Opinion
RENEWED HOPE AND SECURITY STRATEGY THE PRESIDENT-ELECT CAN REFLECT UPON
Published
3 years agoon
By
admin
By Flt.-Lt. Aliko El-Rasheed (Retd)
Nigeria will witness yet another transition from a civilian President to another come Monday, May 29, 2023. This will later culminate into another legislative assembly called the 10th Assembly following successful completion of the Presidential, National Assembly, Governorship and Houses of Assembly elections of 25th of February and 11th March 2023.
Following the declaration of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu as the 16th Nigerian President, Nigeria’s atmosphere has been shrouded with series of protests and petitions regarding the outcome of the elections. This is as there were series of verbal altercations among serving and retired politicians, as well as other public and political analysts in expressing their satisfaction or dissatisfaction about the outcomes of the elections, particularly, the election that produced Tinubu as president-elect.
Could you allow me to skip some of the timelines of the whole process to focus only on what is relevant in line with the topic.
Shortly after his declaration, while keenly listening to his acceptance speech, I completely became relaxed when the President-elect made overtures to his erstwhile contenders to join forces with him to move the nation forward.
“To my fellow candidates, former VP Atiku, former Governor Kwankwaso, former Governor Obi, and all others, I extend the hand of friendship. This was a competitive, high-spirited campaign. Political competition must now give way to political conciliation and inclusive governance.’’
“There are divisions amongst us that should not exist. Many people are uncertain, angry, and hurt; I reach out to every one of you. Let the better aspects of our humanity step forward at this fateful moment. Let us begin to heal and bring calm to our nation,’’ Asiwaju Tinubu had pleaded.
I am sure that the President-Elect started showing Nigerians and the whole world that he can stick to his words. A few days after his speech, he extended his hands of fellowship to anybody willing to contribute to the betterment of our dear country. And to the surprise of all, Asiwaju Tinubu traveled on a two-day working visit to commission some projects executed by Governor Nyesom Wike of Nigeria’s major opposition party in Rivers, a state controlled by the Peoples Democratic Party – PDP.
Recently, Tinubu also hosted a former Kano State governor, Engr. Rabiu Musa Kwakwanso where the duo discussed issues that will be beneficial to Nigeria; and this is just to mention but a few. All these were achieved a few days after his declaration by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
Now that the May 29th inauguration ceremony is fast approaching, what are the President-elect’s plans considering the enormous challenges facing the country in terms of security, corruption, economic wrangling, poverty, youth unemployment, socioeconomic issues, and power will be of major concern to Nigerians and the global community.
Another major challenge that Asiwaju Tinubu will face as president is his choice of right people to be appointed to assist him achieve his mandate and promises made to the people. As at now, I am sure there are dozens of lists being submitted for positions as Ministers, Special Advisers, Head of Agencies and Parastatals, Ambassadors, etc. Yet, to achieve all these, the President must ensure that the right people are appointed based on utmost merits, and not ethnic, tribal, or religious sentiments but competence, teamwork, integrity, and professionalism.
Now to the President-elect, sir!
I will limit myself to the issue of Security which is my area of expertise. Mr. President-elect, I am sure you are fully aware and briefed on the many challenges the electorate currently face as some of them were already mentioned above.
My appeal to you, is that over 200 million souls are looking up to you on how you can better their lives and that of the future generations coming after.
Security is one of the country’s major challenges beginning with Boko Haram (JAS, ISWAP, Al Bakoura etc) in the Northeast; banditry and other non-state armed groups with linkage to terrorism in the Northwest; agitations by the outlawed Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB, and their likes in the Southeast. Others are abduction, kidnapping, tribal and ethnic violence, including a host of so many acts of traditional crimes across the country. Millions of people were displaced and IDP camps that littered almost half of the Nigerian states of the federations.
