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Osun: Buhari Does It Again

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Let me start with some clarifications. I’m from Osun State, and my homestead is Ipetumodu, in Ife North Local Government Area. And I am not Osun in Diaspora. I was born in Osogbo, capital of the State, when my father was Principal of St Charles Grammar School in the 1960s.

When he retired home, after moving from Osogbo to Notre Dame College, Usi-Ekiti, I continued my education, primary and secondary, in our hometown. For tertiary, I went to the then University of Ife, now Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. So, I’m a homeboy. Osun ni mi tokan tokan (I’m a thoroughbred Osun man).

I’m also a Buharist, a firm believer in the ideals of that honest man, the Mai Gaskiya from Daura, in Katsina State, though I am not a registered member of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

It was, therefore, laughable for some people to try and rope me into Osun State politics, as the gubernatorial election held last Saturday. First, they came up with the news that Femi Adesina had lost his ward to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). Which Femi Adesina. Me? Or another one? Do you lose what you don’t participate in?

Out of curiosity, I checked. The APC had, indeed, won my ward, in the Post Office area of Ipetumodu by 176 to PDP’s 130 votes. But it didn’t matter. It just shows how heinous and petty some people can be.

Again, this post later began to circulate on WhatsApp and other social media platforms: “The former Interim National Chairman of APC, Chief Bisi Akande, is from Osun State.

“The current National Secretary of APC, Sen Iyiola Omisore, is from Osun State.

“Bola Tinubu is from Osun State.

“Femi Fani-Kayode is from Osun State.

“Femi Adesina is from Osun State.

“The Deputy National Chairman of APC is from Osun State.

“The current Governor of Osun State is Tinubu’s cousin.

“These are the structures APC have in Osun State and they still lost the election.

“APC should expect more Wahala 2023. Indeed, people’s voice and votes do count.”

Yes, I agree that people’s voice and votes do count, and we will talk more about that, courtesy President Muhammadu Buhari.

My position is this. I work for an APC government, and it is my preferred party. But member? Not so. I have always rooted for good APC candidates and I would have loved if Governor Gboyega Oyetola had won in Osun last weekend. I’d known him since he was Chief of Staff to the former Governor, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola. They were both at the reception held for me in my town by the then Kabiyesi, when I was appointed media adviser to the President in 2015. Gov Oyetola had been focused, sure-footed.

But I’d also known Governor-elect, Ademola Adeleke, since he was a Senator. He had even paid me a brotherly visit at the Presidential Villa in 2017. So, I was a stakeholder in the Osun election in many ways, but it would be fickle for anybody to call me a part of the APC structure in the State. Not by any stretch of the imagination. Yes, APC is my preferred party, but I’m not a member, and won’t likely be, with my eyes set on farming and media work after leaving government service.

Without prejudice to whatever decision Gov Oyetola and the party would eventually take on the outcome, the election has held, and a winner has emerged. I would have preferred that the Governor be re-elected to continue with the steady, unobtrusive job he is doing for the State, but the people have decided otherwise. That was also the position of the President, a fair and just man, if ever there was one.

By Sunday morning when ‘come had come to become,’ the President did not waste time in causing me to issue a statement congratulating Senator Adeleke on his electoral victory. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had declared him winner, and so it must be.

He had his preference for Osun. I did too, as a political observer. But once the race was run and won, the President congratulated the winner. Fair and just thing to do. He said the will of the people must matter in a democracy, and that the will must always be respected. Is that not a radical departure from the past, particularly under PDP, in which all elections in States must be won willy-nilly by the party at the center?

I remember what happened in Ondo State. Olusegun Mimiko had wanted the ticket of the PDP to serve as Governor. He was wangled out. So he went to Labour Party, and won the election. But while the results were being announced, the then government at the center caused another candidate to be announced as the winner. When the people trooped out in protest, an order was given that they be gunned down. When Mimiko heard of it, he appealed to his supporters to stay calm, and went to court instead. It took almost three years, but he eventually regained the purloined mandate.

