May 23, 2023

Ex-US Intelligence Expert Warned UK About ekweremadu's Unexplained Wealth Before Organ Harvesting Case –Report

It noted that the plot could have been foiled if UK authorities had acted on his warnings about Ekweremadu and a dossier of material about his activities in Britain.

Tinubu, Shettima, Governors-Elect, Others Won’t Be Sworn In On May 29 Without Declaring Their Assets –Code Of Conduct Bureau

The Code of Conduct Bureau has warned that without asset declaration no elected public official would be sworn in on May 29, 2023. 

Buhari’s Crimes Against Nigerians Are Beyond Apology —Sowore

Buhari recently apologised for the hardships his government has caused Nigerians in the past eight years.

May 12, 2023

shuke - It Is Most Unacceptable To Insult Eminent Nigerian Personalities Like Pastor Adeboye – Peter Obi

The presidential candidate of the Labour Party in the last general elections, Peter Obi, has slammed those using the name of his support group "Obidients" to abuse and insult Nigeria's eminent personalities.

Drama as Sophia Momodu fires back at Davido, issues him a stern warning

Sophia Momodu replies Davido
Sophia Momodu, the first baby mama of singer, Davido has had enough of him. 

Davido reacts as Sophia Momodu drags him over alleged financial abuse

Award-winning Nigerian singer, Davido has seemingly reacted to his baby mama, Sophia Momodu’s rants on financial abuse.

“Financial abuse is domestic violence” Sophia Momodu rants, sharing cryptic post on Narcissists and Gaslighters.

Fashion connoisseur and influencer, Sophia Momodu has continued to drag her baby daddy, Davido. 

“Financially bullying a woman into staying with you is the most disgusting thing a man can do” Sophia Momodu drags Davido

Sophia Momodu, the first baby mama of singer, Davido has gone on a rant about financial abuse. 

Tribunal Adjourns Peter Obi’s Petition Against Tinubu's Election Victory To May 17

The hearing of the petition submitted by Peter Obi, the Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate at the President Election Petitions Tribunal has been adjourned till next Wednesday, May 17.

Wahala I must be Nigeria’s president – Peter Obi

Peter Obi, the presidential candidate of the Labour Party (LP) during the 2023 general elections, has insisted that he must be President of Nigeria. 

Awon ole Buhari, Osinbajo, governors enjoy N651m hardship allowance

President Buhari, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, state governors, and their deputies have in the last eight years enjoyed about N651.2m hardship allowance.

e shock u APC zoning formula is unfair to North-Central – Gagdi

Yusuf Gagdi, a speakership aspirant for the 10th House of Representatives has called out the All Progressives Congress over its zoning formula ahead of the inauguration on May 29. 

May 10, 2023

Billionaire businessman Femi Otedola opens up on his relationship with Tony Elumelu, the Transcorp shares deal, and why he offered N250bn to buy the company

Billionaire businessman Femi Otedola opens up on his relationship with businessman Tony Elumelu, his Transcorp shares deal, and why he offered N250bn to buy the company, which he says was rejected.

Some people rely on 4am to make announcements - Atiku’s lawyer

Chris Uche (SAN), the lead lawyer for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, has taken a jibe at the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for declaring Bola Ahmed Tinubu winner of the presidential election at about 4am on March 1.

May 09, 2023

Atiku and PDP apply for the live broadcast of Presidential tribunal proceedings

Ahead of the commencement of hearing at the Presidential Election Petition Court today, May 8, the Peoples Democratic Party and its presidential candidate in the just concluded presidential election, Atiku Abubakar, have filed an application for an order to allow the live coverage of the daily court proceedings on the case they brought against the president-elect, Bola Tinubu.

Lori iro Presidential election tribunal begins

Barring any last-minute changes, the Presidential Election Petitions Court (PEPC) commenced on the 8th of May hearing the petitions challenging the declaration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu, as the president-elect.

A rich man and his neighbours

The lady that makes my hair told me an interesting story yesterday. She said when she relocated to this town, she could only afford accommodation in a shanty.

May 06, 2023

Blööd rituáls (juju) and the Nigerian entertainment industry

Nigeria’s entertainment industry has advanced significantly in recent years thanks to the global recognition of its music, films, and visual arts. However, there are rumors and allegations of blood rituals being performed by some artists and business insiders under the glitz and glamour of the industry. 

Charles III crowned King of England

Charles III was on Saturday, crowned the King of England. The coronation took place at London’s Westminster Abbey. 

