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UPDATED: Police confirm Abuja school bomb explosion, 2 dead, 2 injured

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THE Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Police Command has confirmed a bomb explosion at the Tsangagyar Sani Uthman Islamiyya School in Kuchibuyi village, Bwari Area Council, Abuja, which left two people dead and two others injured.

The explosion, which occurred on January 6, at approximately 11:00 am, involved an improvised explosive device (IED).

According to a statement by the FCT Police Command’s public relations officer, Josephine Adeh, three men from Katsina had visited the school’s proprietor, Adamu Ashimu.

She noted that the men were tampering with the device on the school veranda when it detonated, killing two of them instantly.

Adeh further stated that a female trader and a third visitor were critically injured and were receiving treatment under police guard.

“Preliminary investigations revealed that three men from Katsina had visited the owner of the Islamic school, Mallam Adamu Ashimu. The three visitors are suspected of having brought the explosive device with them. Tragically, two of the men died in the explosion while tampering with the improvised explosive device (IED), on the school veranda, while the third man and a female trader sustained severe injuries and are currently receiving treatment under police guard.”

“The FCT Bomb Squad has confirmed that it was an IED explosion, as remnants of the device have been recovered,” the statement read.

The command added that Ashimu has been taken into police custody for questioning, with investigations ongoing to determine the full circumstances surrounding the incident.

Earlier, The ICIR reported the explosion, noting initial accounts, according to a media report, that a student died and four others were injured in the explosion.

However, the police preliminary investigation revealed that the fatalities were among the visitors who brought the explosive device to the school.

The police noted that while responding to a distress call from the Sarki of Kuchibuyi, they deployed operatives, including the explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) team, to secure the area and commence investigations.

The school has since been cordoned off for safety purposes.

The FCT Commissioner of Police, Olatunji Disu, has called on residents to remain vigilant and report any suspicious activities or objects to the authorities. He also advised the public to avoid handling any items resembling explosive devices and to prioritise safety.

Watch out for these disinformation trends in 2025!

Disinformation has long plagued Nigeria’s information landscape, influencing public perception, deepening social divides, and undermining trust in both public and private institutions.

Its effects have been far-reaching, ranging from vaccine hesitancy fueled by vaccine hoaxes to election-related disinformation that erodes confidence in democracy among others. Over the years, state and non-state actors have deployed disinformation campaigns to exploit Nigeria’s vulnerabilities thus leading to low media literacy, heightening ethnic and religious tensions, and an increasing reliance on social media for news.

As we enter 2025, these challenges are set to intensify, with emerging trends threatening to exacerbate existing issues while introducing new complexities. From the weaponization of artificial intelligence (AI) to the rise of influence-for-hire campaigns, the stakes are higher than ever.

The following consists of disinformation trends that may likely shape Nigeria’s socio-political, economic, and cultural landscape this year.

1. Vaccine hesitancy and herbal remedies to health problems

In Nigeria, false claims about vaccines, cures, and diseases will likely persist. Fake narratives about diseases like cholera, Lassa fever, or new COVID-19 variants could thrive in rural areas. Vaccine hesitancy fueled by rumors, particularly among vulnerable populations, will hinder public health campaigns. Unverified herbal remedies promoted as “miracle cures” by influencers and traditional leaders will continue to challenge public health efforts.

2. Changing climate

Climate change is one of the greatest challenges facing our world today, resulting from long-term shifts in temperatures and weather patterns.

While these changes can occur naturally, such as through variations in solar activity or significant volcanic eruptions, the United Nations states that since the 1800s, human activities have been the primary driver of climate change. This is largely due to the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil, and gas, as well as widespread deforestation.

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), climate misinformation refers to the spread of inaccurate information about climate change that can arise from human error, while climate disinformation is driven by a deliberate intent to spread knowingly false information. Regardless of intent, “scientifically misleading information” can have “negative implications for climate policy”,

Recall that the 2024 Global Risks Report by the World Economic Forum (WEForum) ranked misinformation and disinformation (on all topics) as the biggest short-term risk to human society, and extreme weather events as the top long-term risk, which implies that obscuring the facts about climate change can be extremely harmful. This is compounded by false information being significantly more likely to be reshared than the truth on social media platforms.

