Connect with us

Politics

No level of political gang up can hinder Tinubu’s re-election- Oyintiloye

Published

on

Hon Olatunbosun Oyintiloye
By Our Reporter
Ahead of 2027 general election, a Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Osun, Olatunbosun Oyintiloye, on Sunday stated that no amount of political gang up can stop President Bola Tinubu’s re-election in 2027.
Oyintiloye, in a statement made available to newsmen noted  that the recent defection of some APC members to other political parties posed no threat to the political stability of the President or the ruling party.
He stressed that those who thought that the President would fail to win the 2027 election should bury such thought , adding that Tinubu has a winning strategy in his blood.
Oyintiloye also said that the long history of good relationships that the President had established across all the geopolitical zones would continue to work in his favour.
According to him, “leave it or take, no amount of political gang up can stop the re-election of President Tinubu in 2027.
” Those who are gathering against him ahead of 2027 should try and study the kind of person the President is.
“He has the winning strategy, and he is raising men and women of goodwill across Nigeria.
“His achievements, political sagacity, and love for the country will speak for him now and in the future,” he said.
Oyintiloye, a former lawmaker, also said that the President was doing everything humanly possible to put the country on the path of greatness, adding that Tinubu’s efforts has started yielding positive results.
” The president will succeed, and his political enemies will realise the mistakes they are making by not supporting him.
” Those who are whipping up sentiments against the President should check his track records, achievements, and popularity across Nigeria.
” Tinubu’s political strength, strong connection, influence, resilience

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

which made him triumph over all obstacles to win in 2023, will see him through in 2027.

He, however, urged the President to start public engagement and sensitization on the achievements recorded so far and projection ahead by his administration.
He said doing that will allow the citizens to understand and properly evaluate programmes and policies of the administration.
“That will enable people make right decision devoid of sentiment by looking at the positive impacts of the administration’s initiatives on society at large,” Oyintiloye said.
The ex-lawmaker declared that since Tinubu is a man of faith who believes in God, his victory is certain
Up Next