In order to tame all these challenges, Mr. President-elect, please appoint only competent and seasoned professionals with the mandate to execute your security plan for this country. Such must be people of high caliber with robust security intelligence and professional expertise, and above all, the individual who is free from corruption should be saddled with the task of handling the sensitive security sector under the Tinubu’s presidency. That expert who has the country at heart, and will not enrich himself from the public funds at the expense of the nation’s protection.
Our dear incoming President, kudos must be given to our tireless military and other security agencies, but the current strategies in dealing with the numerous security challenges need to be closely looked into, rejigged and polished.
For security reasons, I will be compelled to halt here. But a lot of work is awaiting you, and I am confident that your support and commitment will change everything. The primary responsibility of any government as enshrined in the constitution is to ensure the safety and security of its citizenry as safety and security are the bedrock of any societal development, and our dear country Nigeria’s case cannot be an exception.
Most of the major factors fueling the escalation of current challenges are poverty, youth unemployment, bad governance, and corruption. If all these factors can be tackled, I assure that we will witness zero or little incidences of security issues in our country.
People are still living in abject poverty and our youth are loitering the streets without anything doing. Immorality has bcome the order of the day with “Yahoo boys” spreading like wildfire while sponsored assassinations’, and illegal trafficking and use of illicit drugs are now the only ventures with which our teeming youths now engage.
To achieve all these, the incoming President needs to put the right peg into the right hole in putting our dear country first and make the people comfortable, so that normal businesses, both at domestic and international levels can resume. Nigerian people must be able to move from one point to another irrespective of time and without fear of being attacked, kidnapped, abducted, or even killed.
On assumption for duty Sir, you should consider immediate constitution of the LGAs, States, and National Dialogue of stakeholders with members drawn from the traditional rulers, heads of faith-based organisations, security agencies, and elder statesmen. Such should be replicated across states, while the one at the national level should include the members of the National Council of State.
Other sectors should also follow suit with either Ministers or Head of Agencies as Chairman. If these are implemented, there will be free flow of information where issues of national and state concerns will be addressed with zero or little bureaucratic bottlenecks.
Above is my little contribution, specifically as they bother on the security of our Dear Nation, and I hope that other well-meaning Nigerians will do the same for the betterment and well-being of our fellow citizens towards experiencing better life, and going about our normal businesses.
Long Live Our President-Elect
Long Live the Federal Republic of Nigeria!
By Flt. Lt. Aliko Ibrahim El-Rasheed (Rtd) Pjsc B.Sc HD PGD M.Sc (PhD In-view), is a Security and Counter-terrorism Analyst
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Opinion
APC E-Registration: Benue Flying Broom To Success
Published
4 months agoon
January 20, 2026By
OD
By Bridget Tikyaa
Political party membership registration is a key step to ensuring a vibrant democracy, because it is the key to having one’s voice heard in shaping party’s direction, participation in primaries and selection of candidates who’ll represent one’s interests, and an opportunity to influence policies and ideology, participate actively in party activities, meetings, and even leadership. A card carrying member of a political party often get access to party funding, training, and other resources, an opportunity to click with like-minded people and potential allies, contribute to shaping the party’s stance on key issues, and build a political career.
For young people, party membership can be a game-changer, because it will connect them with experienced politicians and professionals who can guide them, get involved in youth wings, campaigns, and other party activities and invariably build connections and experience that can lead to roles in government, politics, or public service. It is also a fundamental route to community engagement, understanding issues, and making a difference and name, thus building a political structure and asset.
Since the commencement of the nationwide e-registration of members of the All Progressives Congress (APC), millions have registered in less than a week of the exercise.
In Benue State, the state Governor Rev. Fr. Hyacinth Alia led the line up of millions of old and new supporters of the APC in obtaining his membership card.
At the flag-off of the e-registration on Monday, January 12, 2026, the governor said it is a landmark initiative aimed at strengthening the party’s structure and demonstrating its numerical strength.
The flag-off ceremony took place at the RCM Primary School, Ihugh, the headquarters of Mbadede Council Ward in Vandeikya Local Government Area, where the governor urged all APC members to return to their wards and register, noting that the process was simple, fast, and would take only a few minutes.
