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How Ahmed Gulak Was Killed On Way To Imo Airport, His Body Dragged On The Ground

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By Charles Igbo

The insecurity in Imo State reached an unbelievable level in the morning of Sunday, May 30, when gunmen shot and killed Ahmed Gulak

While some say he was killed at the Imo Airport, others say he was killed on his way to the Airport.The daring gunmen not only killed him, but reportedly, dragged his body on the ground.

His body, sprawled on the ground, by a car, gave the impression he was fatally shot on the head as blood was seen searing like a river from his head. He wore a a pair of blue jeans trousers and a tee-shirt. His facial mask was hanging on his neck.

He was on his way back to Abuja.

An eyewitness described as sacrilegious, the way his body was dragged on the floor after he was killed.

Gulak was the Chairman of the All Progresssives Congress, APC. Governorship Election Primary in Imo State. He was the man who declared Governor Hope Uzodinma winner of the Primary. The declaration denied former Governor Okorocha’s son-in-law, Uche Nwosu, the APC ticket which pushed him to contest on the ticket of the AA, a party, allegedly, founded as a Plan B, and funded by Okorocha.
Okorocha had, repeatedly, held him responsible for his political fate in the State.

A grounded politician, Gulak, a lawyer, was a former Political Adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan, a former Senior Special Adviser to former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, and a former Speaker of the Adamawa
House of Assembly.

He was, once, at the centre of the crisis that rocked the PDP when he declared himself the National Chairman of the Party.

He defected from the PDP to the APC in 2018

It is not known what his mission was to Imo State. But while some say he went on the invitation of some Northerners, others claim he went to visit Governor Uzodinma.

Many shocked Nigerians believe that whoever, or whichever group killed him knew his itenary, and either waited for him at the Airport, or followed him to the airport.

What is not known if it is confirmed that he was killed at the Airport, is how this brazen and daring murder succeeded within an environment which ordinarily ought to be very secured with the number of Security personnel all over the place.

Imo State, especially, Owerri, its capital,has been the epicenter of deadly attacks in recent times.

…More details, later

May 31 IPOB Order: Umahi Threatens Shop Owners, Nnamdi Kanu Dares Him

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Dave Umahi and Nnamdi Kanu

By Gideon Njoku

Umahi: “Any Store owner who does not open on May 31 will lose that Shop”

Kanu: “I dare Umahi to do that. Anybody that comes out that day, in any part of Igboland, will be buried that day”

Ebonyi State Governor, Dave Umahi, is in an offensive mood.

On Saturday, he sacked, in one fell swoop, 1,000 people, including his Aides and Board members.

Reports from Ebonyi say the Governor sacked them on suspicion of their being sympathetic to the People’s Democratic Party, PDP.

The Governor had, earlier, dumped the PDP, a party under which umbrella he was elected a Governor two times, in favour of the All Progressives Congress, APC.

But the implications of the sack of 1,000 people pales in the face of the face-off he is having with Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the Leader of the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra, IPOB.

The Group was, a couple of years ago, proscribed by the Federal Government, with the support of South-east Governors. The exception was Imo State Governor, Senator Hope Uzodinma, who was not in office then.

However, the proscription has done nothing to diminish the activities of IPOB which is fighting for an Independent Republic of Biafra.

Umahi’s face-off stems from the declaration of a sit-at-home order by Kanu on May 31st in remembrance of all the Igbo who  died during the civil war in defence of an  Independent Biafra, and those who died thereafter in the struggle for Biafra.

The sit-at-home remembrance is, usually, marked on May 30, by the Movement for the Sovereign State of Biafra, MASSOB, then led by Ralph Uwazuruike. But IPOB has since edged both Uwazuruike and MASSB out.

However, this year’s fell on a Sunday, prompting Kanu to shift it to Monday, so as not to disrupt  Church Services.

He, therefore, ordered a total lock down in all the South-east States, and other Igbo speaking areas.

Kanu ordered that there should not be any movement, at all.

But Governors, stung by what they see as Kanu’s audacity, has asked citizens to go about their normal businesses.

Umahi, in a statement, not only queried Kanu’s powers to order a sit-at-home, but asked him who he discussed with.

He, then, went further to order that all markets and shops in Ebonyi, as well as all public places  be open. The Governor warned owners of stores that they stand the risk of losing their stores if they obey Kanu and lock them.

