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[BREAKING] Rivers lawmakers dump PDP, defect to APC

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SIXTEEN members of the Rivers State House of Assembly have dumped their party – the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) for the All Progressives Congress (APC)

The defection was announced during plenary by Speaker Martin Amaewhule, who convened the sitting at the Conference Hall of the Legislative Quarters on Aba Road, on Friday December 5, where lawmakers have been meeting since the demolition of their official chamber.

Amaewhule, who has been at the centre of the Assembly’s prolonged standoff with Governor Siminalayi Fubara, told colleagues he was also leaving the PDP.

“Distinguished colleagues, very happily, let me announce that your Speaker has decided and has indeed written to my (sic) ward chairman about my (sic) decision to leave the PDP. APC is my new party.

“The major reason for leaving the PDP is because of the division in the party,” he said.

“APC is my new party. I will do all that is needed to be done towards ensuring that the party card of the All Progressives Congress is issued to me in no time. I am happy to be a member of the APC so that we can join forces with Mr President. He is doing so much for this country.

“President Bola Ahmed Tinubu means well for Nigeria. He is tackling issues of security headlong. The President has shown love to Rivers State; he is helping Rivers people to be part of the governance of this country. I am so delighted to be part of the APC so we can support the president right inside the All Progressives Congress,” he added.

Meanwhile, the 10 remaining members of the PDP in the House appointed Sylvanus Nwankwo of Omuma constituency as Minority Leader. He was sworn in alongside three others as minority officer holders. They are Dominic Iderima, Justina Emeji, and Barile Wako.

The lawmakers’ defection came barely three months after the Assembly resumed full legislative duties on September 18, following President Tinubu’s decision to lift the six-month state of emergency imposed on the state in March 2025.

The measure, according to the president, was triggered to halt the breakdown of governance during the rift between Governor Siminalayi Fubara and the Nyesom Wike-backed faction of the Assembly.

The lawmakers who defected include: Dumle Maol, Major Jack, Linda Stewart, Franklin Nwabochi, Azeru Opara, Smart Adoki, Enemi George, Solomon Wami, Igwe Aforji, Tekena Wellington, Looloo Opuende, Peter Abbey, Arnold Dennis, Chimezie Nwankwo, and Ofiks Kabang.

This mass exit further alters the political complexion of the legislature, which only recently returned to normal operations after emergency rule dissolved the state’s political structures and installed retired Vice Admiral Ibok-Ete Ibas as sole administrator.

Their move also followed Wednesday, December 3, vote of confidence in Tinubu, passed by 32 members of the House.

The lawmakers had urged him to contest for a second term.

“In a remarkable display of appreciation to President Bola Tinubu, and confidence in his administration, the Rivers State House of Assembly at its 37th legislative sitting on Wednesday resolved on a motion calling on the President to run for a second term in office,” a statement by the Speaker’s media aide, Martins Wachukwu, read.

Why we blacklisted IGP Egbetokun, Bago, Eno – IPI

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THE International Press Institute (IPI) Nigeria has justified its decision to enter Niger State Governor Mohammed Umaru Bago, Akwa Ibom State Governor Umo Eno and the Inspector-General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, into its newly launched Nigeria Book of Infamy, a registry for blacklisting public officials accused of violating press freedom.

The development came shortly after the names were announced at the 2025 IPI Nigeria Conference and Annual General Meeting in Abuja, where Vice President Kashim Shettima and the Minister of Information, Mohammed Idris, unveiled the book on December 2.

The initiative according to the organiser was designed to publicly identify state actors who suppress journalists or interfere with constitutionally guaranteed media rights.

The IPI Nigeria President, Musikilu Mojeed, had disclosed during the conference that the first set of entries would include the two governors and the police chief, citing “repeated excesses against the media” despite several engagements.

Following the public announcement, IPI Nigeria released a detailed statement on Thursday outlining the grounds for the blacklisting.

Bago’s closure of Badegi FM, harassment of journalists

The institute accused Governor Mohammed Bago of presiding over a pattern of intimidation against journalists and media houses in Niger State, with the most glaring being the closure of Badegi 90.1 FM in Minna on August 1, 2025.

