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BIG STORY

Road To 2027: Coalition Slams Tinubu As Wike, ADC Trade Blows

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The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, and the African Democratic Congress (ADC) clashed on Thursday following the ADC’s criticism of President Bola Tinubu over the current economic hardships in the country.

During his monthly media chat in Abuja, Wike dismissed talks of a 2027 political coalition, insisting that only the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has the capacity to defeat the sitting president. He also claimed that Nigerians are not giving any serious consideration to the ADC.

Meanwhile, the PDP’s National Working Committee, through its National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba, clarified on Thursday that the party has not taken an official stance on any coalition plans.

Additionally, Dumebi Kachikwu, the ADC’s 2023 presidential candidate, accused a faction of the party led by former Senate President David Mark of plotting to position former Vice President Atiku Abubakar as the party’s presidential candidate in 2027. He vowed to challenge the new party leadership in court.

Responding to Wike’s remarks, ADC’s National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, stated on Thursday that the FCT Minister is rattled because the emerging coalition presents a serious challenge to the administration he represents.

Abdullahi maintained that the ADC-led coalition belongs to the Nigerian people.

On Wednesday, a coterie of politicians unveiled the ADC as the coalition platform to oust Tinubu in 2027 following his alleged failure to improve the lot of Nigerians.

Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, former Kaduna Governor Nasir El-Rufai, ex-Rivers Governor Rotimi Amaechi, and other prominent politicians attended the unveiling of the ADC.

Though most of these figures have not formally joined the ADC, they publicly declared their support for the party, which is now led by an interim leadership team headed by David Mark as national chairman and Rauf Aregbesola as national secretary, following the resignation of Ralph Nwosu and his team.

Wike mocks coalition

Commenting on the coalition, Wike criticised the opposition leaders, urging them to stop exploiting Nigerians.

The minister also dismissed claims that Nigerians were angry, pointing out that many members of the coalition were once in power but failed to improve the lives of the people during their time in office.

He said, “I heard David Mark say, to rescue Nigeria, Nigerians are angry. David Mark was Senate President for how many terms? Two terms, is it not? Nigerians were happy? Nigerians were happy when he was Senate President for eight years? And there was no single project to Otukpo; not one. He was flying in a helicopter to go to Otukpo. Nigerians were not angry then, but Nigerians are only angry now.

“When Rotimi Amaechi was minister for eight years, Nigerians were not angry. When Nigeria became indebted, Chinese loans, Nigerians were happy. It’s now that Nigerians are angry. I saw Seriake (Dickson). They are saying Nigerians are angry. They want to rescue Nigeria. So, I’m asking this simple question. What happened to Air Nigeria? Nigerians were happy then.

“When they went to APC in 2015 and took over the reins of power in 2023, Nigerians were happy. Was it under Tinubu’s government that banditry came? Tambuwal, you were the speaker for four years. What did you do to make Nigerians not angry? You were a governor in Sokoto State,” he said.

Wike added that he would only agree that Nigerians are angry if such claims came from individuals who never held public office.

He emphasised that Tinubu was actively working to improve the nation’s condition.

The former Rivers state governor noted, “When you want to go to power, tell us. If there are people who have not been in power in this country, who are coming up with such an idea, I can listen to them.

“But not people who were the ones at the helm of affairs of this country for how many years? Look at where this country is. If this President had not taken certain decisions, which may be very challenging, you would have known where we would have been by now.

“A President came and said it’s a scam; took that bold step, we will not allow that. States are getting more money. Nigerians are angry that states are getting more money. Nigerians are angry that we are providing infrastructure in Abuja. I cannot say that there are no challenges. There are challenges. But for Christ’s sake, stop using Nigerians.”

The minister reasoned that only the PDP could challenge Tinubu in 2027 if they got their acts together, stating, however, that the opposition has succeeded in decimating itself.

