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Senate leader reveals that NASS will pass state police bill this week

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Senate Leader, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele, has said the National Assembly will this week pass the constitutional amendment bill seeking to establish state police, describing the reform as long overdue amid worsening security challenges. In this interview with ADEBAYO FOLORUNSHO-FRANCIS, the lawmaker representing Ekiti Central Senatorial District also explains why the Senate rejected calls to probe military spending and more

Why is the Senate not interested in addressing the motion to probe military spending amidst the rising insecurity across the country?

The issue of insecurity is one about which no serious, God-fearing public official can pretend any longer. It is a major issue. People may argue about whether the situation is getting worse or better. For me, the more important question is not simply to categorise it one way or the other, because sometimes things get worse before they get better.  Let me explain that in the context of what happened on the floor of the Senate last week. The motion in question sought to establish a national committee to probe all financial releases made to the military in the prosecution of this war. We did not think that was the right approach, and we will not pretend otherwise. In the first instance, our military are giving their best under extraordinarily difficult circumstances. Let us remind ourselves that this is not a conventional warfare. This same military faced Boko Haram terrorists in conventional battle and dislodged them. There was a time when these terrorists had their flags flying over communities they had captured — local governments in this country had become no-go areas under their control. When they sought to advance further, our military confronted them, defeated them in conventional battle, and reclaimed those territories. At that point, rather than continue engaging our forces in open combat, the terrorists dissolved into cells and adopted guerrilla tactics. For the first time in our nation’s history, a military trained for conventional warfare was suddenly required to fight an unconventional enemy. Nobody had envisaged this — not the nation, not the military itself. But they did not give up. They have sustained the fight at great sacrifice — sacrifice to our officers and soldiers who are losing their lives, sacrifice to the families of victims who have been killed or kidnapped, and sacrifice to a government that must manage highly sensitive information while remaining accountable to the public. When that motion came before the Senate, the question before us was whether we wanted to put our own military on trial in the middle of a war.

The Senate didn’t deem that necessary too?

No, that would have been the most unpatriotic course of action — out of order, out of tune, and a dangerous mismanagement of a sensitive national security situation. Furthermore, it is an established principle that you do not interrogate the cost of waging a war until the war is over. You do not pause in the middle of a conflict to ask: how much have I given you, how much have you spent, and how did you spend it? Priorities must be clearly understood, and our priority at this moment cannot be to probe our military. To be clear: we were not suggesting that the military should spend money without accountability. We have standing Senate committees — on the Army, Air Force, Navy, and Defence generally — that are specifically charged with that oversight function. They approve budgets, conduct oversight, and carry out both scheduled and unscheduled inspections. Members of these committees have travelled with service chiefs abroad to inspect military equipment procured on behalf of Nigeria, because much of what we are using to prosecute this war is not off-the-shelf material. Some items are ordered today but may not begin manufacturing for another three months. Before shipment, security consultants and committee members from both chambers conduct physical inspections. The same rigour applies on arrival at our ports and airports. We cannot, as a nation, announce every drone that arrives or detail its specifications and operational range. You cannot wage a war that way. A great deal is happening that cannot be debated openly on the floor of the Senate or the House of Representatives. Given that reality, agreeing to a motion to publicly probe the military would have been a dangerous diversion — and that is not where Nigeria’s focus should be today. What I can tell the Nigerian public is this: by the grace of God, we are making significant progress. I know that is difficult for many Nigerians to accept, especially those living through the agony of this crisis. But the increased tempo of attacks in various parts of the country is, in part, an expression of the frustration of our enemies. They are taking casualties at a scale they have not experienced before. Much is happening — through our own military operations and through the fruits of international counter-terrorism collaboration. We are fighting guerrillas who, for every member they lose, feel compelled to strike in retaliation — partly to wage a psychological war, partly to erode public confidence in the military, and partly to turn Nigerians against their own armed forces. We must not allow that to succeed. We must not allow political opponents who seek to weaponise this situation to deter us from sustaining the ongoing onslaught against terrorism.

Can you clarify why the Senate President raised the hope of senators who lost return tickets last week following their complaints?