Umahi: “Those who lock up their stores on Monday, May 31, will lose those shops.”

But Kanu has called his bluff. In a broadcast, he dared Umahi to implement his threat. And, for good measure, warned: “There will be absolutely no movement on Monday the 31st. Anybody who dares, will be buried that day.”

Already, in the South-east, people are panicking already. Soldiers and Policemen have taken over most places, since Friday, May 29, 2021

The very busy River Niger bridge, Onitsha, was blocked  by soldiers on May 29. They neither allowed any vehicle into Onitsha, nor  out of Onitsha. Hundreds of travellers were stranded on both sides of the head bridge, as all vehicles were packed.

The action of the soldiers was, reportedly, triggered by the alleged killing of five soldiers in Anambra.

Meanwhile, in Imo State, the rampage by gunmen continued. In Naze, a community within the Owerri  Capital Territory, two Airforce personnel were killed on Friday, prompting soldiers to invade the Community in search of the perpetrators of the dastardly  act. In the process, fatalities were, allegedly, recorded.

On Saturday, gunmen, literally putting a lie to the assurances by Governor Uzodinma that their activities were over in the State, in addition to the Friday killing of the Airforce personnel, attacked  Government facilities in Atta Community. The facilities attacked include the Divisional Police Office, a Magistrate Court, a High Court, and a Health Centre.

It is most unlikely that there will be much movement in the South-east on the May 30 and 31. If there is, it will be very minimal. Aside from the IPOB order, the heavy presence of Security personnel is so scary that people would rather stay home.

Ironically, that helps the IPOB sit-at-home order.

Update: We Paid N180m As Ransome – Parents Of Greenfield University Students

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and 10 motorcycles

By Adesina Soyooye

Angry Parents of Greenfield University, Kaduna, made a startling revelation Saturday evening.

They told a shocked audience, gathered to rejoice with them, that they paid the Bandits who held their children captive for 39 days a whooping N180, and 10 motorcycles to secure their freedom. This, they said, was without any help from the Government – State or Federal.

They lamented: “The Government did nothing. They abandoned our children. They did not send even one Policeman after the bandits. We paid the sum of N180m, in addition to 10 motorcycles.”

The students and three staff members were abducted from their hostel on April 20.

The bandits set the sum of N800m and 10 motorcycles for their release.

To show their seriousness, they killed three of the students within three days of abducting them, and killed two more two days after.

When their demands were not forthcoming, they set a date for the killing of the remaining students and staff. But on the set date, they released one of the students whose parents, reportedly, paid N20m for his freedom.

Neither the FG nor the Kaduna State Government was prepared to pay a kobo, not even after the parents pleaded for help, disclosing that after paying the sum of N60m, the bandits were still demanding for another N100m and 10 motorcycles.

At that point, Islamic Scholar, Dr Abubakar Gumi, who usually has access to bandits, and became a self-appointed negotiator, intervened. Gumi asked the FG to ask the Central Bank of Nigeria to pay the sum to the bandits. But there was no response.

The bandits waxed bolder than before, and capped their brazeness with a BBC Hausa Service interview granted by their leader repeating, and insisting on the demands they made.

Nasir El-Rufai, the Governor, Kaduna State, responded by saying the Military would be sent for a rescue mission of the students. On its possible   bloody end, he carelessly said some of the students would be lost, but some would be saved.

But on Saturday, May 29, the students and staff members were, finally, released. Reports say they were dropped along the Abuja-Kaduna road.

Speculations are that the parents must have contributed over N10m each, to make-up for the ransome money and the 10 motorcycles.

Greenfield University,  privately owned, was licensed in January 2019. Its  Proprietor is Simon Nwakacha, an Engineer who hails from Anambra State.

Abduction of persons has, since, become one of the most lucrative businesses in Nigeria, especially in the North where students are, usually, abducted from their schools in dozens, scores and hundreds. But this is the first time that abductors, in addition to the ransome money, asked for motorcycles – to boost their business.

Breaking: Chelsea Wins 2021 UEFA Champions League

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Chelsea Wins 2021 UEFA

By Akinwale Kasali

A 42nd minute strike from Kai Havertz was all Chelsea Football Club of England needed to win the 2020/2021 UEFA Champions League for the second time in its history.