Rivers Assembly begins moves to impeach Gov. Fubara, his deputy •Calls on EFCC to investigate Danagogo By Our Reporter As the power tussle between former governor of Rivers State who doubled as FCT Minister, Barr. Nyesom Wike and the incumbent governor of Rivers State, Siminalayi Fubara rages on , Members of the Rivers State House of Assembly have commenced moves to impeach governor Fubara from office. The 26 members of the Assembly led by Martin Amaehwule are loyal to the Minister of Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Nyesom Wike, and are alleged to be taking orders from him. Recalled that Wike, who was the immediate governor of Rivers State had been locked in fierce battle of who controls the state for over a year, while speaking during a civic reception in his honour by his supporters at Abalama on Saturday said he will not stop members of the assembly from carrying out their constitutional role which was pointing towards impeachment of Governor Fubara, his successor. Members of the Assembly however, in a letter addressed to the Speaker, and made available to the public, said it has passed a resolution raising impeachment allegations of gross misconduct against Governor Fubara and his deputy, Professor Ngozi Odu. The Assembly mandated Clerk of the house to publish a letter of allegations of gross misconduct against Governor Siminalayi Fubara and his deputy, Professor Ngozi Odu in national dailies, in pursuant to Section 188 of 1999 Constitution (as amended). The lawmakers accused Governor Fubara of reckless and unconstitutional expenditure of public funds contrary to Sections 120, 121 (1)(2) and 122 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended). They alleged that the Governor from his actions, has shown that he is not prepared to govern the state in line with the constitution, citing the February 28 Supreme Court judgments against the State government. The lawmakers, among other charges also accused the governor of supervising the demolition of the Rivers State House of Assembly, appointing members of the state executive council without being screen by the House, and refusal to present the 2025 appropriation bill to the assembly. The letter which was addressed to the speaker of the House, Martin Amaehwule, reads; “In compliance with Section 188 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) and other extant laws, we the undersigned members of the Rivers State House of Assembly hereby forward to you a notice of gross misconduct by the Governor of Rivers State in the performance of the functions of his office.” “Mr. Speaker, we conclude by stating that the Governor has shown that he is not prepared to govern Rivers State in line with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended) and his oath of office. “The Supreme Court in Suit No.: SC/CVI1174/2024 condemned his actions when it stated that “the 8 respondents fear of impeachment by the House of Assembly is no justification for his attacks on the House of Assembly, the Constitution, the Government of Rivers State and the rule of law.” They further quoted the apex court to have ruled that, “Political disagreements cannot justify these attacks and contempt for the rule of law by the Governor of a State or any person. What the 8 respondent has done is to destroy the government because of fear of being impeached.” Recalled that Governor Fubara said he had written to the Assembly of his intention to represent the budget before them, after being locked outside the assembly complex the first day he also went present the appropriation bill on the 12th of March, 2025. However, Speaker of the Assembly, Martin Amaehwule has denied receiving any letter from the governor. Meanwhile, the Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Martin Amaehwule has confirmed receipt of the Notice of Allegation of Gross misconduct signed by 26 members against Governor Siminalayi Fubara and his deputy, Prof. Ngozi Odu, wherein they listed five grounds of gross misconduct against the Governor and three grounds of Gross misconduct against the deputy with accompanying particulars. The Speaker on Monday during plenary said, he received the notice on the 14th of March, 2025 and in line Section 188 of the Constitution, he has done the needful by distributing them to Members and forwarding them to the holders of the office. But to be sure that the Governor and his deputy become aware of the notice, in the event that the letters were not received, the House resolved through a motion that the notice be published in at least three national dailies. In another development, the House through a Motion move by Rt. Hon. Dumle Maol requested the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to investigate the Secretary to the State Government, Dr. Tammy Danagogo, for spending humongous sums of money not back by an Appropriation Law. Commenting on the Motion, Rt. Hon. Martin Amaewhule stated that the House resolved to invite the EFCC to help in the investigation because the Governor has barred all heads of Ministries, Departments and Agencies in the State not to honour their invitation; adding that it will not deter the House from performing its constitutional duties. The House also amended its Standing Orders, making room for the House to sit at anytime and day within the week if it becomes absolutely necessary in the interest of the State, and in the event of emergency, provided the House is properly convened by the Speaker.

Don't Miss

2027: Tinubu ‘ll face stiff opposition from SE, SS, others -Ex-IPAC chief

Politics

When Transparency Becomes Luxury: INEC and ₦1.5B FOI Controversy

Published

on

By

INEC logo

When Transparency Becomes Luxury: INEC and ₦1.5B FOI Controversy

By Chike Walter Duru

When the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) recently demanded a staggering ₦1.5 billion from a law firm for access to the national register of voters and polling units, many Nigerians were left bewildered. The request was made under the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act, 2011 – a law designed to make public records accessible, not to commercialize them. INEC’s justification, couched in legalese and bureaucratic arithmetic, raises a deeper question: Is Nigeria’s electoral umpire genuinely committed to transparency and accountability?

At the heart of this controversy is a simple statutory principle. Section 8(1) of the Freedom of Information Act clearly stipulates that where access to information is granted, the public institution may charge “an amount representing the actual cost of document duplication and transcription.” The framers of this law envisioned modest fees; not financial barriers.

INEC, however, appears to have stretched this provision beyond reason. By invoking its internal guideline of ₦250 per page, the Commission arrived at the colossal figure of ₦1,505,901,750 for 6,023,607 pages – supposedly the total pages needed to print the entire national voters’ register and polling unit list. It is a mathematical exercise that may be sound on paper, but absurd in context and intent.

Let us be clear: transparency is not a privilege that comes with a price tag. It is a fundamental right. The Freedom of Information Act exists precisely to ensure that institutions like INEC cannot hide behind bureaucracy or cost to deny citizens access to information that belongs to them.

INEC’s justification, however elaborate, falls flat against the law’s overriding provisions. Section 1(1) of the FOI Act affirms every Nigerian’s right to access or request information from any public institution. More importantly, Section 1(2) establishes that this right applies “notwithstanding anything contained in any other Act, law or regulation.” This means that no internal guideline, regulation, or provision of the Electoral Act can supersede the FOI Act, within the context of access to information.