According to the statement, the governor, while addressing an APC meeting, directed the Commissioner for Homeland Security and the Commissioner of Police to seal the independent station and profile its owner over alleged criticism of his administration.

The organisation said its August 3 condemnation and subsequent engagements with the state government were ignored.

Although the station was later reopened after widespread public outrage, the institute said the harassment continued.

This prompted another letter to the governor on November 3, which was also ignored.

The group cited earlier incidents as part of what it described as a “troubling pattern”  including the three-day detention of journalist Yakubu Mustapha in January 2025 and the assault on VOA correspondent Mustapha Nasiru Batsari in 2023.

“Governor Bago’s conduct is undemocratic, unconstitutional, and unacceptable. For these reasons, he is hereby listed in the IPI Nigeria Book of Infamy,” the statement added.

Egbetokun enabling police harassment of journalists

The IGP’s inclusion followed what IPI Nigeria called a sustained pattern of police abuse against journalists under his watch.

It cited the arrest and repeated summons of Media Room Hub publisher, Azuka Ogujiuba, over her reporting on a land dispute currently before the courts. Ogujiuba was detained twice and compelled to travel repeatedly from Lagos to Abuja for interrogation, despite no legal basis for the harassment.

The IPI said that instead of intervening to stop the abuses, several other cases of unlawful arrests and assaults occurred across state commands, including those involving Abdulaziz Aliyu in Kano, Nasir Yelwa in Abuja, and FIJ reporter Sodeeq Atanda in Ekiti.

The institute added that a formal letter sent to the IGP on September 30 was ignored.

Under his leadership, IPI said, “a culture of impunity has flourished in police interactions with journalists,” adding that failure to halt the pattern amounted to dereliction of constitutional duty.

“For failing to uphold his constitutional duties and allowing systematic media repression, Inspector-General Kayode Egbetokun is hereby listed in the IPI Nigeria Book of Infamy,” it added.

Umo Eno kept Channels TV journalists barred for months

Also, Governor Umo Eno’s sanction stemmed from his administration’s expulsion of Channels Television reporters, Christopher Moffat and Kufre Ikpe, from the Government House Press Centre on May 24, 2025.

The journalists were barred after reporting an “undemocratic remark” by the governor.

The IPI said its immediate condemnation was followed by months of engagement with the Commissioner for Information, Aniekan Umanah, and the governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Ekerete Udoh, but the ban has continued for seven months.

The governor failed to reply to a letter written to him by the institute on October 2.

“The continued exclusion of Channels Television reporters constitutes a direct assault on press freedom and violates constitutional guarantees under Sections 22 and 39.

“For refusing to reverse his administration’s repressive actions and for perpetuating a climate hostile to journalists, Governor Umo Eno is hereby listed in the IPI Nigeria Book of Infamy,” the statement added.

Investment scam: Transact with Glorious Wealth Fund at your own risk, SEC warns Nigerians

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THE Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has warned Nigerians against the financial risk of transacting with an online investment platform known as Glorious Wealth Fund (GWF).

In a statement on Thursday, December 4, the SEC said the platform was not registered or licensed to carry out any capital market activity in Nigeria, contrary to claims that it offers investment in Nigerian stocks and other financial instruments under the commission’s supervision.

“The attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Nigeria has been drawn to the activities of an online investment platform known as and operating under the name Glorious Wealth Fund (GWF) through its website gloriouswealthfund.com,” part of the statement reads.

“The operators of this platform claim to offer investment services in Nigerian stocks and other financial instruments, purportedly under the supervision of the SEC. The commission hereby informs the public that the Glorious Wealth Fund (GWF) is not registered or licensed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Nigeria to carry out any form of capital market activity in the Nigerian capital market.

It urged the public to note that any claim by GWF it did not supervise, license, or approve is false, misleading, and fraudulent.

The commission said it had received complaints from investors who were unable to withdraw funds deposited on the platform, noting that the activities bore traits of an “illegal investment scheme designed to defraud unsuspecting Nigerians.”

“Accordingly, the public is advised to refrain from dealing with GWF, as any person who engages with the entity or its representatives does so at his/her own risk.

