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Doctors issue 10-day ultimatum, threaten strike

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THE Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD) has issued a final 10-day ultimatum to the Federal Government, threatening to embark on a nationwide strike if its long-standing demands remain unmet.

In a communiqué signed by the NARD President, Tope Osundara, General Secretary, Oluwasola Odunbaku, and Publicity Secretary Omoha Amobi, on Monday, September 1, the union expressed frustration over the government’s failure to meet its demands.   

The threat followed an Extraordinary National Executive Council (E-NEC) meeting held virtually by NARD on Sunday, August 31.

The NARD noted that it had earlier given a three-week ultimatum in July, “which was extended in the interest of industrial harmony.”

However, the association said that despite repeated engagements, there had been no meaningful progress on critical issues affecting its members. 

It cited the non-payment of the 2025 Medical Residency Training Fund (MRTF) to a large number of doctors and the failure to pay outstanding salary arrears arising from the revised 25 per cent and 35 percent Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS).

The doctors also criticised the continued withholding of the 2024 Accoutrement Allowance and raised concerns over what they described as the unjust downgrading of membership certificates issued by the West African Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN). 

They demanded immediate payment of the 2025 MRTF to all eligible residents, settlement of the five months’ salary arrears under the revised CONMESS, and full implementation of the 2024 CONMESS. 

They also called for the prompt payment of the 2024 Accoutrement Allowance and specialist allowances to all eligible doctors, as well as the restoration of recognition for West African postgraduate qualifications and the release of pending certificates by the NPMCN.

The NARD warned that if these demands were not met by Wednesday, September 10, 2025, the association would have no choice but to commence a nationwide strike.

NARD had, on June 1, called on the Federal Government to immediately settle specialist allowances and outstanding salary arrears owed to its members.

Speaking during a press conference in Uyo, the NARD president decried the continued exclusion of resident doctors from the payment of specialist allowances, despite their active roles in delivering critical care across various health institutions.

A communiqué issued at the end of the meeting outlined the frustrations of the association, including the “persistent casualisation and poor remuneration of resident doctors by chief executives of tertiary hospitals.”

The NARD also condemned the non-payment of arrears arising from the upward review of the Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS).

Meanwhile, The ICIR reports that the ultimatum also came days after the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) led nationwide protests across campuses over similar issues of unpaid salaries, breach of agreements, and systemic neglect. 

The coordinated ASUU demonstrations, which took place in at least 12 universities on August 27, raised concerns over the fragile state of industrial peace in the education sector and highlighted broader discontent with government handling of public institutions.

Earthquake kills over 800, injures 2,500 in Afghanistan

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A 6.0 magnitude earthquake struck Kunar, near the city of Jalalabad, in neighbouring Nangarhar province, eastern Afghanistan, on Sunday, killing at least 812 people and injuring more than 3,000.  

The administration spokesperson, Zabihullah Mujahid, revealed on September 1, that the quake struck at 11:47pm local time (19:17 GMT) destroying numerous villages. Houses made of mud and wood collapsed as helicopters were sent in to evacuate the injured.

Mujahid said the quake destroyed three villages in Kunar, with at least 610 people killed in Kunar and12 dead in Nangarhar.

The spokesperson for the Health Ministry, Sharafat Zaman, said the quake hit at a depth of 10 km (six miles)

Another Health Ministry’s spokesperson, Abdul Maten Qanee, citing efforts in areas from security to food and health, said “All our … teams have been mobilised to accelerate assistance, so that comprehensive and full support can be provided.”

The Defence Ministry said in a statement, that it had flown rescue teams out across the region, with 30 doctors and 800kg (1,764lb) of medicine into Kunar to support hospitals overwhelmed with casualties, with 40 flights carrying away 420 wounded and dead.

The ICIR reports that the earthquake is expected to put additional strain on the Taliban-led administration of the war-torn nation, which is already struggling with multiple humanitarian crises.

This marks Afghanistan’s third major deadly earthquake since the Taliban’s takeover in 2021, which coincided with the withdrawal of foreign forces and a sharp decline in international funding that once made up most of the government’s budget.

Afghanistan’s mountainous terrain makes it highly vulnerable to earthquakes, as the country lies near the convergence of the Indian and Eurasian tectonic plates, one of the world’s most active seismic zones.