By relying on Section 15 of the Electoral Act 2022 and its own “Guidelines for Processing Certified True Copies,” INEC seems to have elevated its internal processes above a federal statute – a position that is both legally untenable and administratively misguided.

Civil society organisations have rightly condemned INEC’s response. The Media Initiative Against Injustice, Violence and Corruption (MIIVOC) called the fee arbitrary and unlawful, while the Media Rights Agenda (MRA) described it as a deliberate attempt to frustrate legitimate requests under the FOI Act. These reactions are not misplaced. Charging ₦1.5 billion for public records is tantamount to weaponising cost – turning what should be a transparent process into a pay-to-play system.

The Attorney-General of the Federation’s FOI Implementation Guidelines pegged the standard charge for duplication at ₦10 per page. Even at that rate, printing the same documents would not amount to anything close to ₦1.5 billion. Moreover, in an age of digital data, it is difficult to believe that the only way INEC can share information is through millions of printed pages.

It is worth noting that the National Register of Voters is a digital database – already compiled, stored, and backed up electronically. The polling unit list is also digitised and publicly available. What, then, justifies this astronomical fee?

Democracy thrives on openness. The credibility of any electoral body depends not just on the conduct of elections, but also on the degree of public confidence in its processes. If the cost of accessing basic electoral data runs into billions, how can civil society, researchers, or ordinary citizens participate meaningfully in democratic oversight?

The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights’ Guidelines on Access to Information and Elections in Africa (2017) are explicit: election management bodies must proactively disclose essential electoral information, including voters’ rolls and polling unit data. Nigeria, as a signatory to this framework, is obligated to promote – not restrict access to such information.

By placing financial barriers in the way of public access, INEC risks undermining not only its own credibility but also Nigeria’s broader democratic integrity. Transparency should not be a privilege of the rich or the powerful. It should be a right enjoyed by all.

This incident presents an opportunity for reflection and reform. INEC must immediately review its internal cost guidelines for information requests and align them with the FOI Act and the Attorney-General’s Implementation Guidelines. More importantly, it should embrace proactive disclosure by publishing the national register of voters and polling units in digital formats that are freely accessible to the public.

There is no reason why information already stored electronically should require billions to access. Doing so not only contravenes the spirit of the FOI Act but also erodes public trust in the Commission’s commitment to open governance.

Access to information is the lifeblood of democracy. It empowers citizens to hold institutions accountable and ensures that governance remains transparent. INEC’s ₦1.5 billion charge is not merely excessive; it is a dangerous precedent that could embolden other public institutions to commercialize public data and silence scrutiny.

If Nigeria must advance its democratic gains, the culture of secrecy and bureaucratic obstruction must give way to openness and accountability. INEC should lead that transformation, not stand in its way.

The Commission owes Nigerians not just elections, but the truth, transparency, and trust that sustain democracy.

Dr. Chike Walter Duru is a communications and governance expert, public relations strategist, and Associate Professor of Mass Communication. He chairs the Board of the Freedom of Information Coalition, Nigeria. Contact: walterchike@gmail.com

Continue Reading

Politics

Don’t use alleged coup plot to silence opposition, ADC cautions FG

Published

on

By

By Abdul-Ganiyy Akanbi

African Democratic Congress, ADC, has cautioned the federal government against using the recent news of an alleged coup plot as a pretext to clamp down on opposition leaders and begin extra-judicial surveillance on voices that do not agree with it.

The party, in a statement signed by its National Publicity Secretary, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, said it views any threat to Nigeria’s democratic order with utmost seriousness, but warned that the federal government must not exploit this moment to instil fear, silence dissenting voices, or engineer political advantage under the guise of national security.

The statement reads: “The ADC has been closely monitoring the reports of an alleged coup plot involving arrested military officers and subsequent media claims that a former Southern governor is under investigation for allegedly funding the suspects. While we vehemently oppose any effort to undermine Nigeria’s constitutional order, we are equally concerned about the potential misuse of such allegations to justify political witch-hunts, suppress dissent, or manipulate public sentiment.