The win against Manchester City Football Club is the third Win Chelsea will record against the Manchester side, having defeated them in the English Premier League, FA Cup semi final and now the coveted UEFA Champions League final.

Coach Thomas Tuchel who came Into the saddle as the Chelsea manager mid season after the sack of Frank Lampard won the Champions League after finishing runner-up with Paris Saint Germain Football Club when Bayern Munich Football Club of Germany won the trophy last season.

Edouard Mendy, Chelsea goalkeeper becomes the first ever African Goalkeeper to have won the award, making superlative saves to keep his team in contention for the trophy.

A disappointed Sergio Aguero who is leaving the Premier League Club Side, Manchester City for Barcelona Football Club in the Spanish League could not hold back tears, as it flowed freely following the loss.

Coach Pep Guardiola’s dream of winning the UEFA Champions League with the Manchester side has been dashed, putting him in a fix as regards his future.

Chelsea won the UEFA Champions League in 2012 under the tutelage of former Chelsea player and Coach, Roberto Di Matteo.

Breaking: Abducted Greenfield Students Freed

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Breaking News

By Adesina Soyooye

Over 40 days after their abduction, the heart- warming news from Kaduna is that the remaining 17 students of Greenfield University, and three staff members have been released by their abductors on Saturday, May 29, 2021.

The students and staff members were abducted from their hostel on April 20, 2021. Their abductors had asked for the sum of N800m and 10 motorcycles for their release.

But the Governor of Kaduna State, Malam Nasir El-Rufai, had sworn not to pay a kobo in ransome money.

Three days after their abduction, three of the students were slaughtered. And, another two slaughtered two days later.

One of the students was released, reportedly, after his parents paid the sum of N20 million.

Parents of the remaining students had, collectively, paid the sum of N60m, but the abductors insisted on an extre N100m, and ten motor cycles. Their leader, in an audacious interview with the BBC, Hausa Service, had insisted on that.

The Parents of the students appealed to the Federal Government to meet  the demands of the bandits and save the lives of their children since the Bandits had threatened to kill the remaining students.

This prompted Islamic Scholar, Dr Abubakar Gumi, who usually mediates between bandits and State Governments, to ask the FG to pay the ransome money.

It is not known, yet, the circumstances under which they were released – whether  the N100m and 10 motorcycles were given to them or not.

The Greenfield University, Kaduna, is a privately owned University, founded in 2019.

Its Proprietor is Simon Nwakacha, an Engineer, who hails from Anambra State.

…More Details, later.

OPINION: COAS Appointment As Missed Opportunity For Unity

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Farooq Kperogi

By Farooq A. Kperogi

The appointment of my namesake, Major General Farouk Yahaya, as Chief of Army Staff to succeed the late Lieutenant General Ibrahim Attahiru who died in a plane crash on May 21 is yet another tone-deaf but entirely predictable mismanagement of Nigeria’s diversity at a time it desperately needs to be cared for with deliberate symbolic nourishment.

There is no question that General Yahaya is qualified for the job. His CV shows evidence of immense professional and academic preparedness for the position. But the alternatives to him are just as qualified, so this is never about competence for the job. It’s about symbolism and the politics of representation at a time of heightened national storm and stress.

Many people had hoped that the regime would appoint Major General Benjamin Ahanotu from Anambra State as Attahiru’s successor both to water the perishingly shriveling tree of national unity in the country and to pacify the Southeast whose sense of alienation in the last five years is resurrecting the ghost of Biafra secessionist agitation.

Since Ahanotu is just as professionally and academically prepared as Yahaya is, a lot more would have been gained in symbolic and substantive terms if the regime had chosen to not appoint another Northern Muslim to succeed a northern Muslim who succeeded a previous northern Muslim.

In no previous Civilian Administration has this ever happened.

Former President Shehu Shagari had ethnic and religious diversity in his choice of Chief of Army Staff. He started with Lieutenant General Ipoola Alani Akinrinade, then appointed Lieutenant General Gibson Jalo, and finally Lieutenant General Mohammed Inuwa Wushishi.

Although Obasanjo’s choices of Chief of Army Staff didn’t reflect religious diversity, they reflected regional and ethnic diversity. Goodluck Jonathan also chose only Christians from the South-South and the Southeast, which we condemned, but his security council was more broad-based than Buhari’s is.