I will address this directly. During our plenary session, we moved briefly into a closed-door session before returning to open plenary for the Senate President to report progress. In both settings, it was entirely normal for the Senate President, on behalf of the leadership, to congratulate those announced as winners in the primary elections — which is precisely what he did. It is equally normal for the leadership to take note of complaints from senators and members of the House of Representatives regarding irregularities they may have witnessed during the primaries. The best we can do, as leadership, is to engage the party’s leadership structure — the National Working Committee, the governors of the relevant states, and where necessary, Mr. President as the party’s national leader — to reflect those concerns. For my part, by the grace of God and the support of my constituents in Ekiti Central Senatorial District, no one ran against me. I was returned unopposed. The same was true of the Senate President and the Deputy Senate President. So this was not a personal matter for any of us in leadership — it was part of what we owe our colleagues. The fact is, some members were calling us even as their primary elections were underway. Some sent written petitions to the party and copied the leadership. There was no way we could have convened the first sitting of the Senate and pretended that these concerns did not exist. The Senate President’s statement was therefore appropriate — and entirely consistent with parliamentary practice and procedure. The party’s appeals committee has since sat, heard from all complainants and relevant stakeholders, and made its recommendations to the National Working Committee. That process will determine the final outcome. Whatever the Senate President said, he was not speaking personally — he was speaking on behalf of the leadership, and I have now explained the basis on which we acted.

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What exactly is the bottleneck delaying state police and when will the constitutional framework be ready?

Our position on state police is very clear. We stand with Nigerians on this issue. A cross-section of the Nigerian public has made it abundantly clear that there cannot be a better time to establish state police than now — and that is where we stand. Our role as the elected representatives of the Nigerian people is to translate this popular desire into law. You can sing about it, debate it, or wish for it — but until it is legislated, it does not happen. That is where Parliament comes in. We have reached a firm conclusion that we will pass the constitutional amendment to make provision for state police, and I can tell you today (Tuesday) that this will come to fruition this very week. There is no reason for further delay. I should also speak to the work that has gone into this. There have been a series of intensive meetings involving the National Assembly team — led by the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Constitutional Review, His Excellency Senator Jibrin Barau, the Deputy Senate President, with myself serving as Vice Chairman — alongside the Chairman of the House Committee on Constitutional Review, His Excellency the Deputy Speaker, Benjamin Kalu. These meetings have involved the Office of the Attorney General, the Chief of Staff to the President, the Inspector General of Police, and other key stakeholders.

The consultations over the past week alone have been substantial, and that is the basis of my confidence in speaking to you today. What we are resolved to do is isolate the state police amendment from the broader constitutional review agenda so that we can vote on it as quickly as possible and transmit the bill to the 36 state Houses of Assembly. As you know, we require the approval of two-thirds of the state assemblies before the bill can proceed to Mr. President for assent. The President is fully aligned with us on this matter. The majority of our governors are also in support, and their respective assemblies are waiting for the bill to arrive. We will trigger that process within the week.

In the last few years, the 10th Assembly has continually been labelled ‘Rubber Stamp’ because of its close affinity with the Executive. Are you not worried about this?

We have worked collaboratively with the executive arm of government over the past three years. Some of our colleagues were labelled rubber stamps for doing so. But let me be clear: we knew we were not a rubber stamp Senate. The difference between the 10th Assembly and some previous assemblies is that we chose to resolve our disagreements privately rather than perform them publicly. We held numerous meetings with the National Working Committee of the APC, with Mr. President, with ministers, with the Chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, and with relevant agencies — meetings during which we raised objections, pushed back, and reached agreement — before bills ever came to the floor. This happened with the four critical tax reform bills, among others. There were occasions when names submitted for screening were returned to Mr. President before we even read the covering letters into the record, because we identified eligibility issues or concerns that would have made confirmation impossible. The president would direct that the list be revised, a corrected list would be resubmitted, and the matter would proceed without public controversy. If we had engaged in that process and then staged a dramatic rejection on the floor, what would that have served — other than satisfying those who equate noise with independence?

We were not doing this to impress anyone or to avoid criticism. We were convinced it was the right approach for a period of unusual national challenge. Our position has always been that genuine collaboration between the arms of government — where it serves the overriding public interest — is not weakness. It is statesmanship.

Is it appropriate for Akpabio to speak for Senators across party lines?

Yes, he does have that standing, and I will explain why. We always say — and mean — that when you enter the hallowed chamber of the Senate, you remove whatever party uniform you wore to get there. You enter as a senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Six months ago, the Senate proposed an Anti-Terrorism Bill and death penalty for abductors. What became of it?