3. Anambra governorship poll

The Anambra state gubernatorial election is expected to hold on November 8, 2025. Like what we observed in Edo and Ondo off-cycle governorship elections, false claims about voter suppression, rigged elections, or fabricated results will be a major trend in the election.

Social media may amplify fake announcements of results, confusing voters and undermining trust in the electoral process. This, among others, is part of the election-related disinformation that Nigerians may have to grapple with, as such spreads faster from online to offline during election period.

4. Economic-related disinformation

As economic hardship persists in Nigeria due to rising inflation, among others, narratives about government programmes such as grain distribution (including rice), fuel subsidy palliative, job creation schemes or other palliative initiatives may likely increase in 2025.

Scams disguised as official initiatives targeting unemployed youth or rural dwellers will exploit economic hardship, further eroding trust in government efforts at reducing the hardship and increasing the purchasing power of the populace.

5. Rise of AI-generated disinformation

AI tools will be increasingly used to create hyper-realistic deepfakes, manipulated images, and fake audio. For example, fake videos of political leaders making controversial statements could circulate widely, especially during election.

In a low-digital-literacy environment like Nigeria, people may find it difficult to distinguish real content from AI-generated visuals and audio, exacerbating mistrust and creating confusion.

6. Influence-for-hire campaigns

Paid influencers, bloggers and social media personalities might likely be lobbied and engaged to promote disinformation. Politicians, brands, and even foreign entities may hire these influencers to push propaganda, suppress dissent, or discredit opponents, as topical events unfold in the year.

For instance, in February 2024, The FactCheckHub published an analysis on a disinformation campaign orchestrated and launched online by some individuals aimed at pressurizing Nigerian authorities to reinstate the then suspended Humanitarian Affairs minister, Betta Edu. She was eventually sacked and replaced with Nentawe Yilwatda during a major cabinet reshuffle by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in October 2024.

In Nigeria’s highly polarized political climate, these campaigns may deepen divisions and skew public opinion.

7. Foreign influence and information manipulation

Foreign state and non-state actors may exploit Nigeria’s vulnerabilities by spreading disinformation to destabilize the country or achieve geo-political goals.

Similarly, foreign actors might amplify divisive narratives around insecurity, ethnic or religious conflicts to manipulate public perception. For instance, the recent case where the Nigerien military leader, General Abdourahamane Tchiani, raised fresh terrorism allegations against the Nigerian government.

Tchiani, in an interview with Radio-Télévision du Niger, the country’s state media, had accused President Tinubu of conniving with France to destabilise Niger Republic. But the Nigerian government has countered the claims, saying they were baseless.

Other areas where foreign actors might target Nigerians with their false narratives include international aid, trade and bilateral agreements.

8. Silencing women and girl-child

Gendered disinformation is sometimes regarded as a subset of misogynistic abuse and violence against women that uses false or misleading gender and sex-based narratives, often with some degree of coordination, to deter women and girls from participating in public sphere.

In 2025, actors may strategically use gendered disinformation to silence women, discourage them from online political discourse, and shape public perceptions toward gender and the role of women in democracies.

They may also target girl-child of school age from accessing education or young women from getting some kind of white or blue-collar jobs citing some ethno-religious beliefs, among others.

9. Ethno-religious and communal hostilities

Targeted false narratives about attacks on religious or ethnic communities may likely rise, particularly in conflict-prone Nigerian states such as Plateau, Kaduna and Benue. Such disinformation campaigns could stoke communal and national tensions, incite violence, and derail peace-building efforts.

The FactCheckHub has over the years observed that foreign actors also get involved in spreading disinformation campaigns during hostilities either between farmers and herders, settlers and indigenes, and Hausa Vs Igbos or Yoruba etc.

10. Conflict-related coordinated campaigns

Nigeria is battling with various forms insecurity ranging from banditry, terrorism and kidnapping for ransom, among others. It is pertinent to note that these challenges have persisted over the years.