How many PDP Governors were eventually kicked out of office by the courts, simply because the party won the positions by artifice and sleight of hands? But count Buhari out of such. Even the Osun Governor-elect has this to say:

“When I saw the congratulatory message from the President, I said this is great for our country and democracy is at play here and I’m sure after I received my Certificate of Return from INEC, I would plan to visit him and thank him for the message because most of the times, the opposition don’t congratulate the winners. Maybe the President is trying to leave a legacy and the Electoral Act that he signed into law. I have to give the President the credit because if he didn’t sign the Electoral Act, there would be room for rigging because they did it in 2018. But this election is great because everything is coming out as expected.”

This election is great, because everything is coming out as expected. And thanks to President Buhari. Whereas, one election was always worse than the previous one in the past, with the do-or-die attitude of PDP, Buhari came with a new attitude since 2015. How many elections has APC lost? Many. If Federal might had been deployed, as it used to be, those elections would have been ‘won’ by force.

In fact, it has become very difficult to rig elections in Nigeria of today. And that is perhaps why vote buying is now so commonplace. But to just snatch and stuff ballot boxes? To alter winner on result sheets? Difficult, almost impossible. And it flows from President Buhari’s resolve. INEC Chairman, Professor Mahmoud Yakubu, can now beat his chest and say that the 2023 general elections would be the nation’s best. Yes, when you have a President like the one we have, you can go all out for fairness, probity, transparency, and you would be backed to the hilt.

President Buhari had always said if bequeathing free and fair polls to the country was the only thing he would succeed in doing (and he has succeeded in many other fronts), then he would do so. We see it happening, and our hearts are gladdened.

When the man from Daura finishes, and goes to take his deserved retirement, those who are fair minded would always remember him as the man who made a difference on many fronts, particularly in the area of free and fair elections. We will never forget him.

*Adesina is Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity

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Tony Elumelu’s Entrepreneurs: A Decade Of Impact

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By Ehi Braimah

In the summer of 2020, I wrote an articletitled, “Tony Elumelu: God’s Gift to Africa,” which was later published as a chapter in my book, ‘My Lockdown Diary: Reflections on Nigeria and Covid-19 Pandemic.’ At the time, the Tony Elumelu Foundation (TEF) marked its 10th anniversary and admitted its 6th cohort in the TEF Entrepreneurship Programme.

Elumelu is the Chairman of UBA, Africa’s global bank, and Chairman of Heirs Holdings, an African investment conglomerate with interests in financial services, healthcare, insurance, energy, hospitality, power, real estate, and technology.

Once you have a vision to do something, avoid distractions as much as possible and don’t allow anything to hold you back. Remember that there are always days of little beginnings. The holy book even admonishes us as follows: My people perish for lack of vision (Proverbs 29:18). This Bible verse is often explored at leadership development seminars. Without a long-term plan or goal (a vision), you cannot achieve anything in life.

The flip side of that coin is to acquire knowledge so that once you pick your spot, you can become an authority on the subject – your area of expertise. We must therefore constantly seek to expand the frontiers of knowledge and craft the desired vision to accelerate growth and development in any field.

This is what Elumelu has been doing: dreaming, craftingvisions and acquiring knowledge. Ideas rule the world, and the TEF founder has been running with his ideas by investing in different sectors of the economy.

On top of that, he is Africa’s leading funder of young entrepreneurs.

When he moved into philanthropy, Elumelu, with the support of his wife, Awele, a medical doctor, launched the Tony Elumelu Foundation in 2010. His primary objective was, and is, to create enduring prosperity and social wealth in Africa by empowering young men and women.

The TEF Entrepreneurship Programme began with the first cohort in 2015. I was one of the pioneer mentors.

By prioritising young entrepreneurs in Africa, the Tony Elumelu Foundation is investing in the future of the continent.These young business owners and employers have gone ahead to create over 400,000 direct and indirect jobs, grossing over $2.5 billion in revenue – a significant impact in a decade.

During that period, the Foundation trained over 1.5 million young Africans on the digital hub, TEFConnect, and disbursed over USD100 million in direct funding to 20,000 young men and women.

The initial goal was to empower 10,000 entrepreneurs in 10 years, but all that, as we can see, have changed with time.

TEF is funded by an annual grant from Heirs Holdings and supported by other companies in the group.In the first five years, TEF spent over N2 billion to achieve its objectives. Each Tony Elumelu entrepreneur is given a non-refundable seed capital of $5,000 to start their own business.