Many well-placed Northern politicians who are disturbed by the widening intensity of fissiparity in the Nigerian polity told me they intervened to ensure that the regime appointed someone other than a Northern Muslim as Chief of Army Staff. One man told me he was part of a group that reached out to Professor Ibrahim Gambari, Muhammadu Buhari’s Chief of Staff, to persuade him to advise his boss to appoint Ahanotu—or another qualified southerner—as Chief of Army Staff.

Perhaps, that was where the group erred. Gambari has no powers to influence consequential policy decisions in this regime. A personage who is intimately familiar with the workings of the Presidential Villa told me a few days ago that Gambari was recently caught dozing off in the waiting room of Sabiu “Tunde” Yusuf, the 30-something-year-old cousin of Buhari’s who is also his special assistant.

The man said the fact of Gambari drifting off in Yusuf’s waiting room was indicative of the extended minutes, perhaps hours, that he had been waiting for the young man. But, for me, it emblematizes Gambari’s powerlessness and lack of access to the man he is supposed to be Chief of Staff to.

As dramatic as this revelation was, it wasn’t shocking to me. I have always known that Sabiu “Tunde” Yusuf, whose highest work experience prior to joining his cousin’s Government was a phone recharge card seller, is the real successor to Abba Kyari.

In my November 23, 2019 column titled “Government of Buhari’s Family, By His Family, and For His Family,” I described him as “one of the most powerful people in Nigeria today. He determines who sees and who doesn’t see Buhari. Only Mamman Daura and Abba Kyari can overrule him.”

I, also, pointed out in my May 16, 2020 column titled “Real Reason the Buhari Cabal Picked Gambari as CoS” that Gambari’s linguistic “handicap” in the Hausa language would ensure that he isn’t sufficiently close enough with Buhari to have any meaningful interpersonal relationship with him. That, I said, would whittle away the influence of his office.

A May 25, 2020 exclusive Daily Trust story titled “How Buhari’s Chief of Staff, Gambari facilitated removal of TCN boss” proved me right. “The Special Assistant to the President (President Secretariat), Sabi’u Yusuf, the same day, wrote a letter referenced PRES/65-I/COS/3/750, addressed to the CoS, Prof. Gambari, conveying Buhari’s approval of his earlier memo,” the story said.

So, unlike Abba Kyari who had a direct access to Buhari and whom Buhari said all ministers should meet if they wanted anything from him, Gambari has an intermediary between him and Buhari, and that intermediary is a blood relative of his planted there by Mamman Daura, his Trinity College, Dublin-educated nephew on whom he has always been emotionally and intellectually dependent.

As I pointed out in my May 30, 2020 column titled, “Gambari: Embrace and Alienation of an Outsider on the Inside,” “The real Chief of Staff to Buhari is Sabi’u ‘Tunde’ Yusuf (of course, acting on Mamman Daura’s behalf) while Ibrahim Gambari is only the public face of the office— with some legroom to do the most obvious official requirements of his job.”

I’ve gone to this length to rejig the reader’s memory just to make the case that anyone who wanted to influence the appointment of the new Chief of Army Staff should have gone to Mamman Daura who is the real, if unofficial, president of Nigeria. But Daura has a really retrograde and fossilized understanding of Nigeria’s ethnic and religious diversity.

Nonetheless, in case people who can influence Daura are reading this, he should be made self-aware that in moments such as Nigeria is going through now, even little symbolic acts of inclusion go a long way. At the twilight of his life, he has become the luckiest Nigerian alive. He has unofficial presidential powers without winning or rigging an election, staging a coup, or even being appointed. Even for the sake of his grandchildren, he should snap out of his provincial cocoon and save the country from avoidable implosion.

Nigeria’s chance for continued existence going forward will be dependent on intentional symbolic gestures that nurture national cohesion. National cohesion doesn’t magically emerge out of thin air because people who are luxuriating in the decadent orbits of power facilely proclaim Nigeria’s unity to be “settled” and “non-negotiable.” Nation-building is never “settled”; it is always in a state of negotiation and renegotiation.