But this year, coordinated false campaigns about kidnappings, communal clashes, terrorist and separatist activities may continue to circulate, particularly online and offline in volatile regions like the Southeastern, Northeastern and Northwestern regions of Nigeria.

These exaggerated or false narratives could cause unnecessary fear, displacement, and even overburden the security agencies, as the Nigerian government vows to tackle these insecurities in 2025.

Kano governor accepts commissioner’s resignation days after rejigging cabinet

THE Kano State Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf has accepted the resignation of the commissioner for project monitoring and evaluation, Muhammad Diggol, with immediate effect.

This was disclosed in a statement issued by the governor’s spokesperson, Sanusi Bature Tofa, on Sunday, January 5.

Diggol was appointed as commissioner for transportation at the inception of Yusuf’s administration in 2023.

He was later reassigned to the Ministry of Project Monitoring and Evaluation, where he served until his resignation on Sunday.

The governor appreciated Diggol for his selfless service, unwavering commitment, dedication, and exemplary work ethic during his tenure as a member of the State Executive Council (SEC).

The governor also extended his best wishes to Diggol in his future endeavours. However, no reason was offered for Diggol’s resignation.

The ICIR reported that the governor, on Thursday, December 12, sacked the secretary to the state government (SSG), Abdullahi Baffa Bichi, and scrapped the Office of the Chief of Staff (COS), occupied by Shehu Wada Sagagi.

In a statement by the governor’s spokesperson, Dawakin-Tofa, the governor said the first major rejig of his cabinet took immediate effect, adding that the decision was to effect a pragmatic political realignment of his administration.

Five commissioners were sacked by the governor in the cabinet shake-up. They include the commissioner for finance, Ibrahim Jibril Fagge; culture and tourism; Ladidi Ibrahim Garko; information and internal affairs; Baba Halilu Dantiye; special duties; Shehu Aliyu Yammedi; and rural community development; Abbas Sani Abbas.

According to Dawakin Tofa, the governor also reassigned some commissioners “to enhance administrative performance and political retooling.”

WAEC launches resit exams for candidates

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THE West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has announced a new initiative, allowing students to resit their West Africa Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) papers as early as January and February 2025.

Until now, millions of candidates had to wait for the next private examination cycle to retake their failed exams.

The new programme, dubbed WASSCE PC1, offers a quicker path to improving students’ grades and enabling them to qualify for the next cycle of admissions.  

The head of public affairs at WAEC, John Kapi, while addressing journalists on JoyNews’ AM Show recently stated that the exams would take place from January 24 to February 15, 2025, with the registration closing on January 8.

The exams, according to Kapi, will be conducted in regional capitals, as the maiden edition is expected to attract a relatively small number of candidates.

“Students who access their results now and realise they need to resit one or two papers have until 8th January to register online through our website or at WAEC-accredited internet cafés. The exams will take place from 24th January to 15th February 2025,” Kapi said.

He stated that WAEC intended to fast-track the release of chief examiners’ reports to assist candidates in their preparation. 

He explained that the reports would offer detailed feedback on students’ mistakes and provide guidance on improving their study methods and exam approaches.

“We’ve advertised this programme widely through banners, our website, and our results checker platform to ensure that both students and parents are aware,” Kapi added.

Students whose results were cancelled can take the WASSCE PC1 exams, as long as they have not been barred for a period due to malpractice.

“For now, the exams will be conducted in regional capitals due to the limited number of candidates. Prospective participants are urged to complete their registration by the 8th of January to take advantage of this opportunity.”

The announcement came amidst the challenges in WAEC’s examination, including the withholding of over 215,000 candidates’ results from the 2024 WASSCE due to malpractice allegations.

According to WAEC’s head in Nigeria, Amos Dangut, 11.92 per cent of the 1.8 million candidates who sat for the exams were implicated in malpractice.

Despite these issues, WAEC recorded some successes in the 2024 results, with 72.9 per cent of candidates earning credits in five subjects, including Mathematics and English Language.

However, this marked a 7.6 per cent decline in performance compared to 2023.