“The commission uses this medium to reiterate that transacting in the Nigerian Capital Market with unregistered and unregulated entities exposes investors to financial risk, including fraud and potential loss of investment.”

The agency urged the public to verify the registration status of companies and entities offering investment opportunities on its portal before transacting with them.

This is not the first time the SEC has issued such an advisory against unverified investments in securities.

In 2023, the commission blacklisted six e-commerce companies for operating without registration and for engaging in dubious financial services not authorised by the commission.

The unregulated online trading platforms the SEC has blacklisted are Prime Invest, FXBoxed and New Finance LLC & New FX Limited.

Others are Axi24, Evolve Consulting LCC, and Trust Fund Mining Global Pty Ltd.

The commission advised members of the public to adopt “the greatest” diligence in making investment choices.

Appeal Court upholds ban on vehicle confiscation, fines imposition by VIO

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THE Court of Appeal in Abuja on Thursday, December 4, upheld a judgment barring the Directorate of Road Traffic Services (DTRS), known as the Vehicle Inspection Office (VIO), from stopping vehicles, confiscating them, or imposing fines on motorists.

The judge, Oyejoju Oyewumi, while delivering the unanimous ruling on behalf of a three-member panel, affirmed the October 16, 2024, decision of the Federal High Court, which had restrained the VIO from harassing drivers on public roads. The appellate court dismissed the VIO’s appeal, ruling it lacked merit.

The dispute arose from a fundamental rights suit filed by human rights activist and lawyer Abubakar Marshal, who challenged the legality of the VIO’s actions on public highways.

The Federal High Court had in 2024, held that no law empowered the agency, its Vehicle Inspection Officers, or related authorities, to impound vehicles or impose fines.

The original ruling described such practices as illegal, oppressive, and a violation of citizens’ rights to freedom of movement, presumption of innocence, and property ownership.

Delivering the judgement in case number FHC/ABJ/CS/1695/2023 on Wednesday, October 2, 2024, the presiding judge, Nkeonye Evelyn Maha, held that no law empowered the respondents to carry out such activities.

“The actions of the first to fourth respondents, under the control of the fifth respondent, are not empowered by any law or statute to stop, impound, or confiscate the vehicles of motorists or impose fines on them,” she said.

The Federal High Court subsequently issued a restraining order against the respondents, to stop them and their agents from impounding or confiscating vehicles or imposing fines, declaring such actions as improper, illegal, and oppressive.

The court issued a perpetual injunction to uphold Nigerians’ rights to their freedom of movement, presumption of innocence, and right to own property.

PAPSS payment platform to solve intra-African business transaction complications – Expert

THE Pan-African Payment and Settlement Systems (PAPSS) is expected to offer solutions to complications associated with intra-African trade transactions through a seamless backend transaction supported by African Central Banks.

Launched in June 2022, PAPPS is a centralised payment infrastructure designed to facilitate faster and more cost-effective cross-border trade transactions in local African currencies.

The payment platform, which is an initiative of Afreximbank and complements trading under the African Continental Free Trade Agreement Area (AfCTA), also minimises risk and contributes to financial integration across the regions. It has also been projected to save $5 billion in clearance and transaction costs, as reported by The ICIR.

“So, within 54 African countries and over 42 currencies, with each country having its own licensing requirements for trade routes, that is a recipe for trade transaction complications, but PAPPS is already bringing businesses together,” said a financial technology expert, Gabriel Ologunwa, who spoke in a monitored interview after the official launch of the PAPPS COWRY Conference held in Lagos.

He emphasised that breaking down trade barriers was the primary objective of PAPPS, which facilitates the instant settlement of intra-African transactions.

Commenting on how the payment initiative could dissuade centralised business transactions with dollars at the expense of intra-African trade, he said, “PAPPS works as an integrated unified marketplace, connecting every player with the ecosystem. Businesses have access to the platform.

“If a customer walks into a bank in Nigeria, with the intention to transfer N10,000 to a relative in Ghana, for 5,000 cedis. The transaction is done on the PAPPS platform, and what happens is that the customer in the Nigerian bank is debited, while the Ghanaian bank is credited on the platform in real time alongside the quoted exchange rate by the respective Central Banks,” he explained further.