The anti-terrorism bill is something that means a great deal to us, and we have done what was required. Both Parliament and the executive are in complete agreement that it is the right thing to do. You will have noted some of the recent pronouncements from our courts, independently handing down death sentences to individuals convicted of kidnapping. Nothing less is appropriate. I sponsored the bill, and you can be assured it will be concluded. I should also note that some of the bills we have passed, and some currently in progress, require accompanying constitutional amendments. We have compiled a list of such bills so that both tracks can proceed simultaneously. However, as I said, we are deliberately isolating the state police amendment to ensure it is dealt with immediately. We will return to the other critical constitutional matters — including the bill on special seats for women in the legislature, and several other reforms needed to advance our democracy. We still have until June of next year, and we will address all of them in due course.

Nigerians are seriously facing economic hardship. What form of reforms and parliamentary interventions has the Senate proferred to cushion the effect?

Part of what we have done — and continue to intensify — is respond to the constitutional mandate under Section 14(2), which requires us to make laws that support the security and welfare of Nigerians as the primary purpose of governance. Looking at the laws we have passed and which have since received presidential assent, you will see that several have led to the creation of agencies and frameworks designed to address the welfare of ordinary Nigerians. The Nigerian Education Loan Fund was created by an act of Parliament, making student loans accessible. We established the Ministry of Livestock through legislation, addressing not only the economic dimension of farming and animal husbandry but also the security and social tensions that have arisen from the longstanding conflict between farmers and herders. Through the tax reform bills, we addressed the problem of double taxation and made life more bearable for Nigerians in the lower income brackets. For instance, anyone earning or below the new minimum wage — roughly N80,000 — will pay no income tax at all. The significance of this reform becomes clear when you consider the sheer number of Nigerians who fall within that income bracket. Similarly, companies with annual turnover below N50m are now able to operate without the burden of corporate taxation. Again, that bracket captures a very large proportion of Nigerian businesses. These are not cosmetic interventions. They are structural reforms aimed at cushioning the effects of the broader economic policies of this administration.

The perennial challenge of open grazing and farmers-herders clash is still out there. Is there any update on the proposed bill?

This is a question that reflects the concern of a great many Nigerians, and it deserves a candid answer. The government is putting measures in place, but the nature of this issue demands more than a policy announcement or a piece of legislation. It requires extensive consultation with all stakeholders. Open grazing is an emotive issue. It involves deeply held convictions about land rights, rights of passage, and centuries-old traditions. On one side, you have herders whose forebears have traversed certain routes for generations. On the other, you have farmers whose livelihoods are destroyed when cattle move through their fields. Both sides feel their rights are being violated. The government’s task is to resolve this — not just through the force of law, but through genuine engagement that brings all parties along. That distinction — between governing through dialogue and governing through decree — is precisely what separates a democratic government from a military regime. It takes longer. It can look, from the outside, as though nothing is happening. But things are happening, and I believe the Ministry of Livestock will soon be in a position to present its progress report to the public. The difference it makes, when the right framework is finally established, will be significant.

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A month ago, Akpabio came under fire over the amendment to the Senate’s Standing Rules and Ranking System, which many believe is targeted at certain persons. Do you share the same position?

Let me explain this clearly, because it is one of those matters that requires patient explanation. What the Senate has done is entirely consistent with global parliamentary practice, procedure, conventions, and traditions. It is what is known as ranking — a principle that governs not merely seating arrangements, but the priority of participation in legislative proceedings, including who is recognised to speak when multiple senators seek the floor simultaneously. The principle is straightforward: a senator serving a second or third term is assumed to have greater familiarity with the rules, greater experience of parliamentary procedure, and a higher responsibility to guide and stabilise the process. This assumption underpins the ranking system globally. The longer one serves in a legislative chamber, the more one is expected to understand its workings and to help steward its proceedings. Now, applying that principle to the specific amendment in question: in the United States Congress — which we cite as our model whenever it is convenient — you cannot simply walk in as a first-time member and seek to become President of the Senate or Speaker of the House of Representatives. The fact that such a rule did not exist in our Senate three years ago is not an argument against having it now. The law grows. Parliament’s function is precisely to amend and improve the rules under which it operates. The dress that fit us in 2023 may not fit us today — and Parliament is the tailor. On the suggestion that this amendment was designed to benefit a specific individual, or to predetermine the leadership of the 11th Senate: you cannot make a law that is targeted at an individual. Such a law cannot withstand constitutional scrutiny. What you can do is make a law that is durable, principled, and consistent with democratic best practice — and that is what has been done. I will also say this: I was not on the floor of the Senate when aspects of this amendment were passed. But on the very next legislative day that I returned, I brought a substantive motion to draw the Senate’s attention to provisions within the amendment that, in my view, were inconsistent with the Constitution. Under our Constitution, any act of Parliament that conflicts with its provisions is null and void. The Senate considered my motion and nullified those offending provisions. That is the system working as it should. One of those provisions concerned the requirement that a senator must first be sworn in before contesting to lead the Senate. The intent is clear: no one should use the Senate presidency as a fallback option — entering the chamber only to contest for leadership, and retreating to their previous office if unsuccessful, thereby vacating a senatorial seat they never intended to occupy. The law is plain on this: the moment you are sworn in as a Member of Parliament, you automatically relinquish any executive office you previously held.