Unity is not an article of faith to be internalized and accepted unquestioningly. It is consciously sowed, watered, and nourished by acts of kindness to the disadvantaged, by equity and justice to all, by consensus-building, by deliberate healing of the existential wounds that naturally emerge in our interactions as constituents of a common national space, and by acknowledging and working to cover our ethnic, religious, regional, and cultural fissures. The efforts will never be perfect or fool-proof but doing something about a problem is always better than complacency and smug self-satisfaction.

Most progressive Muslim northerners I know are embarrassed to no end by the extreme and unprecedented Arewaization of appointments in this regime. They are embarrassed and worried because the lopsidedness of the appointments invites unearned hate to innocent northerners who don’t materially benefit from them, line the pockets of a privileged few, and alienate our compatriots from the South. That’s not sustainable if we still want a country.


Kperogi, PhD, is an Academic and Commentator on National Issues.

Supreme Court Verdict: Edo APC Governorship Candidate, Ize Iyamu, Sues For Unity Among Members

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Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu

By Ayodele Oni

Candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), in the September 19, 2020 Edo state Governorship election, Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu, has finally given up on his fight for the seat. In giving up, he has words of advice to members of the party.

Reacting to the Supreme Court verdict which threw out his appeal against the victory of Governor Godwin Obaseki yesterday, he advised members of‎ the party in the state to reorganize and position the party to win again.

In 2015, he was the candidate of the PDP, but in 2019, on the advice of former National Chairman of the APC, Adams Oshiomhole, he defected to the APC, thus switching positions with Governor Godwin Obaseki who beat him thoroughly in the election.

The Apex court, in a unanimous judgement, cleared Governor Obaseki of Certificate forgery.

In a statement titled “Because we were gallant, our hope is alive” which he issued, the APC candidate said “Yesterday, the Supreme Court by its judgment brought to an end our struggle for the office of the Governor of Edo State that commenced in September, 2020.

“I thank all our supporters as well as our loyal party men and women for your unwavering commitment and sacrifice to the advancement of Edo state and urge you to be law abiding and to be of good cheer.

“What matters most is that our party, the All Progressive Congress (APC), stood up for what we believe in.

“We stood up for the placement of our people at the epicenter of governance which is a sharp departure from the norm.

“As such, let no grievances and no embittered feelings impair the force of our efforts.

“Let us look forward to our coming together to reorganize and position our party to win again. This is in service to our beloved state.

“Finally, I thank God for the opportunity to seek the office. To Him be all honor and glory.”

President Buhari Leaves For Accra, Ghana

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Muhammadu Buhari - Londo Trip

By Ayodele Oni

President Muhammadu Buhari is due in Accra, Ghana on Sunday to attend an emergency Extraordinary Summit of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

A statement by the Special Adviser to the President  on Media and Publicity, Mr Femi Adesina on Saturday, explained that the meeting, is at the instance of the Chairman of the Authority of Heads of State and Government of ECOWAS and President of Ghana, Nana Akufo-Addo.

The host President, Akufo-Addo, was in Abuja a few days to confer with Buhari.

The Accra Summit is expected to discuss recent political developments in Mali, a member of ECOWAS.

Prior to the Extraordinary Summit, the President had met with the Special Envoy and ECOWAS mediator in Mali, former President Goodluck Jonathan, who briefed him on the latest developments in the country following his meeting with key political actors in the West African country.

As the situation in Mali continues to evolve, Nigeria had condemned the May 24 military coup, the subsequent detention of the president and prime minister by soldiers, and called for the immediate and unconditional release of all civilian officials detained.

Those expected to be on President Buhari’s entourage are Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, Minister of Defence, Maj. Gen. Bashir Salihi Magashi (Rtd), Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Otunba Richard Adebayo, and Director-General of National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Ahmed Rufai Abubakar.

The statement added that the President is expected back in Abuja at the end of the one-day Summit.

Senator Tinubu’s ‘Sins’

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Bola Tinubu and his wife, Remi

By James Orji

Senator Oluemi Tinubu, the wife of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, All Progressives Congress National Leader has not stopped trending for the wrong reasons since she became a member of the National Assembly in 2015. But those that have watched her trajectory after becoming a senator had thought that she will carry herself as a distinguished senator of the federal republic. They were wrong.

That expectation has now become a mirage after she was caught up in a brawl with another woman at the Senate Committee on Review of the 1999 Constitution in Lagos this week.