To ensure that no party supporter is left out, Governor Alia has directed party officials and elected local officials across the 23 local government areas of the state to mobilize party members to participate in the exercise. The Local Government Areas with the highest number of registered APC members are taking home a surprise package.
The has a clear message to all party supporters. “In 2023, you demonstrated to the entire world that Benue is APC. You demonstrated through the ballots that you love me and Mr. President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu. We have both remained faithful to the promises set out in our policy blueprints. I therefore urge you to come out and use this opportunity to once again demonstrate that you are ready to vote for consolidation. My administration will give priority attention to the most registered areas because this is an APC administration.”
He therefore tasked all council chairmen and party chairmen at the Local Governments in the state to give the registration agents all the needed support and to mobilize the people to participate in the exercise.
For APC Benue’s number 001, “This is the beginning of another level of progression of the All Progressives Congress. It is something that has not happened with any political party in Nigeria.” It is an apt bragging right. Because the e-registration would help the party accurately determine its strength at the ward, local government, and state levels.
Unlike the 2023 voter registration, the APC e-registration is designed to clearly showcase party membership, seriousness, and direction. That’s why the party leadership took time to train the registration personnel before deploying them across the state. “I want the whole Nigeria and the world to know that when we say Benue State is APC, we are ready to demonstrate it by action, backed by facts and reality on the ground.”
The Speaker, Benue State House of Assembly, Berger Alfred Emberga, described the flag off as a critical step towards deepening internal democracy within the APC, stressing that a robust, accurate, and verifiable membership database would strengthen governance, enhance party cohesion, and boost grassroots mobilisation.
“This e-registration exercise is fundamental to the future of our party. I urge my colleagues in the Benue State House of Assembly, party leaders, and members across the state to participate actively and mobilise their constituents to ensure a successful and credible exercise,” Hon. Emberga said.
While urging the people of Benue State to remain steadfast in their support for the Alia administration, the Honourable Speaker also encouraged APC members and supporters to register and obtain their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs). He stressed that widespread PVC ownership is essential to enable party members to vote for Governor Alia and all APC candidates in the 2027 general elections.
Also speaking, the State Coordinator of the APC e-registration, Hon. James Ornguga, alongside the State Chairman of the party, Chief Dr. Ben Omale emphasised the importance of accurate data capturing. They noted that the exercise would reposition the party for improved organisation, accountability, and electoral success.
They applauded Governor Alia for funding and supporting the e-registration exercise, describing the gesture as a clear demonstration of the governor’s commitment to building a strong, inclusive, and data-driven party structure.
Orgunga particularly called on local government chairmen, party executives, Stakeholders and political gladiators to give full support to registration agents and intensify grassroots mobilisation to ensure the smooth and hitch-free conduct of the exercise across all wards of the state.
The State Coordinator of the APC e-Registration, who is also the State Organizing Secretary of the party, explained that the registration process is straightforward, requiring only voters card and a National Identity Card.
Omale, on the other hand, has nothing but commendation for President Bola Tinubu and the National Chairman of the party for the initiative. He thanked Governor Alia for sponsoring the exercise in the state, urging all APC faithful in Benue to embrace the e-registration, so as to formally confirm their membership.
Already, the e-registration has gathered momentum, recording huge turnout which necessitates the training of additional registration agents. The quick intervention in the 276 wards will address the early challenges linked to manpower and logistics, speed up the ongoing e-registration exercise, and avoid delays that could discourage interested members. The additional agents are to support those already deployed, ensuring wider coverage and smoother registration for prospective members.
The APC State Caretaker Chairman, Chief Benjamin Omale, said the electronic registration is critical to building a credible and verifiable membership register that reflects the true strength of the party while the e-registration coordinator, Hon. James Ornguga, said the supplementary training is a booster session designed to equip the new agents with the technical skills required to handle the digital platform and take the registration exercise closer to the grassroots.