In February last year, the Public Accounts Committee reported proposed a probe on the missing 178,459 police firearms and other alleged corruption cases proposed. To date, nothing has been heard of the probe. Has it been abandoned?

The Public Accounts Committee is a constitutional body — unlike most other Senate committees, the leadership does not establish it by discretion. In fact, there are only two constitutionally mandated committees: the Committee on Appropriations and the Public Accounts Committee. By law, practice, and procedure, the Appropriations Committee is controlled by the ruling party, while the Public Accounts Committee is chaired by a member of the minority opposition. This arrangement is by design — it is part of the transparency and accountability architecture of democratic governance. It is important that the work of the Public Accounts Committee not be misunderstood. Its proceedings are not necessarily structured as probes that must culminate in a named indictment or a penalty. The Committee functions as Parliament’s equivalent of an ombudsman or internal auditor. The executive arm has the Office of the Auditor General for that purpose, and I would encourage members of the public to read the Auditor General’s annual reports — the depth of scrutiny they contain is remarkable, and it is often from those reports that the Public Accounts Committees of both chambers draw their initial intelligence. The purpose, therefore, is to hold agencies to account — to animate them, to compel responsiveness. Not everything that happens in Parliament must happen in the open. Even when we move into executive session, we adhere to the parliamentary convention of reporting progress to the press — summarising, in broad terms, what was discussed behind closed doors. The Public Accounts Committee operates similarly. I am aware of a number of matters that the Public Accounts Committee engaged with at the start of this 10th Assembly, including some that were resolved through intervention — whether by the agency in question producing documentary evidence to counter the allegations, or through other legitimate considerations. There are times when a committee, in the course of its proceedings, must weigh the broader implications of its actions: What is the effect on current investors? What is the reputational consequence for the sector? Where does the matter stand under existing legislation such as the Petroleum Industry Act? Has the situation that gave rise to the original concern already been addressed under the current administration? These are legitimate considerations that, by their nature, cannot always be aired publicly. And when such considerations arise, they can slow down the visible progress of a committee’s work — creating the impression, from the outside, that nothing is happening or that a compromise has been reached. I want to be clear: no senator worth his office would want to be known for initiating a probe and abandoning it. That would imply compromise, and that is not what drives these outcomes. I will remind this gathering that I personally chaired an ad hoc committee in this 10th Assembly. Several of you in this room asked me, on the record, whether that probe would end the way previous ones had. I gave you my word. What happened beyond what the media was able to cover was substantial. Without the committee ever formally publishing its findings, a great deal transpired — and ultimately, that industry had to reckon with new leadership. That is the kind of behind-the-scenes collaboration between the legislature and the executive that produces real outcomes, even when the public record appears incomplete. The underlying interest, always, is the overriding public interest.

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Was the Senate tempted at any point to consider re-amending the Electoral Act following the public outrage and flaws raised by the opposition?

I will be candid. I personally listened to a former Electoral Commissioner (Mike Igini) analysing the new Electoral Act on one occasion, and while he made some valid points — points I would have been glad to have considered during a public hearing on electoral matters — some of his conclusions demonstrated a fundamental misunderstanding of the legislative intent behind several of the provisions he was critiquing. Regardless, that is part of the beauty of our democratic system and the principle of separation of powers. We make the law as the legislature. The President assents to the law or withholds assent. The judiciary interprets the law and determines its validity. If the courts have chosen to strike down certain provisions, then so be it — within the framework of competent judicial authority, that is how the system is supposed to work. When some of my colleagues suggested we should return to the National Assembly to amend the Electoral Act in the immediate aftermath of those rulings, I declined to support that course of action. I was not going to participate in amending an electoral law as Senate Leader, days before primaries and months before a general election, in the middle of an atmosphere where every party is accusing the other of manipulating the process and INEC is under enormous pressure from all sides. Any amendment to the Electoral Act must come after the elections have been concluded — and it must come with the explicit caveat that no amendment can have retroactive effect on elections already held. That is my firm position.