The Senator who heads the south west committee was seen in a viral video abusing Arinola Oloko, a teacher who had come to make contributions at the Marriot Hotel, Lagos on Thursday, the venue of the meeting.

Trouble started when Oloko was prevented by security operatives from entering the venue, which according to the organizer has already been packed by Nigerians who wanted to make presentation before the committee.

It was her protest that drew the attention of Senator Tinubu, who rather than doused the tension, called the angry woman a thug. She later threatened to throw Oloko out from the venue when other people intervened, asking Senator Tinubu who represent Lagos Central in the Senate to apologise to the woman in which she retorted “I will not apologise for what I said. I saw it and I said it,” abusing Oloko for being ‘rude’ to her.

Many Nigerians have reacted to the issue, describing the action of the former First Lady of Lagos state, as unbecoming of an elected public official.

Aisha Yesufu, a rights activist said Senator Tinubu must come down from her high horse if she truly wants to serve the people. According to her “It’s so much disgusting arrogance from a senator who is an elected official to speak to citizens in that manner and this is not the first time Remi Tinubu is doing this. She looks down on people.

“I’m sure she is used to people who come to her, rolling on the floor and she thinks everybody will bow before her family. That is why she keeps on carrying this arrogance around,” Yesufu said.

The senator has denied calling Oloko a ‘thug’, insisting that she was only trying to set the record straight.

Explaining her side of the story, Senator Tinubu said, “It was the noise I heard and as somebody concerned, I went there, that they will be a bit respectful when they see that they put my name as chair and I came out to see them.

“At least, we will be able to talk and dialogue. I didn’t know that it will turn into a noisy field and people will start screaming. I looked at them and I saw a woman. I will tell you, most of the works I’ve done have been supported by women.

“I understand women more than men despite the men I work with and even the men I work with, I respect them when I have to respect them but in this particular incident, I looked at the man, he was angry, possibly he could have waited for a long time.

“I didn’t know who registered, I wasn’t on the registration desk but I looked at the woman screaming and I said I can talk to a woman.

“I said, let me talk to you outside where everybody is, I’ve had COVID and I don’t think I want to be in a cramped place to want to be speaking. And I said, let’s go outside so that I can hear you and hear your complaint.”

“Then, she kept screaming and I said what is going on, are you a thug? I am not going to take that. Are you a thug? Am I talking to a thug? Then her eyes were popping and popping. She is younger than I am, why would I call her a thug outrightly?” Tinubu said.

Notwithstanding, many who have responded to the issue said the senator has become popular for the wrong reasons because it was not her first time of verbally attacking other Nigerians.

On April 28, during the Senate debate on the insecurity in the country, Senator Smart Adeyemi from Kogi state, did not bargain for what he got after Senator Tinubu accused him of working for the opposition People Democratic Party, PDP, after her colleagues said President Muhammadu Buhari has failed to rein in the spate of killings across the country.

“Are you in PDP? Are you a wolf in sheep’s clothing?,” Mrs Tinubu said rebuking the lawmaker, Tinubu said after Adeyemi said “This is the worst instability we are facing. In fact, this is worse than the civil war.”

Another incident involving Tinubu occurred in June 13, 2016 when another Senator Dino Melaye threatened to beat her up and “impregnate you and nothing will happen, “after the two lawmakers disagreed during a debate in the Senate, whether to probe former Senate President Bukola Saraki for forgery.

Even though Melaye received knocks from many Nigerians for trying to beat Mrs Tinubu, others also blamed the Lagos former First Lady for always antagonizing the former Senate President because of the way the latter emerged as the nation’s number three citizen.

Saraki did not get the support of Asiwaju Tinubu and other APC stalwarts to emerge as Senate President, a situation analysts say did not go down well with the former First Lady, who was also denied the chairmanship of a juicy committee as a punishment for her husband’s action.

Meanwhile, analysts familiar with Lagos politics informed the magazine that Senator Tinubu was one of the reasons why Akinwumi Ambode, the immediate past Governor of the state did not get a second term in office, because according to sources, Senator Tinubu accused the former governor of not giving her the respect she deserved as wife of the godfather of Lagos politics, Asiwaju Tinubu.

Everything was going on well for the former helmsman before Tinubu suddenly withdrew his support and threw his weight behind the incumbent, Babajide Sanwo-Olu.