Sonia Ekweremadu breaks silence after her parents are imprisoned for 10 years

Sonia, the daughter of a former Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, has spoken about her parents’ ordeal in the UK. 

“I was paid N15k for a month” Make-up artiste recounts working for Vice President’s daughter, Kiki Osibanjo (Video)

A Nigerian Make-up artiste, Oma Ojo Vicky has narrated her experience working for the Vice President’s daughter, Kiki Osibanjo.

Lori iro - I won fair and square - Tinubu says as he thanks Wike (video)

President-elect, Bola Tinubu, has said that he won the February 25 presidential election fair and square.

The Buhari Years: How the anti-corruption war floundered

THE 90-page document of achievements rolled out by the media team of the President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (retd.), includes an impressive list of policies, reforms, ordinances, and institutions initiated or upgraded on his watch, all committed to fighting corruption. Alas, it is one of the ironies of his eight-year tenure that a major promise that propelled him to power and raised hopes at home and abroad of a better Nigeria was not met. Instead, graft eventually triumphed under Buhari. His supporters swear that corruption personally offends Buhari; but just as inescapably evident, he failed to effectively translate his intentions, promises and policies to crush sleaze into successful outcomes. 
While Buhari and his team claim success and “significant progress in the eradication of deeply entrenched corruption,” the reality is that corruption remains bullish. Ratings by domestic and global agencies capture the country’s persistent descent into state capture and rent-taking. As he claimed in October 2022, Buhari insists that he has “strengthened the institutions for tackling corruption and cultivated international support, which aided the repatriation of huge sums of money illegally kept outside the country. The increasing number of prosecutions and convictions, with associated refunds of large sums of money, is still ongoing.” True, but the flip side is that the regime eventually undermined its own anti-corruption war. The unravelling is a study in self-subversion, leadership incapacity, lethargy, and compromise. In the anti-corruption war, Buhari scored an A in intention, rhetoric, and grand gestures: in the practical essentials needed to win; political will, coordination, impartiality, and strict enforcement of laws, he did rather poorly.
In the 2022 Corruption Perception Index of Transparency International, Nigeria ranked 150 out of 180 countries; in 2021 it ranked 154, after slight improvements in 2015 and 2016. The 2022 Basel Anti-Money Laundering Index scored Nigeria 6.77 out of 10, finishing a poor 17th out of 128 countries. It is neither for lack of intention, nor of laws, and policies. The regime inherited a country mired in what The Economist of London described as “industrial scale corruption.” His 2015 electioneering mantra was, “If we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria.” Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo highlighted the “grand corruption” dimension where people would cart away public funds without the pretence of formal procurement documents. In the beginning, Buhari looked set for action. He tapped the vigorous operations director of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Ibrahim Magu, to head the agency; and empanelled a seven-member Presidential Advisory Committee against Corruption, headed by the eminent law professor, Itse Sagay, and other aides to drive the campaign.
Two inherited plans, the Treasury Single Account, and the IPPIS–the first to ensure remittance of government revenues directly and in real-time, and the second to digitise salary payment of public workers and eliminate the scourge of “ghost workers,”—were actualised to initial acclaim. He initiated new ordinances and strengthened others. The Asset Management Corporation Act was amended in 2019 and 2021; he sought to streamline asset recovery and disposal, culminating with the Proceeds of Crime (Recovery and Management) Act 2022. Presidential Executive Orders to improve the ease of doing business at the ports and other trade facilitation agencies won some praise. The United States Commerce Department in response, removed its negative advisory on Nigeria’s ports and enabled the country to briefly improve its anti-corruption rating.
There has also been enthusiastic interdiction, arrests, trials, and convictions, as well as seizures by the EFCC, the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission. The sealing of agreements with global agencies and other countries on money laundering and corruption was also undertaken. Undaunted by institutional constraints, the EFCC and ICPC struggled bravely to fulfil their mandate. The EFCC secured 3,785 convictions of fraudsters and treasury looters in 2022 alone, shattering its own record of 2,220 convictions in 2021, continuing a pattern of increased convictions; from 103 in 2015, it rose to 195 in 2016, 312 in 2018, spiking to 1,280 in 2019. Over $121 million was also recovered in the 10 months to October 2021, said Abdulrasheed Bawa, EFCC’s youthful chairman. For the full year, recoveries of stolen funds were N152 billion and $386 million and smaller sums on other currencies apart from fixed and movable properties seized in Nigeria and abroad. 
