, and consolidating our shared resolve to secure our maritime domain against emerging and evolving threats.

“The core objectives of the exercise are clear and enduring. They include strengthening regional maritime security cooperation, enhancing information sharing and maritime domain awareness, and improving tactical and operational readiness.

“It also includes building the capacity of participating navies to effectively counter both national and transnational maritime crimes, including piracy, sea robbery, illegal trafficking, and other illicit activities at sea. The importance of this exercise cannot be overstated.”

Abbas further said the exercise had significantly contributed to improving diplomatic relations and strengthening naval partnerships across the region and beyond, thereby reinforcing the collective security architecture within the Gulf of Guinea.

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“For this year’s exercise, the Nigerian Navy will deploy 10 ships, two helicopters, maritime domain awareness assets, and elements of the Special Boat Service.

“These assets will be engaged in a series of carefully designed scenarios, including anti-illegal trafficking of arms and drugs, anti-crude oil theft operations, anti-illegal, unregulated and unreported fishing, visit, board, search and seizure procedures, as well as search and rescue exercises and simulation of hot pursuit.

“These activities are deliberately structured to sharpen our operational competence, test our readiness, and refine our collective response mechanisms to real-world maritime threats. The success of an exercise of this magnitude is underpinned by meticulous planning, robust logistics, and unwavering commitment.”

He thanked President Bola Tinubu for his support of the Armed Forces and lauded officers and personnel for their professionalism and dedication.

Abbas added, “Through sustained collaboration, we will not only consolidate the gains already achieved but also build a more secure, stable, and prosperous maritime domain for our nations.”

Earlier, the Flag Officer Commanding Eastern Naval Command, Rear Admiral C.D. Okehie, said the exercise is a major multinational maritime security operation conducted across West and Central Africa under the sponsorship of the United States Africa Command.

He noted that the Gulf of Guinea remains a vital global sea lane but is vulnerable to evolving maritime threats.

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Iran foreign minister arrives in Russia as US talks remain stalled

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Iran’s foreign minister arrived in Russia on Monday as peace efforts between Tehran and Washington hung in the balance, following a flurry of regional diplomacy and the collapse of planned talks in Pakistan.

Abbas Araghchi arrived in Saint Petersburg, the Iranian Foreign Ministry said on Telegram, where he is expected to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

It comes after Araghchi visited Oman between trips to Pakistani capital, Islamabad, as mediators push to keep peace talks between Tehran and Washington alive.

On Saturday, US President Donald Trump scrapped a planned trip to Islamabad by his envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

In a sign that efforts were ongoing, the Fars news agency said Iran had sent “written messages” to the Americans via mediator Pakistan outlining red lines, including nuclear issues and the Strait of Hormuz.

Fars said the messages were not part of formal negotiations, however.

US media outlet Axios reported on Sunday that Iran had sent a new proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and end the war, with nuclear negotiations postponed for a later stage, citing a US official and two other sources with knowledge of the matter.

Iranian state news agency IRNA cited the report without denying it.

A ceasefire in the US-Israeli war with Iran has so far held, but its economic shockwaves have continued to reverberate globally.

Iran has sealed off the strait, cutting flows of oil, gas and fertiliser and sending prices soaring, raising fears of food insecurity in developing countries. At the same time, a US blockade of the strait is in place.

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Hopes for a second round of talks in Pakistan had centred on the planned visit by Witkoff and Kushner, but Trump cancelled the trip after Iranian state television said Araghchi had no plans to meet US officials there.

On Sunday, Trump told Fox News that if Iran wanted the talks, “they can come to us, or they can call us”.

Trump faces domestic pressure as fuel prices rise following Iran’s closure of Hormuz, with midterm elections due in November. Polls show the war is unpopular among Americans.

Safe transit

Asked whether cancelling signalled renewed fighting, Trump said: “No, it doesn’t mean that.”

On Saturday, Araghchi met Pakistan’s military chief Asim Munir, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, before travelling to Oman and returning to Islamabad.

He later left for Russia for talks with senior officials, his ministry said.

Russian and Iranian state media confirmed Araghchi’s talks with Putin, citing officials from their respective governments.

Araghchi himself posted on X that the talks in Oman had focused on ensuring safe transit through Hormuz, “to benefit of all dear neighbours and the world”.

“Our neighbours are our priority,” he added.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had no intention of lifting their blockade, which has roiled energy markets.

“Controlling the Strait of Hormuz and maintaining the shadow of its deterrent effects over America and the White House’s supporters in the region is the definitive strategy of Islamic Iran,” the Guards said on their official Telegram channel.

The United States has imposed a blockade of Iranian ports in retaliation.

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Israel strikes Lebanon

Israel and Hezbollah traded blame over violations of the fragile ceasefire in Lebanon, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying the military was “vigorously” targeting the Iran-backed militia as both sides claimed new attacks.

Hezbollah drew Lebanon into the Middle East war on March 2 by firing rockets at Israel to avenge the death of Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei, with Israel responding with strikes and a ground invasion.

But claims that both sides have breached a 10-day ceasefire agreed earlier this month have continued.

Netanyahu told Sunday’s weekly cabinet meeting that Hezbollah’s actions were “dismantling the ceasefire” while Hezbollah said it would respond to Israeli violations and its “continued occupation”.

Lebanon’s health ministry said Israeli strikes on the country’s south on Sunday killed 14 people, including two women and two children, and wounded 37.

The state-run National News Agency reported that Israeli warplanes had struck after evacuation warnings in Kfar Tibnit.

An Israeli strike on Zawtar al-Sharqiyah, another of the flagged villages, destroyed a mosque and another religious building, the news agency said.

Israel, which reported a soldier killed in combat in south Lebanon, says it can act against “planned, imminent or ongoing attacks”.

“This means freedom of action not only to respond to attacks…but also to pre-empt immediate threats and even emerging threats,” Netanyahu said.

AFP

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PHOTOS: Newborn twins found abandoned in Benue bush

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A set of newborn twins were found abandoned by in a bush in Vandeikya Local Government Area of Benue State.

The babies, a boy and girl, were rescued on Saturday, April 25, 2026, by the LGA Task Force during a routine sanitation duty in Vandeikya Township.

The unidentified mother dumped the babies at a bushy slope in Vandeikya, located in Mbaaji, Ningev Council Ward, a place known in the Tiv dialect as “Wangbeen Jor.”

Chief Daniel Orhembega, Chairman of the Task Force, who confirmed the development explained that his men picked up the babies while on their way to dispose of refuse.

He said one of the task force agents heard a baby crying.

When they moved toward the direction of the sound, they saw the newborn twins wrapped in freshly plucked leaves along with the placenta and a gown believed to belong to the runaway mother.

At the time, one baby was crying while the other was deeply asleep.

The twins were immediately picked and handed over to nearby medical personnel, as they required urgent medical attention.

The babies are now under the care of the Vandeikya Local Government Welfare Department.

The Local Government Chairman appealed to the general public around the area to assist in finding the mother by providing any useful information that can lead to disclosure of her identity.

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