He noted that the percentage of candidates who met the criteria for credit in the key subjects decreased by 7.6 per cent compared to the 2023 WASSCE results.

“This is a 7.6 per cent decrease in examination performance compared to last year of 2023 WASSCE. Also, 215,267 results were withheld due to examination malpractice by the candidates. This accounts for 11.92 per cent of the total number of candidates who wrote the examination,” Dangut said.

Police nab suspected manhole cover thieves in Abuja amid rising cases

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SECURITY agencies have arrested suspected vandals responsible for the stealing of Abuja highway sewage manhole covers.

This was disclosed in a statement on Sunday, January 5, signed by the senior special assistant on public communications and New Media to the FCT minister, Lere Olayinka.

According to Olayinka, some of the suspected criminals are behind the removal of sewage manhole covers on highways in Abuja, the nation’s capital.

He said efforts were also being made to apprehend their collaborators, especially buyers of the manhole covers.

Olayinka added that as directed by the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) minister, Nyesom Wike, relevant stakeholders were already working hard to stop the act.

“The minister, who lamented that Nigerians could go to the devilish extent of removing sewage manhole covers on highways and selling them, thereby putting the lives of road users at risk, vowed that the government would do everything necessary to bring the perpetrators to book.

“Wike said it was sad that the government would use public funds to put amenities in place for the use of Nigerians, and criminally minded citizens would remove the amenities and sell them to (fellow) Nigerians,” Olayinka said.

The ICIR reports that manhole cover theft has been rampant in Abuja.

When removed, the holes left open often result in vehicles driving over them skidding off the highway and involving in accidents.

In 2017, a senior advocate, Femi Falana, was one of the victims in Abuja. He sued the Federal Capital Development Authority for N100 million because of injuries and other harms the accident caused him.

Manholes and gully pots are supposed to be an advantage to urban cities like the FCT, but they often constitute a danger to motorists.

In 2022, The ICIR, in an investigation, exposed how Abuja became the city with uncovered manholes. 

Nathaniel Bassey speaks on performing at American Presidential prayer breakfast

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AS the United States of America prepare to enter into the President-elect Donald Trump era, renowned Nigerian gospel singer Nathaniel Bassey has expressed his excitement over an invitation to join in the American Presidential Inaugural Prayer breakfast.

The Presidential prayer breakfast is a non-official and non-government event. It is a faith-based  platform where intercessory prayers and worship are offered to God on behalf of the office of the president and government of the nation.

The event is held once in four years preceding the inauguration ceremony as a breakfast prayer meeting ahead of every new administration.

This year’s event is to be hosted by Reverend Merrie Turner and is always attended by leaders and dignitaries across the world.

Bassey took to his  Instagram to share the exciting news, stating: “Let’s raise a sound in America. See you January 20, 2025.

“The 44-year-old gospel artist is clearly thrilled to be a part of this significant event and is inviting his followers to join him in spirit,” he stated.

This prestigious event, held once every four years, will feature a distinguished lineup of speakers, including Alveda King and Mario Bramnick, a pastor, and will be hosted by Merrie Turner at the Waldorf Astoria Presidential Ballroom.

The Akwa-Ibom gospel singer who is also a pastor, is known for his hit songs like “Imela,” “Onise Iyanu,” and “Olowogbogboro” and has established himself as one of the most prominent and most listened-to gospel ministers from Nigeria, with his music spanning across different genres.

Bassey is not a stranger to the US; in 2024, the mayor of Albany, New York, honoured him by declaring October 6 as “Pastor Nathaniel Bassey Day” in the city.

He is a highly-skilled trumpeter and the founder of the popular Hallelujah Challenge- a global online worship movement.

The ICIR reported that former US President Trump, of the Republican Party, defeated current Vice President and Democratic candidate, Kamala Harris, in the 2024 general election.

It came after current US President Joe Biden dropped out of the race in July after a disastrous debate that confirmed the doubts many had that he was fit for another four years in office.

He will be sworn in as the 47th president of the United States on January 20, 2025.