Between 2019 and 2022, the ICPC said it “recovered, forfeited and restrained” assets valued at N450.99 billion from corrupt persons. Of the 4,705 investigations and 309 prosecutions it undertook in the three years, it secured 85 convictions. TransparencIT, a civic tech organisation, noted that like EFCC, conviction rates by ICPC saw minor increases from 2017, and that in its 20 years of existence, the agency had secured 180 convictions. There are shortcomings and operational flaws, but Bawa, his predecessor, Magu and ICPC Chairman, Bolaji Owasanoye, and their operatives, consistently demonstrated enthusiasm in prosecuting the war. For these, Buhari deserves the credit and was named the first African Union Anti-Corruption Champion in 2018. But despite this recognition, his stated personal aversion for graft, speeches and the slew of policies, and the valiant efforts of the anti-corruption agencies, the war faltered. As he leaves office, corruption is ascendant. A report by Deutsche Welle in 2022 labelled the war as “hopeless,” insisting that the country was “sinking deeper into the mire of corruption.” A 2019 survey led by the UNODC found that most Nigerians believed that corruption had increased. What went wrong? The reasons are varied. One is that corruption will always fight back. But decisively, the regime’s anti-corruption war was defeated by its own internal contradictions, and self-subversion, and by Buhari’s lack of firm leadership.
To begin with, he had no overall coherent strategy. The disparate policies, measures, regulations, laws, and agencies lacked cohesive coordination, a central clearing house or effective command and control centre. Buhari neither took direct charge nor appointed, or empowered an overall coordinator backed by the full weight of his office. In the event, inter-agency rivalry reigned. The State Security Service effectively prevented Magu from being confirmed by the Senate. He was eventually forced out by an alliance of regime insiders including the Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami. Once, a shoot-out was only just averted when secret police agents thwarted an attempt by EFCC operatives to arrest a former security chief. Every war needs an overall strategy, commander and adaptable tactics shaped by battlefield realities. This one did not.
Fatal to the enterprise also was the failure to headhunt an AGF with a known passion to crush corruption. Malami never demonstrated this ardour. Buhari also kept some tainted company; many of those with whom he formed the All Progressives Congress and won power, have corruption allegations hanging around them. A former APC chairman, Adams Oshiomhole, once publicly invited opponents to join them promising that promptly their “sins would be forgiven.” The Centre for Democracy and Development noted that Buhari “consistently turned a blind eye to malfeasance by some of his own appointees and resisted independent oversight of Nigeria’s most scandal-ridden agencies.” Lapses have surfaced in IPPIS, and some agencies flout the TSA without facing strong sanctions. 
A former state governor had his N5 billion fraud trial discontinued after he stepped down from the contest for the Senate presidency in favour of Ahmad Lawan, the regime’s choice. Abdulrasheed Maina, who was accused in 2012 of diverting pension funds running into billions of naira and declared wanted by the police and the EFCC, was in 2017 secretly reabsorbed into service and promoted in a move later found to have been orchestrated by some regime figures. His eventual arrest and conviction could not erase the credibility deficit. Overwhelmingly, those convicted are mostly common fraudsters and few officials; institutional weakness enables most politically exposed persons to walk free. In 2022, Buhari granted pardon to two convicted PEPs, Joshua Dariye and Jolly Nyame, ex-governors of Plateau and Taraba states respectively. The NNPC, the Nigerian Ports Authority, the Nigerian Police Force and other graft-prone agencies were not thoroughly cleansed. A suspended Accountant-General of the Federation allegedly was able to steal N109 billion out of which he has returned N30 billion, according to the EFCC. The US Department of State, in its 2021 Country Reports on Human Rights accused the Nigerian government of deliberately underfunding the judiciary to make it ineffective in prosecuting corruption cases. “Many of the corruption cases, particularly the high-profile ones, remained pending before the courts due to administrative or procedural delays,” the report said.
Buhari’s promise to dump the corruption-enhancing “envelope” budgeting system that facilitates massive looting by public servants and federal legislators did not materialise. The ICPC revealed that MDAs ‘padded’ the 2021 budget to the tune of N300 billion. They allegedly ‘padded’ the 2022 budget with duplicated projects worth N100 billion. Yet there were no publicly-known consequences for the complicit lawmakers and civil servants. In 2021, an NGO compiled a list of 25 top corruption cases linked with stolen or mismanaged funds worth N900 billion, which the government was investigating but was left dormant. In the years ahead, analysts reviewing how the war floundered will cite Buhari’s customary inattentiveness, his lack of hands-on supervision, other leadership lapses, cronyism, and failure to rein in members of his inner circle and heads of key agencies, and the influence of the corrupt political elite among others. All these and institutional weakness played their part. But perhaps the most decisive is this: Buhari did not realise that in a diverse, polarised polity like Nigeria, sectionalism in appointments and policies, nepotism and exclusionary practices are also enablers of corruption that were bound eventually to weaken and subvert the war. From the start, therefore, the war was doomed.