According to Ologunwa,16 African Central Banks are currently on the platform, with over 160 commercial banks already boarded to offer the services to business and industrial clusters across Africa.

He explained that the platform had quotations of various African countries’ exchange rates, where countries “are allowed to quote their own rates for easier transactions.”

Apart from growing intra-African trade, the platform focuses on bringing African countries together, more closely in business dealings.

“It is estimated that as of today, $54 billion in transactions happen on the continent, and we expect that the platform will scale up such transactions. We are also moving to the era where marketers should naturally dictate the price and remove artificial scarcity of currencies,” he added.

Findings show that the new pan-African payment system removes legacy complexities, including the cost of cross-border payments, bolsters operational efficiencies and sets a new path to more stable and stronger African currencies. It is believed to spur intra-African trade.

Analysts believe that the platform would ease the financial burden of traders to enable them to scale beyond their countries’ borders and tap into the AfCFTA, with a market value of $3 trillion.

The Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise (CPPE), Muda Yusuf, who spoke further about the platform, told The ICIR that PAPSS was a major positive development for trade facilitation on the African continent, especially in the context of AFCFTA.

Yusuf said the payment settlements would take place within the continent.

“It is estimated that the continent would be saving about $5 billion in payment transactions costs with the adoption of the PAPSS platform,” Yusuf said.

EFCC appeals judgment ordering release of 27 seized properties

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THE Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said it had filed a notice of appeal challenging a recent judgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja that ordered the release of 27 houses it confiscated to businessman James Ikechukwu Okwete and his company Jamec West Africa Limited.

The appeal, filed on December 1, 2025, at the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division under Suit No. FHC/ABJ/CS/348/2025, seeks an order staying execution of the trial court’s October 31 judgment pending the appeal’s determination, according to the statement by the commission.

The commission sought “an order of this honourable court staying execution of the judgment of this honourable court delivered on the 31st day of October 2025 pending the hearing and determination of the appeal filed on the 1st day of December 2025 against the judgment.”

“And for such other further orders as the honourable court may deem fit to make in the circumstances”

Reports indicate that the controversy dates back to March 2025, when the EFCC obtained an ex-parte interim forfeiture order over 27 properties, claiming they were acquired with proceeds of unlawful acts.

The commission publicised the interim order in a national daily on April 4, 2025.

James Okwete and his company contested the forfeiture, arguing to reclaim the houses. A third individual, Adebukunola Iyabode Oladapo, asserted interest in one of the properties located at House No 12, Fandriana Close, Wuse 2, Abuja.

They filed objections to the EFCC’s bid for final forfeiture.

Meanwhile, on October 31, 2025, Justice Joyce Abdulmalik of the Federal High Court ruled in favour of Okwete and company.

The judge vacated the interim forfeiture order, dismissed the application for final forfeiture and directed that the properties be immediately released.

In her ruling, she held that their affidavit of cause had merit, effectively concluding that the commission had not sufficiently demonstrated that the properties were proceeds of crime.

The court directed the EFCC to return the houses, but the agency, dissatisfied with the decision, promptly filed an appeal.

“Without more, I forthwith set aside and vacate in its entirety the interim order of forfeiture granted on 13th March, 2025, to the applicant in respect of the properties listed in the schedule attached to the applicant’s ex-parte originating motion.

“Accordingly, I order the immediate release of the aforementioned properties/its documents to the property owner/respondent and the House No: 12 Fandriana Close, Wuse 2, Abuja, FCT to Adebukunola lyabode Oladapo respectively.

“In that vein, the applicant’s motion for final forfeiture along with the corresponding responses filed are now otiose. I so hold,” the judge ruled.

Subsequently, the court, through a Form 48 issued by its registry and addressed to the chairman of the EFCC, warned of the consequences of the commission’s alleged continued failure to comply with its October 31 judgment directing the immediate release of the 27 houses.