What is your position on the recent court’s declaration of N’Assembly’s N110bn SUVs and legislative allowances as unlawful?

 

 

Let me speak plainly on this, because my position has never changed and my colleagues are well aware of it. All allowances received by parliamentarians — at both the federal and state levels — should be published; published fully, publicly, and once and for all. I genuinely believe that if this were done, legislators might actually emerge as the greatest beneficiaries of that transparency.  Today, a constituent may come to me in need of N250,000 for his child’s school fees, and I am able to offer him N50,000 or N100,000. He walks away uncertain whether to be grateful, because he has no idea how many other people are making the same request of me or what my actual resources are. The mystery surrounding legislative remuneration breeds assumption — and assumption, in this case, does not favour legislators. There are two things I want to place on the record clearly. First: legislators do not set their own salaries. Our remuneration is determined by the Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Commission — it is not within our power to fix. Second: the vehicles allocated to senators and members of the House of Representatives are not personal property. They are official vehicles, provided to enable constituency work and legislative duties — no different in principle from the official cars provided to directors, permanent secretaries, and ministers across the executive arm of government. That distinction is almost never made in public discourse, and it should be. Parliamentary institutions are rarely popular, and this is not peculiar to Nigeria. In many countries, members of the executive branch find legislators inconvenient — because oversight is inconvenient. If you are genuinely holding agencies and ministries to account, you will attract enmity. That is the nature of the work. I will say this: the question of publishing legislative remuneration is one I believe must be addressed as we prepare for a new assembly. My position is clear. The Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Commission should publish — comprehensively — what every category of public officeholder earns: National Assembly members, state assembly members, ministers, and all other relevant categories. That settles the matter permanently. You may quote me on that.

What will you describe as the achievements and low points of this 10th Senate?

I am never eager to enumerate achievements in a country where so many of our people are burdened by insecurity, economic hardship, and daily struggles. Patriotism and modesty counsel against self-congratulation in such circumstances. But since you have asked, I will answer. The lowest point of this assembly was a period during which it appeared, to the outside world, that there was disorder on the floor of the Senate — that we lacked internal cohesion, that we had shown disrespect to the female gender, and that we were not functioning as a unified institution. During that period, the daily conversation in the media was not about legislation or governance — it was about the suspension of a senator, the appropriateness of the penalty, and the internal politics of the chamber. That was a painful distraction from the work we were doing. It overshadowed everything else, and for me, it was not a period I look back on with any satisfaction. As for our achievements — the Senate has done a great deal in working with the executive arm to stabilise the economy. We have made laws in virtually every sector: agriculture, education, health, banking and finance, securities and foreign exchange regulation. We have exercised oversight to ensure that agencies deploy appropriated funds as intended. And through the four tax reform bills — which I regard as genuinely revolutionary — we have laid a foundation that, in a matter of years, will begin to transform the non-oil sector of this economy in particular. On a personal level, I have sponsored more than 70 bills in this assembly, of which more than half are private member bills originating from my own legislative initiative. Seven of those bills have led directly to the establishment of at least six federal institutions, all within the past two years: The University of Agricultural and Development Studies, which has been signed into law and is now fully operational. The University of Agriculture and Technology in Ekiti State, which has also been established and is in operation. The Federal University of Technology and Environmental Sciences in Ekiti, now in its first academic session. The upgrade of the Federal Polytechnic, Ado-Ekiti, to the Federal University of Technology. The upgrade of Yaba College of Technology to Federal University of Technology status. And the Federal University of Science and Technology, Epe, in Lagos State, which has also been established. Beyond education, my first bill as a senator in this assembly was the bill to restore Nigeria’s original national anthem — which Mr. President assented to on the 11th of June, 2023, and which was sung as our national anthem the very next day, Democracy Day, the 12th of June. In different ways — fundamental and symbolic — the work of this Senate has been consequential. There is more to be done, and we intend to do it.