Emefiele’s CBN superintendence is so damaging

THREE months on, the damage to the economy wrought by the Central Bank of Nigeria’s ill-timed and riotously implemented naira redesign policy is still raging.

Nigeria’s electoral show of Shame

The conduct of the 2023 presidential/National Assembly polls on February 25 has once more stirred deep questions on the credibility and integrity of the Independent National Electoral Commission.

Revisiting the faulty ‘repentant terrorists’ narrative

The military has just dispersed another 594 Boko Haram terrorists and enablers that it claimed to have de-radicalised into society under the Federal Government’s Operation Safe Corridor rehabilitation and reintegration plan.

May 03, 2023

What type of role model will the ruling class have hoisted on millions of Nigerians?

Role modeling is a responsibility each individual owes society for the continuance of a culture of which virtue, ethos and decorum form the foundation.

Is Nigeria done for? Are we done for?-Tony Afejuku

The February 25 presidential election was a Nigerian peculiar phenomenon I deliberately did not want to comment on or write about before or after the event.

Avoiding the Rwandan Roulette in Nigeria - Ike Willie-Nwobu

On April 7, the United Nations will observe the International Day of Reflection on the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda.

‘Nigeria’s Hollow Democracy’: Full Text of Chimamanda’s Open Letter to Biden

Dear President Biden,
Something remarkable happened on the morning of February 25, the day of the Nigerian presidential election. Many Nigerians went out to vote holding in their hearts a new sense of trust. Cautious trust, but still trust.

Southern Kaduna: Blood, Tears, Anger [DOCUMENTARY ]- DAVID HUNDEYIN

Something truly abominable is happening in Southern Kaduna. Join Beevan Magoni as he explores the depths of hell in Nigeria's Middle Belt. 

The subversive politics of Gangs of Lagos -Abimbola Adelakun

The Nigerian Video and Film Censors Board Executive Director Adedayo Thomas said their agency is not taking any censorious action against Gangs of Lagos, a film directed by Jade Osiberu and streaming on Amazon Prime, because the law does not empower them to regulate online content.

Yorùbá ro’nú, yes, ro’nú! - Abimbola Adelakun

The ethnic irredentists who regularly punctuate the atmosphere with the dog whistle of Yorùbá ro’nú are not sincerely invested in the gains of contemplation.

Has Bola Ahmed Tinubu Committed Perjury? The Evidence Says Yes - DAVID HUNDEYIN

Who exactly is the presidential candidate of Nigeria's ruling party? The results of several subpoenas have revealed forged documents, identity theft, false claims and perjury on his INEC Form EC9.

Buhari’s Deleted Tweet and the Ghost of Nigeria’s Civil War

The tweet was written by President Buhari that Twitter deleted resuscitated the fears and ghosts of Nigeria's brutal civil war one that still reverberates through politics today.

May 01, 2023

Buhari’s Billionaire Nephew, Tunde Sabiu, Posted To UK By NIA To Evade Prosecution

Sabiu ‘Tunde’ Yusuf, the personal secretary to President Muhammadu Buhari who is in his 30s, is set to retire with the biggest retirement benefit from loot said to run into billions of dollars. 

NDLEA Shields ‘President-Select’, Says It Cannot Arrest, Prosecute Tinubu For Drugs Offences

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA, has said that the court lacks the jurisdiction to entertain a suit instituted by the Peoples Democratic Party seeking an order of mandamus to compel the anti-narcotics agency to arrest and prosecute the “President-Select,” Bola Tinubu, over alleged forfeiture of funds in his bank accounts in the United States for alleged drugs issues. 

Beautiful moments from Davido and Chioma’s court wedding (Video)

Award-winning superstar singer, Davido and his wife, Chioma Rowland made headlines late last year when they tied the knot at a private ceremony.

Lori iro - Why we can’t arrest and prosecute Tinubu - NDLEA

The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA, has filed a preliminary objection to a suit instituted by the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, and a chieftain of the opposition party, Senator Dino Melaye, seeking an order of mandamus to compel the anti-drug agency to arrest and prosecute President-elect, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, over alleged forfeiture of some funds in his bank accounts over two decades ago in the United States. 
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