OPINION: Nigeria Can – And Must – Climb Out of The Hole Made By Corruption

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Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede

By Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede

I was 13 years old in 1979, when Nigeria began to slip into a dark, frightening hole that seemed to have appeared overnight, and from which it has yet to emerge: corruption.

Until that point, I had walked with a particular adolescent swagger – that of a young citizen of a newly independent nation that really mattered on the world stage; of a country whose voice carried loud and clear in the community of nations. To me, Nigeria was a country that produced wonderful writers, excellent athletes and brilliant leaders. It was the most populous African nation, one where English was spoken well and whose national IQ was one of the highest in the world. Life in Nigeria, while of course not perfect, was in so many respects really good. And it was getting better.

My secondary school, looking back, provided a reflection of what was happening in Nigeria. In 1977 I was fortunate to attend an elite state-run secondary school, where by any African standard I had access to first-class teachers, academic resources and sporting facilities. Then that hole emerged seemingly from nowhere, and into its bowels vanished so much of what was good about Nigeria.

Suddenly, my school was no longer a centre of excellence, but an underfunded, overcrowded relic of past glory where standards had plummeted overnight. It was a microcosm of the insidious power of the corruption gripping Nigeria, where good was sucked into that forbidding hole and turned into bad. A nation that had up to that point embraced merit in most things, at least those things my childish mind grasped, had done an abrupt about-turn and chosen instead to pursue mediocrity.

At that time, in 1979, Nigeria had just emerged from military rule, the only system of governance I had known since birth in 1966. Power was again handed to civilian authority – but it was not to last long before the military once again seized power in 1983 (and effectively held it again until the turn of the millennium). In 1982, a year before the military seized power from our civilian government for the second time, I began my four years of university studies. Not much changed; certainly, things weren’t getting any better.

Indeed, if I thought that it was the civilians who couldn’t manage our country properly, what followed when we returned to military rule proved that any civilian government is better than a military one. Dictatorship was not only badsocially and economically, but from a global point of view Nigeria was a pariah nation unable to get its act together, and on its way to joining the club of failed African states.

Our military administrations from 1983 on are reckoned by some to have been the most corrupt of all, but perhaps Nigeria was so corrupted already that no one really noticed. Perhaps the hole was now so deep already that it no longer really mattered if it got deeper.

Then the miraculous happened, and in 1999 Nigeria returned again to civilian rule. For the next eight years, because we had once again embraced meritocracy, our country experienced a renaissance. Nigeria made more progress in that short period than it had in the preceding 25 years. We began to climb out of that terrible hole, the one we had dug for ourselves. But then,just as we got our heads above the ground,we lost our footing and we started slipping back down again. Today, I believe, we are almost in the same position we found ourselves in 1999; we have wasted many of the opportunities and outcomes our eight-year renaissance had afforded us.

By now our country should be flying!

Consequently, I have found myself asking: does our apparent inability to climb out of the hole we are in mean that we Nigerians have accepted that we cannot do any better? That our lot in life, despite the fact that we can compete intellectually with any nation on Earth, is much worse than we had dreamed it would be? That our children are consigned to being third-class citizens of the world (unless they emigrate and find opportunity elsewhere)?

Here’s another question to ponder. When I was a small boy, our nation was 60-million strong. When that hole yawned open when I was 13, we stood at around 80-million. Today, we have more than 200-million people mired down there, and in 30 years’ time there will be over 400-million in number. Would that not be the very definition of Hell?

These are the things I dwell upon, the fears that I have for my beloved Nigeria. But then, I look to the examples of other countries that have climbed out of their own holes of poor performance and, instead of basket cases, have become success stories: countries such as Malaysia, Indonesia and China.Surely, if they can, we can, too?

That is the story that I want for my nation. I certainly don’t presume to have all the answers – indeed, I might not have many – but I have resolved to employ the resources I have (financial and otherwise) to do my utmost to change Nigeria’s sad narrative. It’s an investment in a brighter future for my country and all who live in it – and it’s certainly well worth making.


Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede is a banker, investor and philanthropist, and the founder of The Aig-Imoukhuede Foundation.It aims to transform the performance of African public servants,eliminating inefficiency and corruption, so thatAfrican countries are not left stranded on the third world tarmac