As Tinubu continues to insult Nigerians

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By Ikechkukwu Amaechi

TINUBU’s political appointments mirror who he is and his abiding political philosophy. As someone poignantly asked, if he didn’t appoint the likes of  Mahmoud Yakubu, Reno Omokri and Femi Fani-Kayode, people who reflect him in character, attitude, political conduct, and the elasticity of principles, who else? In all Tinubu does, politics trumps governance. What matters is how to strengthen his hold on power, and not the promotion of common good. Even if that translates to insulting Nigerians, so be it.

How else can it be explained that a congenital liar like Reno Omokri is being rewarded with an ambassadorial post for ethnic-baiting Ndigbo? This is where the Southeast senators must prove their mettle if they have any. Since it is unlikely that Tinubu will expunge Omokri’s name from the list and the Senate will most likely confirm his nomination, Igbo senators, notwithstanding their political affiliation, in one accord must call for a division on the floor of the Senate so that it will be seen that they voted against his despicable antics and unpardonable ethnic slurs. It won’t stop his clearance but enlightened political self-interest demands that.

It is extremely difficult to understand why President Bola Tinubu takes delight in insulting Nigerians at every turn. Or how else can one explain most of his actions other than those of a leader who does not care a hoot about what the people think or feel?

A few weeks ago, it was the issue of presidential pardon. It beggared belief that a president would demean a constitutional instrument, designed not only to temper justice with mercy but also give the Nigerian state a human face with the axiomatic milk of kindness flowing underneath its near infinite powers.

Rather than hoisting justice on the totem pole of earned mercy, the initial list of 175 beneficiaries was populated by individuals convicted of grave crimes such as drug trafficking, kidnapping, murder, and corruption. In fact, almost 30 per cent of those pardoned were convicted for drug-related crimes. Granted, after days of sustained public outrage, the list was pruned to 120. Tinubu’s acolytes insist that the review of the original list was proof that he is a listening president. Maybe! But it says a lot about his value orientation.

But even as Nigerians were smarting from that embarrassing lapse of judgement, the president has scored another own goal, this time with the release of a list of 32 ambassador-designates that will be posted to some of the country’s 109 global missions.

In rectifying the errors in the prerogative of mercy list, the president, ever Teflon, blamed everybody else but himself. Bayo Onanuga, his special adviser on information and strategy, said in a statement on Wednesday, October 30, that the move became necessary in view of the seriousness and security implications of some of the earlier forgiven offences and the need to be sensitive to the feelings of the victims of the crimes and society.

Noting that Tinubu had directed the immediate relocation of the secretariat of the Presidential Advisory Committee on Prerogative of Mercy (PACPM) from the Ministry of Special Duties to the Ministry of Justice, Onanuga said his principal had directed Lateef Fagbemi, the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, to issue appropriate guidelines for the exercise, henceforth.

The impression was that, hitherto, there were no appropriate guidelines for the exercise. Nothing could be farther from the truth. To be sure, the power, rooted in Section 175 of the 1999 Constitution, established an unambiguous process that requires a convicted person or their representative submitting a written application to the Attorney-General’s office. The application is then reviewed by the PACPM, which considers various factors, including the nature of the offence, age, health condition, period of incarceration, good behaviour, and evidence of remorse and rehabilitation potential.

It is only after this process has been concluded that the president exercises the power after consultation with the Council of State. Even after that, there is yet a final administrative and legal review which is conducted by the Attorney-General’s office to ensure that all legal and procedural requirements are met before the formal instrument of release is issued.

So, that Tinubu deemed it necessary to pardon the category of convicts that were undeserving was not because of the absence of appropriate guidelines but a reflection of the values that inform his policy choices.

That is exactly what he has done again with his vexatious ambassadorial appointments. Recall that on September 2, 2023, three months after assuming office, Tinubu recalled all ambassadors, both career and non-career.

The only explanation offered by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Tuggar, for the action was that “ambassadors as representatives of the country serve at the behest of the president and it is his prerogative to send or recall them from any country.” Which is true! But to what end?

The recall came just three years after his predecessor, late Muhammadu Buhari, in July 2020 appointed 41 non-career and 42 career ambassadors to man the nation’s diplomatic missions. They were subsequently deployed after confirmation by the Senate in accordance with section 171(2)(1c) and Subsection 4 of the 1999 Constitution.