In October 2015, a powerful 7.5-magnitude earthquake hit the Hindu Kush region in northeastern Afghanistan, claiming 272 lives. On January 17, 2022, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) reported that a shallow 5.3-magnitude quake struck Qadis district in Badghis province, western Afghanistan, killing at least 26 people.

In June 2022, a powerful 6.1-magnitude earthquake struck eastern Afghanistan, affecting the provinces of Paktika, Paktia, Khost, and Nangarhar, and killing more than 1,000 people as numerous homes collapsed.

Two earthquakes with magnitude 5.1 and magnitude 4.6 hit the neighbouring provinces of Kunar and Nangarhar in northeastern Afghanistan In September 2022, leaving at least eight people dead.

In October 2023, three earthquakes struck Herat province, marking one of Afghanistan’s deadliest natural disasters in recent years. The British Red Cross Society reported that at least 2,445 people lost their lives.

In March 2023, a 6.5-magnitude earthquake hit Afghanistan’s northeastern Badakhshan province, near the border with Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, killing at least 13 people.

Finnish court jails Simon Ekpa 6 years for terrorism offences

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A COURT in Finland has sentenced Nigerian-born Finnish, Simon Ekpa, to six years in prison for terrorism-related and other offences.

The Päijät-Häme District Court on Monday, September 1, convicted the 40-year-old former municipal politician from Lahti on multiple charges, including participation in the activities of a terrorist organisation, provocation to commit crimes for terrorist purposes, aggravated tax fraud, and violations of the Lawyers Act.

According to the judgment, between August 2021 and November 2024, Ekpa attempted to promote the independence of “Biafra region” in southeastern Nigeria through illegal means.

Ekpa was accused of using social media to gain politically significant position and taking advantage of the confusion within a key separatist movement in Nigeria to play a significant role in the group.

The court also found that Ekpa played a crucial role in founding and developing the separatist movement into a more organised structure, working alongside others.

During the trial, it was argued that armed groups were established under the movement, which the court classified as terrorist organisations.

“Ekpa equipped the groups with weapons, explosives and ammunition through his contact network. He also urged and enticed his followers on X (formerly Twitter) to commit crimes in Nigeria,” the court said.

Ekpa, however, denied all the charges against him.

The trial spanned 12 sittings between May 30 and June 25, 2025. It ended with a unanimous verdict by a three-judge panel.

Ekpa, a former municipal councillor in Lahti, is widely known for his controversial involvement in the Biafran separatist movement.

His online broadcasts and social media posts attracted both strong support and sharp criticism in Nigeria and abroad.

The ICIR reported in November 2024 that the Finnish authorities detained Ekpa, alongside four others, over suspected involvement in terrorism-related activities in Nigeria.

The Päijät-Häme District Court made the decision following a hearing in Lahti, where Ekpa was alleged to have incited crimes with terrorist intent, according to reports from Finland.

It was reported that the Finnish National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) accused Ekpa of leveraging his leadership in a Nigerian separatist group to promote violent activities in southeastern Nigeria. 

According to the NBI, these activities, which reportedly targeted civilians and government forces, were coordinated through social media from Finland.

Otto Hiltunen, detective chief inspector, revealed that the investigation focused on Ekpa and four other suspects, all of whom are accused of financing terrorism. 

Meanwhile, November 2024 was not the first time the Finnish government had arrested Ekpa.

The pro-Biafra agitator was arrested in Finland days after the Nigerian government expressed concern over his inciting comments and the imposition of a sit-at-home order on residents of Nigeria’s South-East, which could disrupt the elections scheduled for February 25, 20223. 

Ekpa was detained by authorities in Lahti in February 2023 and was later released in the evening of that day.

His arrest also came weeks after an investigation revealed how he and his foot soldiers raised funds for their operations under the Biafra Republic Government in Exile (BRGIE), through fundraising meetings held worldwide. 

According to the report, the group collects funds to support their militia activities, while also seeking alternative revenue streams such as cryptocurrency launches, merchandise sales, extortion, and international lobbying, to expand their operations.