But the number of grantees grew gradually with support from partners such as Google, African Development Bank, EU, UNDP, etc. This is why Elumelu is calling for a global coalition to expand the reach and impact of the entrepreneurship programme, and unlock the huge economic potential of Africa.

“Instead of giving seed money to only 1,000 young entrepreneurs, I’m envisaging a time when we can fund 100,000 entrepreneurs,” Elumelu said on March 22 (his birthday) when the new beneficiaries – the 10th cohort of the 10-year-long TEF Entrepreneurship Programme– were unveiled at the UBA Amphitheatre in Lagos.

Elumelu says we should spread opportunities and democratise luck for our young ones. This is his passion, as he is on a mission to empower young Africans to become wealth creators. He is quick to remind anyone that luck, chance and mentorship helped him to get along on his journey to the top.

He is always excited when he listens to TEF impact stories across the continent. These captivating stories are the joys of entrepreneurship which Elumelu needs to fire on all cylinders as he embarks on another decade of transforming lives.

Indeed, most of the TEF entrepreneurs are doing well, while some are failing or have failed. That is to be expected in the topsy-turvy world of entrepreneurship. However, you only need to listen to their testimonials and see how philanthropy can be used to leverage influence and impact in the way TEF under Elumelu’s leadership has done it.

The icing on the cake is that after 10 years of impact in African philanthropy, the Harvard Business Schoolhas launched the Tony Elumelu Foundation as a case study. Harvard researchers intend to examine the role and impact of the Foundationand its unique approach to catalysing entrepreneurship in Africa.

Harvard Business School will also explore the economic philosophy known as Africapitalism created by Elumelu. Africapitalism is anchored on the strong argument that the private sector must play a pivotal role in Africa’s development, and that investment in strategic sectors must seek social and economic returns.

Other billionaires in Africa should emulate Elumelu by creating a legacy of impact in any area of human endeavour. Their interventions should aim at improving the lives of Africans by changing the existing narrative of poverty into prosperity. Humanity is a precious gift, and we have a duty to nurture and preserve it.

In 2024, over 150,000 entries were received from the 54 countries in Africa, according to Somachi Chris-Asoluka, CEO of the Tony Elumelu Foundation, but only 1,104 made the cut through a rigorous selection process carried out by Ernst & Young (EY), with 65 percent male and 35 percent female distribution.

As you would expect, Nigerians dominated the final shortlist with 53 percent, Benin republic had 10 percent, while the rest of Africa was 37 percent.

The criteria used were: feasibility of each pitch, market opportunity, financial understanding, scalability, and leadership and entrepreneurial skills. The beneficiaries of the 10th cohort have already identified what they will spend their seed money on, but I was not surprised that a majority of them(381) want to invest in agriculture and create agribusiness.

It is the only way we can boost food security and eliminate hunger and packageagricultural products for export.Nigeria can become the food basket of Africa in view of our vast arable land.

On the industry distribution listed presented by Ernst & Young, we also have information technology (133), beauty &fashion (118), manufacturing (80), education (64), professional services (63), green economy (57), medicine & healthcare (41), media & entertainment (34), logistics and transportation (30), energy and utilities (28), construction (25), tourism & hospitality (23), and FMCG (18).

There are a few categories not listed in this article but when added, would bring the total number of beneficiaries by industry distribution to 1,104. It is always a struggle to come up with the final shortlist because the pitch is highly competitive.

From the over 150,000 entries received, 69.8 percent came from West Africa, 0.5 percent from North Africa, 21.1 percent from East Africa, 4.5 percent from Central Africa and 4.1 percent from Southern Africa. But this is not a West African event, neither is language a barrier. We need more participation from the rest of Africa.

Research, advocacy, and training are strong pillars of the Foundation that was set up with the following objectives: supporting entrepreneurship, enhancing competitiveness, policy intervention and leadership development.

Elumelu is fond of telling his young entrepreneurs to “hang in there and be positive about your future.” He also says we must spread prosperity in Africa. “The easiest way to spread prosperity in Africa is to identify young entrepreneurs and support them to start their own business,” he told the audience at the unveiling of the 2024 beneficiaries last Friday.