Having waited for two years, Nigerians expected that when Tinubu eventually rolls out the list, it will be a bang. It was a whimper, instead. Like everything under Tinubu’s watch, the list is an anti-climax.

What is worse, agreed, it is the prerogative of the president to nominate ambassadors, but in doing that, he must show Nigerians some respect. By nominating men who cannot withstand integrity scrutiny, certified domestic violence offenders, and congenital liars, just as he did with the prerogative of mercy list, Tinubu is insulting the citizens.

Being an ambassador is a big deal. Why? Because these are people who automatically become the face of the nation in the global community. They are the mirror through which other countries view Nigeria, which explains why countries always put their best foot forward. Besides strong communication skills, countries look out for the pristine qualities of integrity, resilience, sedateness, and right temperament in their ambassadors. It is neither a job for flippant nor short-fused fellows.

To compensate politicians who not only failed woefully as state governors but also bankrupted their states with ambassadorial appointments is a great disservice to the country. It is even worse when it becomes a reward for corruption, which seems to be the case here.

Recall that in April 2017, EFCC discovered $43 million, £27,000 and N23 million stashed in a flat on Osborne Road, Ikoyi, home of one of Tinubu’s nominees, Ayo Oke, former Director-General of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA). The cash, in sealed plastic wrappers, was hidden in filing cabinets and behind hidden panels in a wardrobe. Following reports that the monies belonged to the NIA, a three-man panel headed by former Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo indicted Oke and recommended his dismissal from service, which was effected in October 2017. He was subsequently charged to court for money laundering. On November 9, 2017, Justice Saliu Sadu of the Federal High Court, Ikoyi, Lagos, ordered the temporary forfeiture of Flat 7B Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos, where the monies – $43,449, 947, £27,800 and N23,218,000 – were found, to the Federal Government and later ordered a permanent forfeiture after NIA failed to claim ownership.

It is instructive that on Friday, June 9, 2023 less than two weeks after Tinubu became president, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) applied for the termination of the money laundering case against Oke and Justice Chukwujekwu Aneke of the Federal High Court, Ikoyi, obliged.

What was the reason for the termination? Administration apologists claim that subjecting Oke to open trial might compromise the nation’s security operations. Yet, here is a country where a former National Security Adviser (NSA), Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki, has been on trial for over a decade on an amended 32-count charge bordering on criminal breach of trust, dishonest release of various sums of money to the tune of N33.2 billion. Dasuki was accused of misappropriating security funds in the accounts of the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA). But N33.2 billion is peanuts compared to the allegations against Oke.

Today, he has been nominated as an ambassador and going by Onanuga’s claim that the initial three ambassadorial nominees that included Oke, Ambassador Amin Mohammed Dalhatu and Retired Colonel Lateef Kayode Are “are in the pot for posting to the UK, USA, or France after their confirmation,” Ambassador Oke is presumably headed for either Washington, London or Paris, arguably three of the most important and strategic diplomatic posts.

But isn’t the Tinubu presidency aware that intelligence officers are never sent to Washington and London as number one; only London and Paris accept persons with intelligence background as Deputy High Commissioners? A retired career ambassador friend of mine quipped last week: “I suspect that the man (Tinubu) nominated three people – Oke, Dalhatu, Are – that will never get Agrément from any of these countries. Besides, I want to see which country will give Agrément for these nominees. That will let us know who rules Tinubu and Nigeria.”

I doubt if Tinubu will nominate these men with the hope that the host countries will help him in doing the dirty job of rejection. It is not always that the ‘Nasir el-Rufai game’ is played.

But the most impudent of all the nominations is that of Mahmoud Yakubu, a professor and the immediate past chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), barely one month after he left office.

Could his nomination be redemption of a 2023 debt of gratitude by Tinubu? Whatever, it speaks volumes – contempt and lack of respect for Nigerians who are still scandalised by Yakubu’s shenanigans as INEC boss.

But nobody should be surprised. Tinubu’s political appointments mirror who he is and his abiding political philosophy. As someone poignantly asked, if he didn’t appoint the likes of Yakubu, Reno Omokri and Femi Fani-Kayode, people who reflect him in character, attitude, political conduct, and the elasticity of principles, who else?