“The opposition has even decimated itself. Let me tell you why I said so, now you are talking about a coalition. What is the coalition? The only party today that, if they put themselves well, can still challenge this government, assuming, is PDP,” Wike added.

Coalition reacts

The ADC Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi, said if Wike’s government had kept its promises, the coalition wouldn’t have been necessary, nor would he be so uneasy.

The former sports minister stated, “The ADC has taken note of the virulent attacks launched on the various leaders of the coalition movement by the Hon. Minister of Federal Capital Territory, Chief Nyesom Wike, in his media chat today.

“Without justifying this behaviour that we find incompatible with the office of a Federal minister, we believe Minister Wike could only descend to that level because of his mortal fear of the threat that the successful unveiling of the coalition of opposition political parties constitutes to the government that he serves.

“We observe that if Minister Wike and the government that he serves had kept their promises to the Nigerian people, the coalition movement would not have been necessary, and he would not have had a need to be so jittery.

“If Minister Wike had paid the salaries of primary school teachers who have been on strike for several months and if he had not treated FCT workers with so much contempt, while he goes about commissioning white elephants running into billions of naira, he would not have needed to be afraid of the coalition.”

Abdullahi further said the coalition leaders are upset that Wike ‘’let himself be used by the government to ruin the PDP, once a leading political force in Africa.’’

He stated, “Minister Wike claimed in his media chat that the coalition leaders are driven only by grievances. If we have any grievances, it is the way the government he is a part, has driven the majority of Nigerians into poverty and misery.

“We are aggrieved to see children of the poor unable to get an education because he would not pay their teachers’ salaries. We are aggrieved to watch the growing insecurity in the FCT that he superintends.

“We are aggrieved that Minister Wike has allowed himself to be used by the government he serves to destroy one of the most powerful political parties in Africa, the PDP.

“But it is rather too late in the day to cry. The coalition movement belongs to the Nigerian people who had been promised renewed hope, but have been served renewed hopelessness. Therefore, no amount of tirade against the leaders of the coalition could stem the tide of this popular movement.”

Joining the fray, the All Progressives Congress described the newly adopted platform for the 2027 opposition coalition as “a gathering of deceivers and self-centered individuals driven by personal grudges.”

In a statement on Thursday, APC National Publicity Secretary, Felix Morka, said, “The vaunted opposition coalition platform of choice, the African Democratic Congress, was unveiled yesterday, Wednesday, July 2, 2025, with a gasping whimper, not the roar that its promoters loudly touted.

“However, in reality, it was an unveiling of a coalition of hoaxers and self-obsessed merchants of vendetta, a roll call of Nigeria’s me-or-nothing politicians, who equate their selfish interest with the interest of Nigerians, who cannot bear to be out of the corridors of power and patronage, who are desperate to grab power for themselves by guile and subterfuge, who lay claim to an immoral birthright to power, even while draped in odious record of betrayal of public trust, and rapacious public service.

“Not surprisingly, the speech delivered by Senator David Mark, the alleged National Chairman of ADC, was disgracefully vacant, without substance or purpose, nothing but stitches of untruths, diatribe, and regurgitated and baseless allegations against the APC-led administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.”

Presidency slams coalition

The Presidency on Thursday said the ADC had no semblance of the 2013 merger that birthed the All Progressives Congress.

Special Adviser to the President on Media and Public Communications, Sunday Dare, asserted this in his latest post on his verified X handle (@SundayDareSD) on Thursday.

He wrote, “Heads up for Nigerians about ADC — There is no injustice to redress — only avaricious ambition to satisfy.”

He added that unlike the APC’s emergence in 2013, the new coalition was not driven by national interest, saying the ADC is being led by “a serial election loser, clutching at what he clearly sees as his last shot at the presidency.”

“Unlike Tinubu, he enters the coalition alone — without the backing of his state governor, his region, or any meaningful political structure. His ambition is personal, not patriotic. So also that of his many co-travellers,” Dare wrote.