The ICIR reports that Ekpa severally enforced sit-at-home order in the South-East, with what started as a peaceful exercise for the release of Nnamdi Kanu, leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), eventually becoming a bloody affair.

Residents of the South-East and visitors who decide to flout the order by stepping out for business, work, or personal reasons on Mondays risk losing their lives and property.

Several lives have been lost, and property destroyed at the hands of militias widely described as “unknown gunmen” who insist on enforcing the sit-at-home.

report published by The ICIR in 2023 noted that micro businesses in the South-East states lost an average of N4.618 trillion ($10.495 billion) in one year to the sit-at-home order.

Tinubu’s Brazil visit ignites hope for petrobras return but corruption shadow roars

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PRESIDENT Tinubu’s recent visit to Brazil has once again reignited talks for the return of Brazil’s state-owned oil company, Petrobras, to Nigeria, but concerns persist over the firm’s previous domestic corruption cases.

Brazil’s state-run oil company Petrobras, which left Nigeria five years ago, should be able to return quickly, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu told a press conference with his Brazilian counterpart, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva during his recent two-day visit.

“We have the largest gas repository. I don’t see why Petrobras shouldn’t return as a partner in Nigeria as soon as possible,” Tinubu told a joint press conference with Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in Brasilia on Tuesday, August, 26.

Many industry analysts believe that the return of the firm would open more doors for Nigeria’s deep-water off shore investments, although concerns of corruption still rears its head.

“We have been doing business with Petrobras. Petrobras is the closest in terms of deep-water off-shore exploration projects because their deep-water share lots of similarities with ours. We share the same climate and its going to be a good one because it will mean the huge investments  of some multi-nationals like Shell, Exxon Mobil in our country,” an oil and gas governance expert, Najim Animasaun told The ICIR.

Former Chairman of Major Oil Markers Association of Nigeria (MOMAN), Adetunji Oyebanji, told The ICIR that their coming back could open more investment opportunities into several untapped marginal fields in the country.

“Their coming back means investments into marginal fields and new acreages. It means that people are having more confidence to invest in Nigeria’s economy. You could also see that emerging economies are also aligning to build their own economic network,” he said.

Despite the hope that the return offers with regard to investment in Nigeria’s oil and gas, there are some unanswered questions about how the firm exited Nigeria in 2020.

The ICIR reports that Petrobras left Nigeria in 2020 due to a combination of factors, partly as a result of financial struggles largely due to domestic corruption scandals which impacted its global divestments and streamlining of its global portfolio.

According to Britannica, Petrobras scandal, Brazilian political corruption scandal began in 2014 that involved the indictment of dozens of high-level business people and politicians as part of a widespread investigation alleging that many millions of dollars had been kicked back to officials of Petrobras, Brazil’s huge majority-state-owned oil company, and to politicians—especially members of the ruling Workers’ Party.

The malfeasance was revealed by a federal investigation begun in 2014 under ‘Operation car wash’

The massive scheme to defraud Petrobras—Brazil’s largest enterprise and a symbol of the country’s entrenched economic nationalism—did not fully come to light, however, until after the narrow re-election of President Dilma Rousseff on October 26, 2014.

By the time of her second inauguration, on January 1, 2015, Rousseff’s approval rating had collapsed to 14 per cent, with some two-thirds of Brazilians blaming her for Petrobras’s troubles.

Petrobras and follow-up reforms after scandals

It would be noted that the investigation about Petrobras neck-deep corruption which began in 2014, uncovered a giant conspiracy involving bribery, kickbacks, and money laundering.

Further findings showed that Petrobras executives and politicians colluded with contractors to receive illicit payments and bribes in exchange for inflated contracts.

The scheme involved billions of dollars and implicated dozens of senior politicians and businessmen.

Notable key players in the financial corruption include the former President of Brazil, Lula Da Silva who was later found guilty and was convicted of passive corruption and money laundering related to a luxury apartment received from Grupo OAS.

His conviction was later annulled due to procedural issues.

In a similar vein, the CEO of Odebrecht-Marcelo Odebrecht, a major construction firm, was sentenced to 19 years in prison on March 8 2016, for paying over $30 million in bribes to Petrobras executives.

The investigation involved cooperation with authorities from over 60 countries, including the US Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The consequences of this scandal led to a significant decline in Petrobras’ stock price, negative impact on the Brazilian economy, and increased unemployment rates.