“Our aim is to make the process inclusive and efficient. With more agents at the ward level, people will be able to register without unnecessary delays,” he said.
Bridget Tikyaa is the PSA Media Publicity and Communications Strategy
By Oyekunle Olalekan
That fragile moment when the body relaxes before the journey ends. When the mind moves ahead of the plane, stepping already into tomorrow. Below them, the land unfolded – wet, familiar, waiting. Port Harcourt breathed under the rain, unaware of how many stories were descending toward it.
They were aboard Sosoliso Airline Flight 1145, traveling from Abuja, descending toward Port Harcourt.
A routine journey. A trusted path.
Among them were students. Young voices carrying laughter from Abuja back to the places that shaped them. Schoolbags tucked beneath seats, futures folded carefully inside. The cabin filled with normal sounds. Seatbelts fastened. A familiar announcement.
But they were not alone.
There were parents too, travelling with quiet endurance. Strangers bound together briefly by chance and shared air. Lives intersecting for only a few hours, never knowing how closely their fates had aligned. Each seat held a history. Each name carried someone else’s heart.
The cabin was filled with normalcy. Seatbelts clicked. The familiar announcement was made. Almost there. No one prepares for loss while preparing to land.
Rain followed them in silence. It fell steadily, blurring sky and earth, erasing certainty. The city below dimmed, and in that narrowing space between cloud and ground, time faltered. What happened next came without permission, without mercy.
And then… impact.
And then… absence.
What remained was not only twisted metal, but waiting. Phones that rang into nothing. Families pacing airport floors long after arrival time had passed. Names repeated until they lost their shape.
They were students.
They were parents.
They were individuals whose lives did not deserve to end as headlines.
Twenty years have passed. Twenty years of birthdays uncelebrated. Of classrooms that never felt quite full again. Of parents who learned how to live with a silence that does not heal. Time moved forward, as it always does, but grief did not dissolve; it only changed shape.
A nation mourned not just what was lost, but what was unfinished, the futures that never unfolded, the questions that lingered about responsibility, about safety, about whether this loss could have been prevented.
Grief does not discriminate. It visits the young and the old alike. It settles into uniforms never worn again, into meals cooked for those who will never return.
They were almost home. That is what makes the loss unbearable. Not the distance, but the nearness. Not the journey, but the promise of arrival.
This is more than the story of a crash that happened twenty years ago. It is a reminder that every passenger matters, that safety is a responsibility, not a suggestion, that memory must outlive negligence.
They were almost home.
And now, two decades later, they live in remembrance.
RIP to the 107 lives lost that day.
Gone from sight, but never from memory.
Opinion
Kogi: The Road That Connects Every Region Now Endangers Every Home
Published
5 months agoon
December 8, 2025By
OD
By Oyekunle Olalekan
There was a time when the long stretch of highway running through the middle of Nigeria symbolised unity. It was the route that carried families to reunions, traders to markets, students to school, and workers to opportunity. That road was the lifeline that stitched our regions together, a shared path, a shared hope.
But today, that same road has become the nation’s most painful wound.
Across the central corridor, travellers now journey with trembling hearts. Buses move in fear, not confidence.
Every stop along the highway comes with silent prayers. The road that once connected homes now threatens to break them.
In recent months, the nation has woken up repeatedly to chilling news: travellers ambushed in the middle of the highway, entire buses hijacked, ransom calls echoing through the phones of helpless families.
Stories of kidnapped students, traders, children, and clergy have shaken communities to their core. Some victims were rescued after courageous operations; others are still missing, their families clinging to hope in the dark.
The human cost is immeasurable. Mothers stay awake through the night waiting for travel updates. Fathers count the hours, fearing the worst. Students postpone journeys out of dread.
Traders lose income because the safest option is to stay home. Even the most essential movement, the simple act of travelling across one’s own country has become a gamble with fate.
This is more than a regional crisis. When danger grips the central road that binds the country together, the entire nation bleeds. If that artery fails, movement fails. If movement fails, unity fails.
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