He compared the ADC’s founding to the APC’s, saying the 2013 merger that produced the latter was built on strategic discipline and collective sacrifice.

“In 2013, the merger that birthed the APC was driven by selflessness, national interest, and strategic discipline.

“Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, despite commanding the loyalty of several sitting governors, chose to wait.

“He bided his time, played the long game, and focused on building a viable political platform,” he said.

Dare also cited the unifying influence of then-General Muhammadu Buhari, whom he described as “a man seen as a symbol of integrity” and a rallying figure with a strong national grassroots following, a quality, he says, the current coalition lacks.

“No one in this coalition commands that kind of loyalty or trust. Not one of them could genuinely unite a ward, let alone a country,” he reasoned.

He argued that the APC merger was rooted in legitimate grievances, including what he described as the constitutional denial of power to a marginalised region and a collective desire to end what many saw as 16 years of misrule by the People’s Democratic Party.

Dare said, “The APC coalition emerged to address real grievances: the constitutional denial of power to a region that had been unfairly sidelined and to end the 16 years of ruinous governance by the PDP. It was a coalition grounded in justice and balance.”

The current attempt by the ADC, he said, lacks any ideological or national cause since the presidency is already zoned to a region that, he notes, is “rightfully due.

“This new coalition? It’s purely opportunistic. The presidency already rests with the region rightfully due. And that’s where it will be till 2031,” he declared.

Sunday Dare insisted that the political forces that created the APC and ADC are different.

“Let’s be clear – this is not 2013 — and this is not the APC,” he concluded.

Also reacting to the unveiling of the ADC’s new leadership in Abuja on Wednesday, Special Adviser to the President on Policy Communication, Daniel Bwala, on his X handle, @BwalaDaniel, described the political realignment as “a dead on arrival party.”

“Association of wild goose chasers, consisting of internally displaced politicians forming a dead on arrival party; better described in the words of @PeterObi as ‘structure of criminality,’” Bwala wrote in his post.

While Bwala did not name individuals, his remarks appeared to target the architects and promoters of the ADC, a platform touted as a broad coalition of opposition politicians aiming to challenge the ruling All Progressives Congress in the 2027 general elections.

Bwala, himself a former PDP chieftain who defected to the APC in 2023, had defended the Tinubu administration until his eventual appointment in 2024.

Amaechi formula

Meanwhile, former Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, said the only way to stop President Bola Tinubu from returning to power in 2027 was for citizens to take their fate into their own hands.

Amaechi spoke on Thursday at the public presentation of the 2025 Nigeria Social Cohesion Survey Report by the Africa Polling Institute in Abuja.

He said, “The only way you can stop Tinubu from being the President of Nigeria in 2027 is to run an election of Nigerians versus the bandits. If you think you will just sit down and do that, may God be with you.”

Amaechi criticised the citizens for grumbling in private while remaining passive in the face of what he described as elite domination.

He said, “The elites who are stealing Nigeria’s money are not up to 100,000 but you have 200 million Nigerians who can’t fight 100,000 men.

“You sit down in your house and complain and grumble. What makes you think the elites would remove their hands completely? Who told you the elites don’t know how you are feeling? They know you are not happy. But you are helpless not because the elites made you helpless, you made yourself helpless.“

He also cited examples of countries like Bangladesh, Peru, and Kenya, where mass protests forced unpopular leaders out of office.

“Go to Bangladesh, right? The day they got tired of that woman, what did they do? They chased her out. Go to, is it Peru or Chile? Nigeria is the most docile society I’ve seen in my life. Please tell me, has there been any revolution without blood? Any revolution without blood is a failure,” he said.

He said if not for his wife, he would have left the country.

Amaechi said, “I told my wife, I want to Japa like you people do. They will give me official visa to stay in their country, any country. She said, ‘no, we can’t leave Nigeria because Nigeria is lovable. It’s lovely.’”