In all Tinubu does, politics trumps governance. What matters is how to strengthen his hold on power, and not the promotion of common good. And even if that translates to insulting Nigerians, so be it. Or how else can it be explained that a congenital liar like Reno Omokri is being rewarded with an ambassadorial post for ethnic-baiting Ndigbo?

And this is where the Southeast senators must prove their mettle if they have any. Since it is unlikely that Tinubu will expunge Reno Omokri’s name from the list and the Senate will most likely confirm his nomination, Igbo senators, notwithstanding their political affiliation, in one accord must call for a division on the floor of the Senate so that it will be seen that they voted against his despicable antics and unpardonable ethnic slurs. It won’t stop his clearance but enlightened political self-interest demands that.

Amaechi can be reached on ikechukwuamaechi@yahoo.com

Tinubu nominates Ibas, Dambazau, others as ambassadors

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PRESIDENT Bola Tinubu has nominated the former Chief of Naval Staff and immediate past sole administrator of Rivers State,  Ibok-Ete Ekwe Ibas, as a non-career ambassador. 

The list includes former Senator Ita Enang; former Imo State First Lady, Chioma Ohakim; and former Minister of Interior and ex-Chief of Army Staff Abdulrahman Dambazau.

The nominations, conveyed in a letter read on the Senate floor, on Thursday, December 4, by Senate President Godswill Akpabio, were referred to the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs.

The committee was also directed to complete their screening and report within one week. 

In his letter, Tinubu urged the lawmakers to give the nominees prompt consideration to enable him to make critical diplomatic postings.

This latest batch followed earlier nominations that were widely criticised by the opposition parties, including the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Nigerians, who accused the president of rewarding political allies rather than appointing qualified diplomats. 

On November 29, the PDP described a previous ambassadorial list as ‘scandalous’ and full of individuals with “integrity deficits,” alleging further that the selections were politically motivated rather than merit based.

The party said the list confirmed fears that the Tinubu administration was more inclined to rewarding political loyalists than appointing credible representatives capable of enhancing Nigeria’s global standing.

According to the statement, signed by the PDP National Publicity Secretary, Ini Ememobong, the ambassadorial selections offered a troubling picture of the president’s judgment and priorities. The party said it was no surprise that Nigerians reacted with outrage when the names were made public.

Similarly, many citizens on social media expressed outrage, particularly over nominations of former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and politicians whose past roles were marked by controversy. They argued that these appointments reinforced perceptions of patronage and a reward system for loyalty rather than competence.

If confirmed, the newly nominated ambassadors will be posted to key nations including China, India, South Korea, Canada, Mexico, the UAE, South Africa, and Kenya, as well as multilateral missions such as the United Nations, African Union, and UNESCO. 

Tinubu had recalled all ambassadors appointed by former President Muhammadu Buhari in September 2023.

US to impose visa ban on individuals linked to alleged Christians genocide in Nigeria

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THE United States government has announced plan to impose visa restrictions on individuals accused of orchestrating or supporting violent attacks against Christians in Nigeria and other countries.

In a statement on Wednesday, December 3, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the measure was triggered by “mass killings and violence against Christians by radical Islamic terrorists, Fulani ethnic militias, and other violent actors in Nigeria and beyond.”

Rubio said the new policy, invoked under Section 212(a)(3)(C) of the US Immigration and Nationality Act, would allow the State Department to deny visas to anyone having “directed, authorised, significantly supported, participated in, or carried out violations of religious freedom,” including, where appropriate, their immediate family members.

The Secretary of State referenced President Donald Trump’s earlier directive, noting that the US “cannot stand by while such atrocities are happening in Nigeria, and numerous other countries.”

It added that the new “policy will apply to Nigeria and any other governments or individuals engaged in violations of religious freedom.”

The decision came amid heightened concern in the US over alleged attacks on Christian communities in Nigeria. 

On Tuesday, US lawmakers convened a joint congressional briefing on what some in Congress described as an “alleged Christian genocide” in the country. The session, led by senior members of the House Appropriations, Foreign Affairs, and Financial Services Committees, sought testimony for an upcoming report ordered by Trump on the scale of the violence and possible US responses.