The scandal, however, led to significant reforms and restructuring efforts within Petrobras, including the appointment of new leadership and implementation of new policies to prevent corruption.

Tinubu’s visit offers hope

On Monday, President Tinubu welcomed Petrobras imminent return to Nigeria, five years after the Brazil’s state-owner oil company halted it’s joint venture operations.

Nigeria and Brazil have a robust trade relationships, with Nigeria standing as Brazil’s 49th largest export destination.

Trade between the two countries peaked at nearly $2.1billion in 2024.

Brazil exported almost $1billion to Nigeria, primarily sugar and jams and imported $1.1billion, mostly fertilisers.

Bayo Onanuga, the special adviser to the president on information and strategy, said the decision would ignite Nigeria’s economy.

In a statement, Onanuga noted that, “Petrobras’ return to Nigeria offers hope for renewed economic cooperation, potential investment in Nigeria’s vast natural gas resources, and a strengthening of the two countries’ energy sector partnership.

“This collaboration is expected to foster economic growth, as Nigeria seeks to leverage its resources through partnerships with established international companies like Brazil’s state-owned oil giant.”

#GEJ2027: A hostage in the lap of judges

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By Chidi Anselm Odinkalu

SEVEN years ago, in 2018, my good friend and former Dean of Law at the University of Ghana at Legon, a professor, Raymond Atuguba, undertook a path-breaking study which sought “to move away from the perception that Justices of the Supreme Court dispense justice impartially under a constitutional democracy and reflect on the influences on the Justices as they are taking decisions.” The focus of the study was the influence of politics on judicial decision making in the Supreme Court of Ghana.

For this purpose, Atuguba examined 78 judgments by 39 Justices of the Supreme Court (including six Chief Justices) over the first twenty-five years of Ghana’s Fourth Republic from 1993 to 2018 in political cases, cross-matching the Justices who sat on the cases against the political party or regime which appointed them. As a functional matter,  Atuguba’s study defined a political case to be one in which “you have a political party or politician or politically exposed person as a party to a suit or where it revolves around issues that inure to the political,  social, financial or other benefit of a political party or its operatives or known affiliates.”

The conclusions were revealing but hardly shocking. The study found overwhelming correlation between Justices and the regimes that appointed them. It showed that in a majority of cases, the politics explained how the judges decided. In presenting the conclusions of the study,  Atuguba argued for the need to “acknowledge political decision making by our Supreme Court….”

Courts are not instruments of revolutionary change. On the contrary, most judges across the world see their roles primarily as being there to afford cover to the regime which appointed them or the system under which they work and, as Alexander Hamilton wrote, are defined by “an unwillingness to hazard the displeasure” of these political benefactors. It is unusual for judges, especially in a developing country, therefore, to defect from the path of support for a ruler or party in power.

This should explain the chronically anomalous jurisprudence that has become the routine of judicial decision-making in Nigeria under elective civilian government. Rather perversely, this situation should present politicians with the needed incentive to ensure that the country’s electoral system is credible because once out of power, those who enjoyed the benefit of weaponised or situational court decisions suddenly find themselves at the receiving end.

Former president, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan – also known as GEJ – now finds himself in this situation. As the country prepares for presidential elections in less than 18 months, it now seems certain that GEJ seeks a return to the partisan fray. The man himself has made moves which clearly indicate that he is giving this more than an active consideration. If he were to choose to run for the presidency, his political brand is likely to be #GEJ2027.

Columnist, Chidi Amuta, has counselled GEJ to “flee” from the importuning of those who want to draft him into the 2027 contest. Should he choose to ignore that, however, the likelihood is that the judges will have the final say on his ambitions. It does not require a lot of imagination to see why or how such a case will be decided under the present dispensation.

The ambitions of President Jonathan in 2027 will rest on two different provisions of the 1999 constitution. Under section 137(1)(a), a person is disqualified from running for Nigeria’s presidency if “he has been elected to such office at any two previous elections.” This provision was there when President Jonathan ran unsuccessfully for a second term in 2015. At the time, there was a considerable amount of murmuring about his ineligibility to run, having assumed office for the last year following the death of Umaru Yar’Adua in May 2010.