 

Police repel armed bandits, rescue 18 kidnap victims in Katsina

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THE Katsina State Police Command have rescued 18 kidnap victims and foiled a bandit attack along the Funtua-Gusau highway in Zamfara State.

The incident occurred on January 3, 2025, at about 9:30 pm, when bandits ambushed four vehicles, firing sporadically in an attempt to abduct the occupants.

According to police spokesperson ASP Abubakar Sadiq, in a statement on Sunday, January 5, the suspected bandits, armed with AK-47 rifles, opened fire on the vehicles, which included a Toyota Avensis, two DAF trucks, and a Pacars Canter. 

The vehicles were transporting 18 passengers to various destinations when the attackers attempted to abduct the occupants. 

The statement noted that the swift response of officers from the Faskari Divisional Police Headquarters thwarted the kidnapping attempt and ensured the safe rescue of all passengers.

In a related incident the same night at about 11:00 pm, some suspected bandits also attacked Gidan Gada village in Kafur Local Government Area and rustled an unspecified number of cattle. 

However, the command noted that its operatives from Kafur and Malumfashi divisions, after pursuing the attackers to Fanisau village, where a gunfight ensued, recovered the rustle animals.

“Unfortunately, the DPO Kafur sustained a gunshot injury during the encounter and was immediately rushed to the hospital for immediate medical attention and is currently responding to treatment.

“Efforts are on top gear to ensure the arrest of the perpetrators of the dastardly act”, the statement added.

The Katsina State Commissioner of Police, Aliyu Abubakar Musa, while commending the officers for their bravery, urged residents to support security agencies with timely information to combat criminal activities effectively.

The ICIR reports that there has been a series of kidnap attempts and rescue missions by the security forces in Katsina.

In one of its most recent publications, The ICIR reported security forces, comprising the Police and Army rescued four kidnap victims in Dandume Local Government of Katsina State.

On December 8, 2024, the command said it rescued about 20 victims in two kidnap attempts by armed bandits in the state on Saturday, December 7.

The incidents took place in Jibia and Faskari Local Government Areas (LGAs), the command posted on its X handle on Sunday, December 8.

The first incident occurred on December 7, 2024, at about 1900 hours, at Kwanar Makera along the Katsina–Magamar Jibia road, Jibia LGA.

According to the police public relations officer, Abubakar Sadiq Aliyu, a group of bandits, armed with dangerous weapons, AK-47 rifles, opened fire on a moving vehicle.

2025: Inflation to reduce to 27% not 15% projected by FG – Rewane

THE Chief Executive Officer of Financial Derivative Company, Bismarck Rewane, said inflation projection for 2025 by the company showed a drop to 27 per cent from its current 34.6 per cent.

This is contrary to the 15 per cent projected by the Bola Tinubu-led federal government, for 2025, the ICIR findings have shown.

The President, during the presentation of the budget estimates to the joint session of the National Assembly last December, said the federal government will prune down inflation to 15 per cent in 2025.

Rewane, who spoke while reacting to the projected budget estimates argued that considering a number of economic indicators, it’s not going to be possible to see inflation drop to 15 per cent this year.

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu presents the 2025 budget at a joint session of the National Assembly on Wednesday, December 18
Nigerian President Bola Tinubu presents the 2025 budget at a joint session of the National Assembly on Wednesday, December 18

“In the World of reality, we’re seeing 27 or 25 per cent not 15 per cent.15 per cent is very bullish aspiration, but we live in the world of reality which I see 27 per cent. I will rather bet on that than bet in 15 per cent.

Bismarck who gave further insight to to the economic projections expected in 2025 said,” inflation will go down but not as predicted by the President down to 15 per cent, is not realistic.

He said that naira stability would help the the manufacturing sector plan and hedge against inflation. “It’s going to be a combination of lots of factors such as higher interest rate, increase in output and the reform of electricity sector.

“Generally speaking, N15.8 trillion on debt servicing in 2025 is based on the assumption that some interest rates would begin to decline in the course of the year. Several factors are involved.”

He stressed that Nigeria needs all the revenue to service debts, refinance existing debt obligations and finance part of its growth projections.