“We are happy to see our young ones prospering, and we would like to partner with other global institutions for more impact,” the TEF founder continued.

“Today is a day of impact, gratitude and reflection. God has been kind to me and my family. It is not from the abundance of our wealth that we are funding young entrepreneurs, but it is from the realisationthat the spread of poverty is a threat to everyone. We cannot live alone in prosperity.

“I’m indeed happy that in our lifetime, we are able to impact the next generation.”Let us continue to spread opportunities, democratise luck and improve lives.

Braimah is a global public relations consultant and marketing strategist. He is also the publisher/editor-in-chief of Naija Times (https://ntm.ng) and Lagos Post (https://lagospost.ng), and can be reached via hello@neomedia.com.ng.

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Office Of Senate President And The Impeachment Broom

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By Kassim Afegbua

Crucify him, Crucify him! is the chorus in the Hallowed Chambers of the Nigerian Senate. The legislators are calling for impeachment of the Senate President, Senator Godswill Akpabio. From day one in June, when this 10th Senate was consummated, it has been one impeachment threat after the other against this compatriot. Where has he gone wrong? It appears that the struggle and contest for the office of the Senate President between Senators Abdulaziz Yari and Godswill Akpabio is not yet over. It has as usual worn the garb of a North-South divide; some Senators from the North insist that in order to balance the algorithms of power, the Senate Presidency should be ceded to the North, considering that the current President of Nigeria and the Chief Justice of Nigeria are both from the South. The supporters of Senator Yari have thrown ethnicity into the fray and so pressured other members of the Senate to see reason to uphold their position to have the office zoned to the North. They choose to be oblivious of the very recent history of who and who occupied that office before Akpabio; this is our one Nigeria. Such is the temper of power in a multi-ethnic society where so many interests and factors are rolled into the process of power acquisition and distribution. After all the power play albeit, it culminated in Senator Godswill Akpabio being elected to assume the position of the Senate President.

But events following his emergence tend to suggest that the dust of the contest has not fully settled. Some of the forces behind Senator Yari are still up in arms against the Senate President, watching closely to see him slip on the banana peel, and latch unto every incident to rake up mud against him. Even when the issues are quite analogous, they tend to want to make them impeachable in a bid to rattle the Senate President, show strength, and alter the political applecart. Senator Akpabio as a person may not be their real target; it appears that they want to capture the office of the Senate President. The resolve is just to make sure that the South-South geopolitical zone is denied the office. Since 1999, we’ve had several Senate Presidents and impeachments that were deliberately orchestrated to swipe the South- South of power and consolidate a remote grip on the leadership of the Legislature. In eight years, eight few years, there were five Senate Presidents, all from the South-East who came about as consequences of one impeachment plot or another. Senators Anyim, Okadigbo, Enweren, Nwabara, and Nnamani all slipped on the banana peel route. These impeachments came to an end when Senator David Mark emerged as Senate President. He served for eight years in that position and there was peace and stability in the Senate and indeed the National Assembly. After him came Senator Bukola Saraki by a veritable political coup within the APC hierarchy. Saraki was followed by Senator Ahmed Lawan. None of them was impeached. They are all from the North.

Both Senators Saraki and Lawan served for four years each, and heaven never fell. Even though there were observed impeachable offences, the threats of impeachment never reared its ugly head. Senator Saraki who outsmarted all deliberate efforts to uproot him because he was not the choice of the APC, was still able to complete a four-year term before he bowed out of the Senate. The era of Senator Lawan was dappled with questionable approvals granted to the Executive on the “Ways and Means,” but nobody raised a voice of impeachment. Why then is it that it is only when senators from the South occupy the Senate President position that threats of impeachment rear their ugly heads? What exactly has Senator Godswill Akpabio done to warrant the calls for impeachment? Or what exactly has he done? Is it a conspiracy to have him removed to please certain interests from the North? Is he not conducting the business of the Senate well? Has he indeed committed any impeachable offense, to warrant the hoopla being generated? I am of the considered view that Senator Godswill Akpabio has brought in his own style to bear on the Senate, and as a man with his wits about him, he has succeeded in carrying every senator along. He may not be the angel from heaven like his predecessors, but he surely has led with an open heart, to the admiration of the majority members of the Senate. Those who are demanding that his head be gullotined are traitors and hypocrites. The Ningi episode presented a handy excuse to drive the nail of impeachment deeper into the coffin.