Having been on the presidential ticket with Yar’Adua in 2007 and again at the top of the ticket in 2011, it was arguable in 2015 that GEJ had previously “been elected to such office” twice and was therefore barred from running again. However, it was beyond improbable that a judge could be found at the time to rely on that argument to preclude a sitting president from running.

In 2027, however, two things will be different. First, two years after GEJ left office, in 2017, the fourth alteration to the Constitution (no. 16), introduced section 137(3) which provides that: “A person who was sworn-in as President to complete the term for which another person was elected as President shall not be elected to such office for more than a single term.” This will put GEJ’s eligibility directly in issue. The question will be simple: having inherited the presidency from President Yar’Adua and served a full elected term from 2011 to 2015, is he still eligible to run again in 2027?

On that question, the judges will not be apolitical. In litigation, this will be presented as a legal question. In reality, it is a political one and this is where the second issue arises. Where in 2015, GEJ enjoyed the favours of judicial complaisance and the presumption against judicial defection from incumbents, that presumption would count against him in 2027. And where in 2015, no judge could be found to bump him from the race under cover of judicial ceremony, there will be no end to the number of judges happy to oblige the incumbent in 2027 with precisely that kind of judicial cover for a political hit job.

The only issue will be the timing of such a judgment. A ruling party looking to make the most of this situation will probably lend its organising and marketing assets with deniability to the promotion of the ambitions of GEJ to begin with. That is the easiest way to decimate the ranks of the opposition. By omission or commission, a putative #GEJ2027 project will suck most of the oxygen from the ranks of other opposition candidates. It will be in the interest of the ruling party to egg him on until he secures the ticket of a major party for the contest.

At that point of no return, an innocuous looking legal challenge will materialise questioning GEJ’s eligibility to run under the constitution. They will sue him, his party, and Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and will ask the courts to restrain INEC from recognising him as a candidate in the election.

The suit will slow walk its way to a decision. Then, suddenly, around the week before the vote, judgment will come down restraining the party from presenting GEJ as a candidate and restraining the INEC from having him on the ballot. Any serious threat to the incumbent’s ambitions will have been judicially squelched. The script is so easily authored, the ruling party must be licking its chops at the idea of a Jonathan candidacy. There can be no better political gift for the incumbent president and his ruling party.

GEJ should know that those importuning him for a tilt at the presidency in 2027 are clutching at withered straws. The judicial landscape he left in 2015 is radically different from what he will confront should he choose to throw his hat into the ring 12 years later in 2027. The odds are that, whatever GEJ does, his ambitions will fall to a judicial hit job made to look all very legal. He can choose to risk it, safe in the assurance that his ambitions will be crushed in the laps of the judges; Or he can choose to continue in the life of a statesman who still has a lot to offer to his country in meaningful leadership.

A lawyer and a teacher, Odinkalu can be reached at chidi.odinkalu@tufts.edu

NRC boss apologises to assaulted NTA journalist Ladi Bala

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THE Managing Director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), Kayode Opeifa, has apologised to Ladi Bala, a journalist with the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), whom he assaulted while covering a recent incident of a train derailment along the Abuja-Kaduna rail corridor.

Opeifa tendered the public apology at a press conference on Sunday, August 31, at the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), FCT Council Secretariat, Abuja.

The NRC boss while admitting to the assaults on the journalist, explained that his remarks were made under intense pressure as he tried to manage the crisis.

He claimed his assaults were misunderstood as hostility towards the press.

“I wish to sincerely apologise for the regrettable remarks I made, which were directed at a seasoned journalist and reflected poorly on both the NUJ FCT and NAWOJ.

“Acting under pressure and in the heat of the moment while trying to ensure safety, I uttered some unkind words for which I take full responsibility,” Opeifa said.

The ICIR reported that the incident occurred on August 27 and that Bala, a former president of the Nigerian Association of Women Journalists, was covering the aftermath of the derailed train when she was verbally abused by the NRC boss.

In a swift reaction, the NUJ FCT Council condemned the harassment and intimidation of the journalist and demanded a public apology from the NRC boss.

Apologising to the journalist, Opeifa, said, “To her, I offer my fullest apology. I also extend the same to the NTA, NAWOJ, and the wider journalism community.”