The roundtable forms part of a broader review of Nigeria’s security landscape as both countries move to deepen cooperation. 

The ICIR reported that President Bola Tinubu recently cleared Nigeria’s delegation for the new US–Nigeria Joint Working Group, launched to make commitments from high-level talks in Washington, and led by the National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu.

The group, made up of top ministers and security officials, seeks to strengthen counterterrorism operations, improve intelligence sharing, bolster border security, and enhance coordination on humanitarian and civilian protection issues.

The initiative was in response to growing concerns over terrorism, banditry, and alleged attacks on Christians in Nigeria, drawing heightened US scrutiny and renewed warnings on safeguarding vulnerable communities.

Trump added Nigeria to countries on watchlist for Christian genocide on October 31.

He referenced alleged grave violations of religious freedom, including the persecution of Christians.

He further alleged that Christianity faced an existential threat in Nigeria, with thousands of Christians reportedly killed by radical Islamist groups.

He also warned that the US could take action including the possibility of military intervention if Nigeria failed to address the issue.

Nigeria was first designated a CPC byTrump in 2020, but his successor, President Joe Biden, removed the country from the list after assuming office.

 

Nigerian States, LGAs have failed transparency tests – CeFTPI boss

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THE Executive Director of the Centre for Fiscal Transparency and Public Integrity (CeFTPI), Umar Yakubu, has said that Nigeria’s fiscal accountability crisis is far worse than citizens realise.                              According to him, the problem is not just corruption, but a system deliberately stripped of the tools needed for transparency. 

He made this known on Wedneday December 3 when he appeared on the ICIR’s accountability interview series.   

“Nigeria’s fiscal accountability crisis is far worse than citizens realise and the problem is not just corruption, but a system deliberately stripped of the tools needed for transparency,” he said.

Yakubu outlined the loopholes enabling corruption across federal, state, and local government systems, warning that Nigeria’s accountability framework has buckled under years of political interference, weak demand from citizens, and deliberate sabotage of watchdog institutions.

“If we do not look at the factors that cause those problems, we will not resolve it. For example, if we look at public sector corruption, instead of the normal people to advocate against EFCC, ICPC, we don’t look at that. We look at the primary source of all this public sector corruption, which is usually the political class.

“How did the political class get to where they are? We have a regulator called INEC, (Independent National Electoral Commission). So our work will focus more, not that we’re ignoring these other ones. We will now focus more on INEC because, for example, if you get your electoral system right, you will not have these pressures you have on the system.

“Once there’s transparency, the level of accountability will increase. We look at public sector reform because a lot of problems we have in Nigeria, aside from corruption, are a lot of waste. It’s usually about waste and low level of efficiency. So we look at that as well. Thirdly, we look at the integrity of systems, not of individuals,” he said.

Yakubu said federal commissions and regulatory agencies such as NCC and JAMB have shown minor improvements in transparency, noting that core ministries have not moved an inch since 2021.

“State-level transparency is almost non-existent. There is no state assembly in the last 10–15 years that has impeached or even seriously questioned a governor on public spending,” he said.

Yakubu explained why repeated revelations in annual audit reports rarely lead to prosecution.

“The Auditor-General is one of the most powerful offices in the constitution, but the political system has found a way to weaken it.” 

Their reports are meant to trigger legislative action, but instead, “the National Assembly is often in bed with the executive. Without their support, even constitutional watchdogs become toothless.”

The CeFTPI boss urged Nigerians to demand for transparency across all sector and hold power to account.

“Citizens are not demanding enough. The only people doing this work are usually civil society like us, you and I, and a couple of media. So there needs to be more demand for transparency and accountability, because what evidence has shown is that when citizens are not demanding and they leave it wholly to the media, though the media is very important and critical, I understand how many ways citizens can voice their concerns,” he added.

According to Yakubu, CeFTPI was registered in 2016 but started operation in 2020 after COVID.

“But before, between 2016 and 2020, we’re doing a low-level advocacy around things like rape, fraud, corruption, organised crime, human trafficking.

“We try to advocate in areas where we feel that the cost of the problems in whatever ill we see in society, if it’s corruption, we look at what are the primary enablers,” he explained.