Senator Akpabio is not just a senator; he is one of exemplary repute, he’s a leader who has been able to politically impact on his people. As Governor of Akwa Ibom state, his level of transformation of the state through infrastructural renewal raised the commercial viability and prosperity indices of the state and his people. His performance as Governor was remarkable and exemplary. It is the reason he is referred to as an “uncommon transformation Governor.” Inter Alia, he was Minister of Niger-Delta, and a principal officer of the Senate. In those offices he raised the bar by quintessential delivery. These are the antecedents he brings to the office of the Senate President; he has a rich background of cross-country affiliations and solidarities that are needed to create synergies in the Senate. Those who want him out are only pursuing an agenda of the same old mundane regional domination that is never pregnant with anything that could possibly bring prosperity for our nation or people. Senator Godswill Akpabio may not be your usual dye-in-the-wool politician, but he understands the dynamics of playing in Nigeria’s political landscape and sure knows how to smoothen the relationships between the three arms of government for our collective best interest. He has the uncanny ability to rally round his colleagues and has succeeded in building a robust relationship between the Legislature and the Executive in pursuant of the renewed hope agenda. Those who are working assiduously to impeach Senator Akpabio need to be less pedantic, provincial and parochial, and more objective future thinking. Realpolitik is it in today’s world. Posterity should matter. We need to rescue our country from the clutches of crickets, before they throw us into another avoidable political crisis. What we need at this time is stability that would propel the wheel of good governance.

The suspension of Senator Mohammed Ningi to me, should be revisited; if he has now shown signs of penitence. His tactic was hare- brained; as a Senator, he has all the avenues to lay his complaints before his colleagues especially during their Executive Session, but he chose to go public without doing due diligence on his point of disagreement. He flew a kite which caught him midstream. Peradventure, he was trying to impress his constituents. Majority of the senators are buying into Akpabio’s leadership on account of his conduct of the affairs of the Senate. From his consummate administrative skills to his drive and mapping, he has proven to be the right man for the office. His colleagues have access to him, he’s a networker, he makes and follows plans, he is energetic, and he shows love for his people, which he converts to trails for prosperity. As a man with his wits about him, Senator Akpabio additionally has the gift of oratory and has been able to assert the relevance of South-South geopolitical zone since his emergence as Senate President. He will be fondly remembered even after many years of leaving office. Rather than call for his impeachment for no justifiable reason, the senators should work with him to create the required stability to enable Executive bring us out of our current quagmire. The beauty of contemporary leadership is being able to rally round the people and build affinities that would help cement unity in diversity. The South-South geopolitical zone is the treasure base of the nation and should therefore be cautiously cultivated to promote that sense of belonging that has been preached about over the years. Let us deliberately maintain peace in the region for our betterment. This latest hobby of calling for impeachment at the slightest or even no provocation is unbecoming. Nigeria is very fragile. We need to promote national cohesion and carry every geopolitical zone along, so that the real gains of the Renewed Hope afore promised will be accessed.

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Pulaaku Initiative: Tinubu’s Message Of Hope To The North

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By Modibo Mustapha

It was the first Nigeria Army Chief of Staff and Former Military Governor of the defunct Northern Region, late General Hassan Usman Katsina (Ciroman Katsina), that described in the social menace of begging and destitution in the North as a Hausan-Fulani community problem. He said this during a media chart on an NTA network program in February 1992. Exactly 32 years ago.

In his frank characteristic, the late Ciroman Kastina (of blessed memory) attributed the unfortunate situation to the failure of “the current leaders of the North including myself”, and that “only we the northern leaders can find a lasting solution to the problem”.

This statement will not come as a surprise to those who were familiar with the frankness and truthfulness of the late General.

He then called on the Northern leadership to work in unison, towards improving the condition of living in the region, through the provision of formal education and social amenities to the people, so that the menacing culture of begging on the streets of the North will be considerably minimized or completely eradicated. He further warned that if the situation is left unchecked, it may snowball into a major problem, with dire consequences to the peace and stability of the entire nation. Many will agree that the late General predicted the security situation of today over three decades ago.