“We are particularly concerned about the conflicting signals coming from government sources, especially as the Defence Headquarters has publicly denied ever mentioning a coup plot, despite widespread media reports to the contrary. Such inconsistency raises serious fears that the coup narrative may have been politically engineered.

“The ADC is particularly concerned that the federal government has not deemed it fit to make a categorical statement on this very serious matter, especially after the military authorities had repeatedly denied that there was such a threat to the government. By keeping quiet, the government has deliberately allowed the coup story to fester for whatever reason.

“What is clear, however, is that the government is exploiting the coup story to divert attention from the real issues of mis-governance in the country and to curry sympathy. Even more significantly, subsequent unattributed media reports purportedly implicating unnamed politicians in the so-called plot now provide a pretext for the government to clamp down on opposition figures or mount undue surveillance on them.

“We understand that the APC government is desperate. But such desperation must never be allowed to endanger our democracy or undermine the democratic rights of citizens.

“The ADC therefore calls on the federal government to immediately clarify the true nature of the alleged coup. Government has a duty to decisively quash the swirling rumour. Conversely, if indeed there has been any such threat to national security, the government has a duty to be transparent about it and brief the nation accordingly. Government must desist from weaponising national security as a pretext to silence opposition and political dissent.

“The ADC is resolute in its opposition to dictatorship of any form, whether military dictatorship or its civilian variant. We therefore support any legitimate action that may be taken in defence of our constitution and our democracy. In the same vein, we oppose any ploy by the government to intimidate legitimate voices under the guise of national security.”

Continue Reading

Politics

HURIWA Slams FG, IGP, Army Chief for Turning Abuja Into War Zone Over Peaceful Pro-Kanu Protest

Published

on

By

IPOB leader, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu

By George Mgbeleke

The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA) has come down heavily on the Federal Government, the Inspector-General of Police, and the Chief of Army Staff, over what it described as a shameful, lawless, and dictatorial clampdown on peaceful Nigerians who gathered in Abuja to demand justice and the release of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu.

The Association said the disgraceful show of force witnessed in the Federal Capital Territory on Monday was proof that the Nigerian government under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is descending deeper into militarized tyranny, where peaceful dissent is treated as treason and citizens are ruled through fear instead of justice.

HURIWA said it was both “laughable and tragic” that an entire capital city could be locked down simply because a handful of young Nigerians said they would march peacefully to ask for justice. “Why is the government this afraid of its own people?” the group asked. “What is it hiding? Only leaders with unclean consciences fear the sight of citizens expressing themselves. Only dictators, tyrants, and looters of public funds are terrified of seeing hungry, frustrated Nigerians pour into the streets to speak truth to power.”

The rights group described as “insanity in uniform” the deployment of hundreds of soldiers, armored vehicles, and police patrol teams across major routes in Abuja, turning what should have been a peaceful civic action into a tense military siege. It said the reckless action of the security agencies crippled economic and commercial activities across the city; banks were shut, filling stations stopped dispensing fuel, commuters were stranded, and private businesses lost billions of naira in a single day.

HURIWA blamed the chaos on the paranoid conduct of the Police and the Army, accusing both institutions of creating unnecessary panic and tension. “The protesters were not armed, not even with a stone,” it said. “Yet live ammunition and tear gas were fired at harmless citizens. The government must explain why such unconstitutional brutality was unleashed on people whose only ‘crime’ was demanding justice.”

The Association also faulted the security advisory issued by the United States Embassy warning its citizens to stay away from the protest venues, describing it as “a foreign conspiracy against Nigeria’s democracy.” It questioned why a sovereign government would allow itself to be guided by what it called “a baseless, imported panic message” to justify domestic repression. “Did Nigerians invite Americans to the protest? Did they plan to storm the US Embassy? That advisory was totally irrelevant, yet the government used it as an excuse to flood Abuja with troops. It smacks of complicity,” HURIWA declared.

The group warned that the government’s growing intolerance for peaceful protests is a dangerous provocation that could one day spiral out of control. “If you keep pushing citizens to the wall, they will fight back,” HURIWA cautioned. “No government can suppress the people forever. Hunger and injustice will always find a voice. Nigeria is not a military barracks; it is a democracy; at least, it is supposed to be.”