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‘Revenue doubled, debt hit N200tn’ — Peter Obi demands answers from Tinubu govt

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Mr Peter Obi, presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress, NDC, and former governor of Anambra State, has questioned the Federal Government’s borrowing pattern, arguing that the sharp increase in national revenue under President Bola Tinubu’s administration has not translated into improved living conditions for Nigerians.

The remarks were contained in a statement posted on Obi’s official page while reacting to the President’s recent account of his administration’s performance after three years in office.

According to Obi, President Tinubu listed the increase in government revenue from N16.8 trillion in 2022 to N35 trillion in 2025 as one of the administration’s major achievements.

Obi argued that despite the reported increase in revenue, the country’s debt profile had continued to rise.

“Shockingly, while Nigerians expected a reduction in borrowing with the exponential increase in revenue, the opposite is the case,” Obi stated.

According to him, Nigeria’s total public debt has risen to about N200 trillion, representing an increase of over N100 trillion within the last three years.

Obi also argued that the country earned more than projected budget revenues during the period due to global and regional economic developments that affected commodity prices and government earnings.

Obi also alleged that key socio-economic indicators had worsened during the same period.

“Alarmingly, even with the astronomical increase in both revenue and debt, almost all key socio-economic and governance indicators are worse than in 2023,” he said.

Obi cited rising multidimensional poverty, unemployment and a decline in gross domestic product, GDP, per capita as areas of concern.

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According to him, multidimensional poverty increased from about 87 million people in 2023 to more than 140 million people in 2025.

“The question Nigerians and even the international community are asking is, ‘Where did all the money go?’” Obi stated.

He called for greater transparency and accountability in the management of public resources, urging the government to provide Nigerians with a detailed explanation of how revenues and borrowed funds have been utilised since 2023.

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Tinubu approves N10bn funding for emergency response to Ebola

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President Bola Tinubu has established a Presidential Task Force on Ebola Virus Disease Preparedness and approved the immediate release of N10bn in emergency intervention funding.

This follows the rapidly expanding outbreak that has already killed at least 349 people across the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, with the World Health Organisation declaring it a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.

A statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, said the task force would be chaired by the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, with membership drawn from relevant ministries, departments and agencies and state representatives.

The N10bn, Onanuga said, will strengthen the operational preparedness of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention and support critical national public health emergency response activities.

The task force was constituted following a stakeholder meeting convened by Gbajabiamila to review Nigeria’s preparedness.

It was attended by representatives from the Ministry of Interior, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria, the Nigeria Immigration Service, the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority and the Lagos State Government, among others.

According to Onanuga, Tinubu directed the “intensification of passenger screening at all international airports, including enhanced temperature checks and crowd-control protocols, and enhanced monitoring of passengers arriving on high-risk airline routes, including Air Uganda, RwandAir, Air Tanzania, Air Angola, Kenya Airways and Ethiopian Airlines, all carriers with direct or connecting services from the affected region.”

He ordered the immediate activation of referral and isolation centres at Lagos and Abuja international airports, with other airports to follow, and the mandatory activation of QR code-based pre-arrival health declaration systems for passengers originating from or transiting through designated high-risk countries.

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The President also directed the disinfection of departure halls, cargo areas, baggage sections and airport facilities as precautionary environmental measures.

Tinubu directed the task force to designate specific airports or terminals for high-risk flights to enable controlled screening and isolation procedures, and to consider adjusting flight timings to minimise interaction between high-risk passengers and other travellers.

He also mandated the group to consult with security, diplomatic and aviation bodies on the possibility of regulating flights from affected and high-risk countries.

The President directed all states hosting international airports and international border corridors, as well as relevant MDAs, to immediately submit their plans, funding requirements and intervention needs for coordinated implementation.

The current outbreak, caused by the Bundibugyo virus, a species of Ebola, was first confirmed in DRC’s Ituri Province on May 15, 2026, and rapidly spread to Uganda after a case was confirmed in Kampala.

As of June 7, the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control reported 515 confirmed cases and 91 confirmed deaths, with 283 individuals in isolation.

By May 29, the total suspected case count had risen to 1,037 with 349 deaths.

Unlike earlier-known Ebola strains, there is no licensed vaccine or specific therapeutic agent against the Bundibugyo virus, though early supportive care has been shown to be lifesaving.

Case fatality rates in previous Bundibugyo outbreaks ranged from 30 to 50 per cent.