“We need foreign direct investments and increase in the general level of income to enable impact in the life of the people,” the economist added.

While offering a glimmer of hope on foreign exchange reforms, Rewane said, there’s going to be some level of exchange rate stability, which is expected to see the naira strengthen further and allow investors to make their own economic projections and hedge against inflation.

“The gap between the arbitrage is closing up and round tripping has reduced. This is positives to investors, but inflation need to go down further,” Rewane emphasised.

Apart from Rewane, some prominent Nigerians said economic indices are not promising enough to lift millions of Nigerians out of poverty, following rising cost of living.

“As a nation, we have fallen from being the largest economy in Africa, with a gross domestic product (GDP) of $574 billion and per capital income of over $3,500 in 2014, to now ranking fourth in the continent,” former presidential candidate of Labour Party, Peter Obi said in his new year message.

“Our current GDP is less than 50 per cent of what it was a decade ago, standing at approximately $200 billon, with a per capital income of $,1000”

With diminishing purchasing power and rising hunger, the former Anambra governor further urged the president to do more to eradicate hunger.

“The newly approved N70,000 cannot afford a bag of rice or even a bag of beans. As a result, many Nigerians go to bed hungry, while many rely on charity and palliatives,” he added.

A development economist, Celestine Okeke, also said there’s no meaningful impact on the economic reforms and borrowings of the current administration.

“We’ve seen Nigeria’s debt rising astronomically to over N100 trillion since the current administration. Yet, we can’t see the meaningful impact in the lives of the people. The Political class live in affluence flying jets, but we don’t see them make the commensurate sacrifice they request from the people.

Notably, the economic indicators and further findings showed most Nigerians are struggling to cope with the economic reforms of the Tinubu administration, with statistics showing Nigerians are not getting better.

The ICIR reports that Nigeria’s ranking on the 2024 Global Hunger index is 110 out of 137 countries, reflecting a critical level of hunger and food insecurity in the land.

How input distribution system worsens plight of Nasarawa women farmers

By Vincent A. YUSUF

THE Nasarawa State government’s input support delivery system, which favours men, is making things worse for smallholder women farmers, an investigation reveals. 


Smallholder women farmers in the state are experiencing a bigger disparity compared to male farmers due to the government’s input supports distribution structure, which does not provide equal access to inputs, Weekend Trust gathered.

Despite the fact that women account for 70-75 per cent of the agricultural workforce, according to the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA) and the International Budget Office (IBP), women farmers’ organisations alleged that their demand for government support has not received much attention.

Statistics from various sources estimated that there are 38 million smallholder farmers in Nigeria and 70 per cent (26 million) are women. However, a larger proportion of men typically profit from the country’s agricultural inputs support than women, according to the International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI)’s Datastore.

Though the 2019 National Gender Policy in Agriculture aims to guarantee that gender-responsive and gender-sensitive approaches are employed in agricultural project planning and execution, providing women with equal access to productive resources and the opportunity to realise their full potential, implementation is woefully inadequate.

In Nasarawa State particularly, gender policy in agriculture has not been successfully implemented; despite women’s inability to compete with men, they are not given any special recognition in the agricultural input distribution structure – not even in the budget.

Although Nasarawa State is predominantly an agrarian state with over 70 per cent of the population involved in subsistence farming according to the state investment and development agency (NASIDA), only N9.6bn (4.81 per cent) of the N199.8bn state budget for 2024 went to agriculture.

Out of the N9.6bn allocated to agriculture, N5.6bn went to capital expenditure, with none (zero per cent) of these targeted women-specific projects, something even officials at the state Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources admitted.

Earlier, the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) did a “Pullout of Women in Agriculture Projects in the 2024 Nasarawa State Budget” as an empowering and advocacy tool to guide women farmers on the possibility of engaging MDAs at the budget preparation stage so that their voices can be heard in specific projects that will improve their productivity.

Attempts by the Small-scale Women Farmers Organisation in Nigeria (SWOFON), a coalition of women farmers associations and groups, to engage government in the state using that information tool, have not been successful, Jummai Yohanna, state Chairperson of the group said.