He hinted that 618 passengers were onboard the train at the time of derailment, and that about 20 passengers sustained injuries, and seven were critical.

He said further that seven coaches and their locomotive were damaged, but that two coaches and one locomotive have been cleared from the crash site, with two more coaches expected to be removed before Monday.

As part of his honour for the assaulted journalist, Opeifa bestowed an honorary title of “Ambassador for Media Advocacy,” on her.

Edo governor, Okpebholo, confirms former IG Arase’s death

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EDO State Governor, Monday Okpebholo, has confirmed the death of former Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase.

He described him as a patriotic Nigerian and an illustrious son of the state.

Arase died on Sunday, August  31, at Cedarcrest Hospital in Abuja after battling an undisclosed ailment. He was 69.

In a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Fred Itua, Okpebholo said the late police chief was a man of integrity who served Nigeria with distinction.

“We have lost a great mind, a dedicated public servant, and an exceptional leader. Dr. Arase was a man of integrity and honour who served our nation with distinction, rising to the pinnacle of his career through sheer hard work and dedication,” the governor said.

Okpebholo recalled that Arase’s tenure as the 18th Inspector-General of Police was marked by reforms in intelligence-led policing and efforts to strengthen community security.

He described him as a source of inspiration to young officers and a figure whose contributions to the nation’s security architecture would be remembered for generations.

The governor also extended his condolences to the Arase family and the Nigeria Police Force (NPF), praying for the repose of the deceased’s soul.

Meanwhile, when The ICIR visited the Cedarcrest Hospital in Abuja on Sunday to confirm Arase’s passing, staff members on duty declined to confirm his death and insisted on a formal letter before releasing any information.

The ICIR reporter’s pleas that the staff should allow him to see the managing director of the hospital or the facility’s spokesperson because he did not come with any letter fell on deaf ears.

Meanwhile, the reporter eventually confirmed from sources at the hospital that Arase died at the facility Sunday morning.

Born in Owan West Local Government Area of Edo State on June 21, 1956, Arase joined the Nigeria Police Force on December 1, 1981, after earning a degree in Political Science from Ahmadu Bello University.

He later obtained a Law degree from the University of Benin and a Master’s in Law from the University of Lagos.

During his career, he headed the Criminal Intelligence and Investigation Bureau, served as Commissioner of Police in Akwa Ibom State, and later rose to the rank of Assistant Inspector-General of Police. He also took part in a United Nations peacekeeping mission in Namibia and was a Fellow of the Nigerian Defence Academy.

Arase retired as IGP on June 21, 2016. In January 2023, he was appointed Chairman of the Police Service Commission (PSC) by the late former President Muhammadu Buhari, but was removed from the post by President Bola Tinubu in June 2024.

As of the time of filing this report, the police and the late IGP’s family have yet to issue an official statement on his passing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

APC wins 20 out of 23 LGAs in Rivers local government poll

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THE All Progressives Congress (APC) has won 20 out of the 23 Local Government Areas (LGAs) in the Rivers State local government elections held on Saturday, August 30.

The ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the state was victorious in only three LGAs, namely Port Harcourt, Obio/Akpor, and Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni.

The APC also secured the majority of councillorship seats, winning in 20 LGAs, while the PDP clinched councillorship positions in the three LGAs where it won the chairmanship.

This is the first time since 1999 that an opposition party has recorded a sweeping victory in Rivers State.

Announcing the results at the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission (RSIEC) headquarters in Port Harcourt on Sunday, the RSIEC Chairman, Michael Odey, said certificates of return would be presented to all winners on Monday, September 1.


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The elections are viewed as a step toward lifting the state of emergency imposed on the state in March this year by President Bola Tinubu, following a protracted feud between the suspended Governor Siminalayi Fubara and the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike.

Wike, who voted during the polls, hinted that with the polls concluded, the suspension of Fubara and the state House of Assembly would be lifted by September 18.

He described the exercise as crucial for stabilising governance at the grassroots level and commended Tinubu for ensuring that the elections were held, noting that without them, local governments would not have access to federal allocations.

The ICIR reported on Saturday that there was a heavy presence of security across the state, as residents trooped out to participate in the local government elections.