In 2014, during the West African Ebola epidemic, Nigeria recorded 20 confirmed cases and eight deaths after a Liberian-American diplomat, Patrick Sawyer, arrived at Lagos’s Murtala Muhammed International Airport infected.

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June 12: Atiku backed rotational presidency deal, insists Akume

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The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, George Akume, has said former Vice President Atiku Abubakar was among political leaders who supported the adoption of rotational presidency in Nigeria following the annulment of the June 12, 1993, presidential election.

Atiku Abubakar
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar

According to the SGF, the annulment of the June 12 election, won by the late Chief MKO Abiola, prompted political leaders to take difficult decisions aimed at preserving national unity and strengthening democracy.

A statement by his Media Aide, Yomi Odunuga, said Akume made the clarification on Tuesday while responding to questions at a World Press Conference in Abuja, as part of activities marking Nigeria’s 27th Democracy Day anniversary.

He recalled that leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party met in Kaduna under the leadership of the late Chief Solomon Lar and Alhaji Adamu Ciroma to deliberate on the country’s political future, with the issue of power rotation featuring prominently.

“It was a tough argument before the issue of rotational presidency was agreed on. At the end, we had to concede. We must do this.

“June 12 annulment had complicated the whole thing. It was finally agreed that we’ll be alternating between North and South.

“Atiku was one of the leaders at that meeting, which was convened by Chief Solomon Lar. He was part of that agreement,” Akume was quoted as saying.

The SGF explained that the decision to alternate presidential power between the North and South was designed to address the political consequences of the annulled election and promote inclusiveness and national cohesion.

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Akume’s remarks come amid ongoing political debates over power rotation ahead of the 2027 general election.

Atiku, a northerner and the presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress for the 2027 election, is expected to challenge incumbent President Bola Tinubu, who is seeking a second term in office.

Tinubu, a southerner, was elected President in 2023 following the completion of the constitutionally permitted two-term tenure of the late President Muhammadu Buhari, a northerner.

Atiku has been criticised by political rivals and the Presidency for running for the highest office and maintaining future presidential ambitions during election cycles when political consensus favours power rotation to the South.

Reflecting on the significance of June 12, the SGF described the annulment as a painful setback to the democratic aspirations of Nigerians.

“Abiola won that election round and square. That election was annulled by the military government. It was very painful because the people spoke, and they spoke freely. They made their own choice,” he said.

According to him, one of the major lessons from the June 12 experience is the supremacy of the people’s will in a democratic system.

“The first lesson is that the voice of the people must always be supreme; it must be sacrosanct. That’s the beauty of democracy. We prefer the ballot to bullets,” he stated.

Akume expressed confidence in Nigeria’s democratic institutions, particularly the Independent National Electoral Commission, saying the country had learned from the events of 1993 and would never allow a repeat of such an annulment.

“If an election is conducted very fairly, and one wins, no problem. The actors at the Independent National Electoral Commission are not young people; they were adults when this thing happened.

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“If we were to take a poll at that time, over two-thirds of Nigerians would have condemned that act of annulment,” he said.

The SGF further commended INEC officials, describing them as men and women of integrity committed to protecting the nation’s democratic process.

“Fortunately for us, those at INEC are men of honour and integrity. They are well-read, patriotic Nigerians, and they are determined to make a difference. Never again would such happen in this country.

“You win, you win. When you lose, go back and prepare for another election. Look at the American example. President Trump lost to Joe Biden. He didn’t bring America down. He went back, prepared and came back and won. That’s the beauty of democracy,” Akume said.

He noted that Nigeria’s 27 years of uninterrupted democratic rule reflected the country’s commitment to democratic governance and freedom.

“We have decided to embrace democracy. That is why, for 27 unbroken years, we have been enjoying this freedom in a democratic setting. We love the values and the morals of democracy, and there is no system that is as beautiful as democracy,” he said.

Akume also highlighted freedom of expression as one of the key benefits of democratic rule.

“It is under a democratic system that you can insult your president and insult anybody and still go to bed, and you don’t receive a midnight knock on your door. Try it under a totalitarian regime,” he stated.

The SGF urged political actors to embrace democratic principles, respect electoral outcomes and continue to strengthen the nation’s democratic culture.

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He added that Nigeria’s 27 years of uninterrupted democracy underscored its commitment to the rule of law, freedom of expression and peaceful political participation.

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