Governor Abdullahi Sule while flagging off input distribution in Awe LGC in July, said “The 147 wards of the state will receive not less than 16,000 bags (of fertiliser) while other farmers’ associations, disability groups, religious groups, traditional institutions will also benefit from the free fertilisers provided by the President Tinubu government to boost food production in the state.”

However, groups like SWOFON said they did not benefit from that gesture.

While also speaking with journalists in Abuja, the governor said the state has decided to double its efforts in input support to farmers adding that “If we were initially providing 13,000 bags of fertiliser to farmers, we will now increase it to 26,000 bags. This proactive step is taken in recognition of the challenges faced by farmers, and the government is well-positioned to offer support to smallholder farmers.”

However, Yohanna is not happy with the state government and painted the picture of women farmers’ continued struggle in the state, which she said, is demoralising.

“Nobody cares about us. We went on several advocacy visits to the Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources, yet at the end of the day, when they see us coming, they lock the doors against us because they feel we were disturbing them,” Yohanna told Weekend Trust.

She said the productivity of women is declining because the most needed inputs end up mostly with men, while access to tractors or even small women-friendly equipment is totally absent, adding that the women farmers have nowhere else to turn to.

In her village, Ikposogye, in Obi Local Government Area (LGA), Weekend Trust gathered that fewer than 10 bags of fertiliser that got to the community were taken over by men, according to women who spoke with our reporter.

Some women farmers said they rent farmland at a cost between N20,000 and N30,000 depending on the size of the land, but more costs pile up due to reliance on manual labour, which is very expensive, thereby, forcing many of them to reduce their farm size.

Yohanna and her group are actively involved in the production of rice, sesame, groundnut, cassava and other crops. Each of them needs an average of eight bags of fertiliser and other inputs to have good yields. None of them got help in this regard.

“We have been pleading with the state government for four years to take our situation into consideration, but to no avail. Members are actually no longer hopeful. We are met with closed doors by government authorities. Sometimes, all we hear about is the distribution of inputs, but when you go there, there are no provisions for women. Men manage the entire distribution system, and they will typically consider their interests first,” she said.

In Obi, Rahab Dauda has been growing rice and other commodities for more than 20 years as a smallholder farmer. The cost of using manual labour makes it difficult for her to find reasonably priced mechanisation to support her growth.

“I wish to grow the farm, but we don’t see tractors here. Even if you see, it has to finish men’s fields before it can come our way because they are the ones who bring them. If we had those small farm machines, we would not have to wait for them. And by the time they’re done with them, they are already heading to other places that have better work waiting for them, you know. This is our plight,” she said.

Hanatu Guyit is another woman who grows rice and melon. Even though she was able to get a tractor to work on her farm, she said that it was not an easy task because it takes a lot of time and the manual labour is even more expensive.

Speaking in front of her rice field, Guyit said most of the inputs get to men who sometimes “do what they want with it” adding that “we the women who need it most hardly get it.”

In Lafia, Victoria David, 50, a member of SWOFON and a farmer who grows rice, beans, sorghum and cassava in Mile Uku community said like other women who have suffered for years without assistance, she and other women in the area have to rely largely on their own efforts to support themselves because government assistance was not forthcoming.

“Our female colleagues are eager to increase output, but input is the issue. Government focuses less on women, and many of us are unable to reach our full potential because of the cost of these inputs,” she said.

Laraba Alkali, another female farmer in the area, noted that most of their farms suffered this year because cost of inputs rose significantly in the middle of production, making it difficult to access input due to absence of government support.

In the same vein, the chairperson of SWOFON in Doma LGA, Kizia James Waziri, told the Weekend Trust that the smallholder women farmers there are currently facing a number of difficulties, including high input costs, insecurity, and a lack of government assistance. Their productivity is being negatively impacted by these.

She and other female farmers in the area did not get any government input support, despite living less than 150 meters away from the deputy governor  (Emmanuel Akabe)’s home in Doma town.

Like other women in the area, Zuwaira Isa is a farmer who wants to increase the output of her millet, cassava and other crops but faces numerous obstacles and is left on her own without government assistance.