It accused the Tinubu administration of ruling with fear and intimidation, saying the clampdown exposed an embarrassing level of insecurity within government circles. “Even if protesters marched toward Aso Rock, they could never breach its walls. That place is impenetrable and heavily guarded. So, what exactly is the government afraid of? The truth?” HURIWA asked.

The group demanded that the Federal Government immediately halt the use of soldiers for crowd control, release all arrested protesters without delay, and pay compensation to business owners whose operations were crippled by the security lockdown. It also urged the National Human Rights Commission and international human rights bodies to launch independent probes into the violent disruption of the protest.

HURIWA further warned that Nigeria’s democracy is being choked by a leadership that mistakes citizens’ cries for justice as threats to its survival. “This is not the democracy Nigerians fought for,” the statement said. “When a government uses live bullets on its own people for daring to ask questions, it has lost moral legitimacy. Those who are clean do not fear accountability. It is those with blood and corruption on their hands who tremble at the voice of the people.”

The Association reiterated that peaceful protest is a constitutional right, not a privilege. It said the continued militarization of civic spaces will only deepen public resentment and erode trust in government institutions. “No government that silences its people can ever claim to be democratic,” HURIWA said. “Nigeria’s rulers must stop this war on citizens and start governing with conscience.”

Continue Reading

Latest

Politics2 hours ago

When Transparency Becomes Luxury: INEC and ₦1.5B FOI Controversy

When Transparency Becomes Luxury: INEC and ₦1.5B FOI Controversy By Chike Walter Duru When the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)...

General News2 hours ago

NSC Endorses SWAN 60th Anniversary, Hails Benjamin’s Visionary Leadership

BY WARIYAI DANIEL, YENAGOA. The National Sports Commission (NSC) has endorsed the 60th anniversary and Sports Icon Awards of the...

General News2 hours ago

Gov Diri Tasks UN On Protection Of River Deltas

By David Owei,Bayelsa Governor of Bayelsa State, Senator Douye Diri, has urged the United Nations to institutionalise the protection of...

Religion2 hours ago

Deputy Governor Ewhrudjakpo Decries Proliferation Of Diverse Christian Groups; Calls For More Prayers For Bayelsa

By David Owei,Bayelsa The Deputy Governor of Bayelsa State, Senator Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo, has expressed concern over the proliferation of different...

Religion2 hours ago

2026 Hajj: NAHCON inaugurates Aviation C’ttee for quality flight services

By Abdul-Ganiyy Akanbi Ahead of the 2026 Hajj exercise, the Chairman/CEO of the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, NAHCON, Professor...

Politics2 hours ago

Don’t use alleged coup plot to silence opposition, ADC cautions FG

By Abdul-Ganiyy Akanbi African Democratic Congress, ADC, has cautioned the federal government against using the recent news of an alleged...

Law & Crime5 hours ago

Tension, fear, grip Abuja residents as Police, soldiers threaten FreeNnamdiKanuNow Protesters with tear-gas, live bullets causing standpid, gridlock in FCT

By Our Correspondent Abuja experienced significant disruptions(today)Monday due to the the FreeNnamdiKanuNow protest led by Omoyele Sowore. The situation is...

Politics5 hours ago

HURIWA Slams FG, IGP, Army Chief for Turning Abuja Into War Zone Over Peaceful Pro-Kanu Protest

By George Mgbeleke The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA) has come down heavily on the Federal Government, the...

Politics24 hours ago

When Transparency Becomes Luxury: INEC and ₦1.5B FOI Controversy

When Transparency Becomes Luxury: INEC and ₦1.5B FOI Controversy By Chike Walter Duru When the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)...

Politics1 day ago

ICON Hon. (Chief) Amobi Godwin Ogah, a Distinguished Nigerian and An ICON

ICON Hon. (Chief) Amobi Godwin Ogah, a Distinguished Nigerian and An ICON By IGNATIUS OKOROCHA Hon (chief) Amobi Godwin Ogah...

Trending