Recalling how NANS, NLC, and ASUU once joined forces to pressurise the government, he said the NLC was now shying away from protests.

“Now, NLC can’t even mobilise their people. Why? Ethnicity. I’ve spoken to them before. I even told them, ‘I will join you in the protest.’ They said they can’t. So, Nigeria has totally collapsed.”

He said the political class had outperformed the military in worsening the citizens’ sufferings.

“We pushed away the military and brought in the politicians. The politicians have shown they are worse than the military.”

The Executive Director, Africa Polling Institute, Professor Bell Ihua, presented a survey data which showed that 83 per cent of Nigerians had little or no trust in the Tinubu government, while 80 per cent distrust the National Assembly, and 79 per cent distrust the judiciary.

He said, “This report has very telling information. Citizens are united in shared struggle based on economic realities. The government needs to act based on this scientific data to rebuild public confidence.”

PDP undecided

On its part, the PDP clarified that it has yet to make any official decision regarding the 2027 coalition movement seeking to challenge President Tinubu.

In a statement on Thursday, the PDP’s National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba, said the party is focused on preparations for its upcoming national convention.

The PDP has been grappling with internal crises since the 2023 presidential election, which intensified in 2024 following disputes over the National Secretary position.

The issue was eventually resolved in favour of Samuel Anyanwu during the party’s 100th National Executive Committee meeting held on Monday.

Despite the development, the party has witnessed defections to other political platforms, with some members pledging allegiance to the ADC.

Earlier, on April 15, PDP governors meeting in Ibadan, Oyo State, declared that the party would not participate in any coalition aimed at challenging Tinubu in the 2027 presidential election.

Aligning with this, the PDP National Working Committee, under the leadership of the acting National Chairman, Umar Damagum, reiterated that while the party is open to receiving defectors from other parties, it is not interested in joining a coalition.

However, this position contrasts with the actions of key PDP figures like former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, ex-Senate President and Interim National Chairman of ADC, David Mark, and former Jigawa Governor Sule Lamido, who have called on party members and Nigerians to support the ADC-led coalition.

In PDP’s latest response, Ologunagba stated, “The attention of the National Working Committee of PDP has been drawn to a misrepresenting report in a section of the social media claiming that the PDP had directed its members to join the coalition group.

“For the avoidance of doubt, the NWC states in clear terms that the PDP has not taken any official position on the issue of coalition.

“The PDP is for now focused on building and consolidating on attained unity, stability and strengthening of its structures and capacity to play its roles as the leading opposition Party determined to return to power in 2027.”

The PDP assured it is actively putting necessary structures in place to restore its winning momentum ahead of the 2027 general election.

“Our party is currently working conscientiously towards a successful national convention, which will further revamp and reposition the PDP for the task ahead. Nevertheless, as a major opposition party with a very strong presence and bond with Nigerians across the country, the PDP restates that it remains open to working with other well-meaning, like-minded citizens in the collective effort to rescue our nation from the stranglehold of the rudderless and insensitive All Progressives Congress-led administration.”

LP’s Obi ultimatum

Meanwhile, the Julius Abure-led Labour Party has issued a 48-hour ultimatum to its 2023 presidential candidate, Peter Obi, to resign over his alliance with the ADC.

In a statement on Thursday, the party’s National Publicity Secretary, Obiora Ifoh, stated that ‘’desperate politicians cannot be the architects of a new Nigeria.’’

He noted, “We are aware of several nocturnal meetings between Peter Obi and some of our members, lobbying them to join him in his new party. We’re also aware that a number of them have refused to defect with him.

“Labour Party has consistently said it is not part of the coalition and therefore, any of our members who are part of the coalition are given 48 hours to formally resign their membership of the party.”

Ifoh reaffirmed that the Labour Party has no interest in joining the coalition, describing its members as ‘’power-hungry individuals driven by personal ambition rather than the welfare of the people.’’