She listed some of the obstacles to include lack of access to quality seeds, fertiliser, herbicides and mechanisation.

“I have to reduce my farm size because the cost of fertiliser and agrochemicals was too high for me. In place of fertiliser, I had to bring in cow dungs from a Fulani settlement and rice husk from other places to spread on my farm. It was cheaper than fertiliser,” she said.

According to sources who asked not to be named in this report, some of those who benefited from the fertiliser distribution sold the input even at the venue of the distribution.

This reporter, who posed as a buyer, got offers from those who benefited. Some offered to sell at N25,000 (for both NPK and Urea 50kg bag), which was far less than the market value of N41,000 for urea (Indorama blend) and N39,000 for NPK 20:10:10 blend.

In Akwanga LGA, some of the men who got inputs at the distribution centre along Akwanga-Keffi Road resold to those who operate input shops at cheaper rates.

A beneficiary offered to sell two bags of urea and NPK with herbicide for just N50,000. These same products could fetch about N100,000 in the open market. He got the input as a member of a youth group.

A smallholder farmer from Akwanga, Ladi Aku, said it has been increasingly difficult to produce crops without support this year due to rising inflation, which has affected not only inputs but also cost of labour.

At Sabo Gida area of Kokona, Mrs Rebecca who is a widow with six children could not even afford one bag of fertiliser this year because of the cost. Instead, she had to use ashes and cow dungs to apply in one of the farms she planted maize.

“Where do I see money to buy fertiliser with all these problems—children’s food, school fees, cloth, hospital bill all on me and I have never received any input support from government to farm. I only heard few bags of fertilisers were given in the town,” she said.

How inputs were distributed – Government 

Reacting to some of the issues, the Permanent Secretary, Nasarawa State Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources, Abdullahi Umar, explained how the state government gets input to women farmers.

“Generally, smallholder women farmers are supported with farm input via a standing committee at their local government and development area headquarters respectively. The committee includes chairmen of LGAs and overseers of Development Areas, paramount rulers, Divisional Police Officers (DPOs) agriculture coordinators, councillors of agriculture, and other heads of security personnel etc. Sometimes they also obtain their farm inputs from Nasarawa State (Fadama 3/NG-cares). Recently, they were supported with farm inputs directly at wards levels across the state,” the permanent secretary said.

He, however, said that in all these “Women are usually involved in structures that provide support for the state’s farm inputs.”

Reacting to the inequality in accessing support between men and women farmers, Abdullahi admitted that “what they say is a real fact because the percentage of men that normally benefit from the farm inputs in the state is more than that of the women.”

What SWOFON, stakeholders suggest

Stakeholders have recommended ways to improve the inclusion of women in all stages of budget processes, including establishing one committee composed solely of representatives from women’s organisations in the state to handle any assistance the state government wishes to provide smallholder women farmers with.

The Programme officer, SWOFON,  Chika Orji, said although Nasarawa State has made women farmers part of the budget committee this year, which has never happened before, the state is, however, far behind in the social inclusion of women farmers in the schemes of things, adding that “their voices are not being amplified” despite constituting the largest labour force in the sector.

She said now that the government has involved women in the budget process, their demands and challenges need to be considered, adding that there is a current donor intervention collecting data of smallholder women farmers in the state for evidence-based advocacy.

She called on the government to treat women as an entity for proper representation.

“SWOFON is an entirely women farmers organisation. So, it is there to amplify the voice of that rural woman farmer, which needs to be heard; so that when government is taking a decision, they are treated as an entity, separate from the men. There is every need to separate the women from the men,” Orji said.

In a similar position, Moses Agha, a retired staff of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security in Lafia said “combining women with men will make it difficult to track what proportion of the support went to women.  Such women committee should exist even at the ward and local government level and with that, you can tell how many bags of fertiliser, quantity of agrochemicals or other inputs went to women in all the 13 local government areas of the state.

They contended that doing so would facilitate the state government’s ability to monitor the annual and actual amount of assistance provided to women farmers.

This report was made possible with support from the International Centre for Investigative Reporting ICIR