However, before that remarkable statement was made by the late General Hassan Katsina on the degradable culture of begging in the North, Professor Jubril Aminu, as Nigeria’s Minister of Education in 1989, had introduced the concept of Nomadic Education into the nation’s educational system.

Many at that time, did not understand the passion with which Prof. Jubril Aminu wanted to take formal education to the nomadic Fulanis in the forests. With the benefit of hindsight today, one can sadly attest to the fact that the worries and warnings of both late General Hassan Katsina and Professor Jubril Aminu have been justified. This is in view of the criminal recruitment in droves, of uneducated northern children begging on the streets, and the illiterate nomadic Fulanis in the forests, into the army of Kidnapers, Bandits, and Terrorists that are currently unleashing mayhem on Nigerians.

It will not be considered an exaggeration to say that the absence of formal education and lack of social amenities for vulnerable children that are begging on the streets, combined with the deliberate isolation of the nomadic Fulanis from general socio political economic activities by government, have both contributed immensely to the frightening spate of insecurity in the North.

When on Tuesday the 30th January 2024, a group of policy analysts in Abuja known as the Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI), identified the recently established Pulaaku Initiative as the long awaited Non- Kinetic solution that can drastically reduce the susceptibility of vulnerable children and the nomadic fulanis, to the heinous crimes of kidnaping, banditry, and terrorism in the North, there was a sigh of relief among many opinion leaders across the nation.

The personal commitment and political will with which President Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR, approved the establishment of the Pulaaku Initiative can be seen in the rapid release the sum of 50 Billion Naira operational fund for its immediate take off.

However, as good and thoughtful as the initiative appears, the challenge still remains that the intended beneficiaries of the new program need to be effectively mobilized and carried along in its implementation. This is absolutely a challenge to the Northern establishment.

It will amount to major failure and a monumental self-indictment on the part of northerners in government, either in elective or appointive offices, His Excellency Vice President Kashim Shattima GCON, who is coincidentally the custodian of the Pulaaku Initiative inclusive, if this presidential opportunity for the return of peace and stability to the region is wasted.

Leaders from the North, irrespective of their political leaning or inclination, are expected to unite and give the Pulaaku Initiative the needed support to succeed.

The emphasis of the Pulaaku Initiative on the provision of formal education and other social amenities, will go a very long way to give the vulnerable children in the North and the nomadic fulanis a sense of belonging and formal orientation, needed to interact with their immediate social environment without fear of complex and discrimination.

The nomadic fulanis in Northern Nigeria have been neglected for too long, owing to the failure of governments at all levels. The Pulaaku Initiative is the first policy of it kind, ever deployed by government with a deliberate intention to create government presence within the nomadic communities in the North.

This above objective, more than any other thing, should be more important to the North at this crucial point in time when peace and social stability seems to have eluded the region.

It is therefore incumbent on the current northern political class to pay more attention to issues like this that will bring genuine development to the people of the region, and to desist from distractive arguments on mundane issues like the unwarranted controversy over the transfer of some Federal Government staffs to Lagos from Abuja. This is gibberish, and a lallation of the highest order.

Mr. president needs to be commended and encouraged to sustain his interest and spirited efforts on the implementation of the Pulaaku Initiative, so that the goals and objectives of the initiative can be achieved within a reasonable period of time, to the credit of his administration.

Duty therefore beckons on His Excellency Vice President Kashim Shattima GCON, to use his good office to convene a summit of various leaders of the Fulani herdsmen, and the owners of the Sangaya Islamiya schools in the North. They are indispensable stakeholders in the Pulaaku Initiative of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu GCFR, and enlisting their passion and support for the scheme will largely determine its success.

Finally, the need for the North to support the Tinubu administration cannot be over emphasized in this context. The appalling neglect of socio economic issues relating to the Herdsmen and the Sangaya Islamic education system by successive governments in Nigeria, is the tap root of the current insecurity in the North.

The North must support the President for what Mr. Niyi Akinsiju, Chairman of the Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI), aptly described at a press conference in January 2024, as a “creative and pragmatic intervention that will most likely change the narratives around insecurity in the country”.


-Mustapha is a Legal Practitioner in Yola, Adamawa State.

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