2027: PDP risks having no candidate if it fields Jonathan

MINISTER of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, has argued that the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) risks having no candidate in the 2027 general elections if it gives its presidential ticket to former President Goodluck Jonathan.

Keyamo, a senior advocate, argued this in a post on his X handle on Sunday, August 31, citing Section 137 (3) of the 1999 Constitution (Fourth Amendment).

He said the PDP has tipped Jonathan as one of its targets for presidential candidate because of the ex-president’s purported eligibility to run for only one term.

“But, if he is fielded, the party runs the risk of not having a candidate at all by virtue of Section 137 (3) of the 1999 Constitution (Fourth Amendment).

“The constitutional amendment was made AFTER the court judgment which cleared him to run in 2015, so nothing is decided yet on that new amendment, hence I use the word ‘RISK’ advisedly,” Keyamo argued.

He stressed that all the arguments about whether the section could be interpreted to affect the former president would not be decided on social media, but at the Supreme Court.

“If he is barred from running after nominations have closed and the PDP is declared as having no candidate, nobody should scream ‘judiciary is corrupt’ because such a large party saw the judicial danger ahead and deliberately ignored it,” Keyamo, maintained.

He knocked the PDP for its decision to zone its presidential candidate ticket to the South.

He said, “In 2023, PDP lacked the balls to deliberately zone its presidential ticket to the South, so it woefully lost its decades-long stranglehold on the S/South and S/East, the two of its most loyal regions since 1999.”

Kayemo believes that the party has retraced its step and has deliberately zoned its 2027 presidential ticket to the South to win back the southern regions into its fold.

He opines, however, that if the PDP decided to field its most attractive south-west candidate, no other region of the country will vote for a fresh Yoruba candidate who would be eligible for a fresh two terms in office, stressing that the candidate will battle with the well-oiled APC structures in the region.

“You need a majority of at least three to four regions in Nigeria to win the Presidency,” Keyamo told the PDP.

The senior advocate further argued that if the PDP wooed back former governor Peter Obi, the notion of a fresh candidate from the South would work against the party despite Obi’s shout to serve for one term.

“In addition, the principled ones amongst the ‘Obidients’ will see him as going back to his vomit of ‘structure of criminality’ and may not be too vociferous in their support anymore.

“This is happening to PDP because it committed an original sin in 2023 by lacking the balls to zone its presidential ticket to the South,” Keyamo claimed.

He added, “Young social media warriors” may lampoon anyone talking about these zoning sentiments, but that is the reality of “our politics” and it is not about to end.

“Except something extraordinary happens, the party may have to wait till 2031.”

Cedacrest Hospital mum as former IGP Solomon Arase dies in facility

FORMER Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase, is dead.

He reportedly died at the Cedacrest Hospital, Abuja, on Sunday after suffering from an undisclosed ailment.

Born in 1956, Arase served as the 18th Inspector General of Nigeria Police Force between April 2015 and 21 June 2016.

Before his appointment as the IGP, he had served in different capacities, including working as the Head of the Criminal Intelligence and Investigation Bureau; Commissioner of Police in Akwa Ibom State, Assistant Inspector-General of Police, and in Namibia during the United Nations Peacekeeping Operation.

The late Arase joined the Nigeria Police on December 1, 1981. Among others, he had bachelor and master’s degrees in Law from University of Benin and University of Lagos, respectively.

The late President Muhammadu Buhari appointed him as the chairman of Police Service Commission in January 2023, and President Bola Tinubu relieved him of the post on June 23, 2024.

As of the time of filing this report, there was no information yet from his family and the Nigeria Police Force.

All efforts to confirm his passing from the hospital where he reportedly died failed as an official contacted on the phone at the facility refused to speak with our reporter on the issue.

The reporter also drove to the facility to confirm if the former police chief truly died at the hospital.

Our reporter met two staff at the hospital’s reception. They demanded an official letter from the reporter before they could speak on the issue.

The reporter’s pleas that the staff should allow him to see the managing director of the hospital or the facility’s spokesperson because he did not come with any letter fell on deaf ears.

Meanwhile, the reporter eventually confirmed from sources at the hospital that Arase died at the facility this morning.