The statement read in part, “Labour Party is not available for people with a dual agenda, people with a deceptive persona. The party will not avail itself to individuals who have one leg in one party and another leg elsewhere. People who in the morning, they will claim to be in the Labour Party and in the evening, they are in coalition.

“Nearly 70 percent of the Nigerian population are youths who are tired of the old order, tired of gerontocrats deciding their fate. The new Nigeria that the youths are dreaming of is not what can be realised from what we are seeing in the coalition.

“These people are opportunistic politicians who are only interested in re-launching themselves into the cycle of power, people who are desperate to continue holding on to power.”

The party maintained that the vision for a new Nigeria can only be achieved through the Labour Party, emphasising its readiness to guide Nigerians on that path.

In a swift response, the caretaker committee headed by Nenadi Usman, dismissed the 48-hour deadline given to Obi.

In a statement by Eluma Asogwa, Senior Special Adviser on Media to Usman, the factional LP described Abure’s ultimatum to Obi as mischievous and devoid of any legal or moral authority.

“The attention of the Labour Party has been drawn to misleading reports and commentaries suggesting that His Excellency, Mr Peter Obi, has been issued a 48-hour ultimatum to resign from the party following his participation in the recent coalition talks and the unveiling of the African Democratic Congress in Abuja.

“For the avoidance of doubt, the leadership of the Labour Party, on May 26, 2025, publicly declared its full support for Mr Peter Obi’s involvement in the coalition efforts aimed at creating a robust political alternative to rescue Nigeria from the disastrous misrule of the APC. That position has not changed.

“We wish to reaffirm that Mr Peter Obi’s participation in the coalition activities, including the ADC unveiling, was done with the full knowledge, approval, and support of the Labour Party leadership.

“The individuals claiming to have issued an ultimatum to Mr Obi are political jesters with no legitimate standing in the Labour Party.

“They are neither recognised by the party nor by the law, having long been sacked by the Supreme Court of Nigeria – the highest court in the land – and suspended from the party for their serial acts of indiscipline and anti-party activities.”

‘Contract with Nigerians’

Former National Chairman of the African Democratic Congress, Ralph Nwosu, told The Punch that the coalition would, in the coming weeks, unveil its blueprint tagged “Contract with Nigerians.”

This, he said, would set the nation on the path of real progress and development.

Nwosu explained that the coalition was agreed upon after no fewer than 10 National Working Committee and National Executive Committee meetings of the party, as well as meetings with coalition partners spanning the last 18 months.

He said, “I’m part of the people making the decisions. We volunteered our party for this purpose because we knew that this day would come, from the day we formed our party. And, the real building of Nigeria has just begun. The real building of Nigerian democracy and development has just begun.

“Following the launch of the coalition, the contract with Nigerians will be unveiled within a few weeks. This is because there has to be a new contract. Nigeria cannot continue to follow this way. So, that contract will be unveiled.

“So, this is the real coalition now? I always continue to say this is the coalition. All the others are distractions by agents of government and agents of doom.”

Nwosu added that the coalition had begun to have its foothold on the 774 local government areas and all wards across the country.

“We’ve been on this for the last 18 months. We’ve held over 10 different NWC and NEC meetings. And then, on our party side, we are preparing the party. We’ve also had meetings with all the coalition partners. And, we are telling them, come.

“That is why, within three weeks, we’ve held convergences of all the coalition partners across Nigeria. We’ve held a convergence of coalition partners under the ADC platform across the 36 states and the FCT.

“And now, the same convergence of coalition partners is being taken to the 774 local governments, and all the wards in the country,” Nwosu said.

Speaking on the new leadership of the ADC, the party’s 2023 presidential candidate, Dumebi Kachikwu, said the faction of the party led by David Mark was deliberately structured to produce Atiku as the 2027 presidential flag bearer.

Addressing journalists in Abuja on Thursday, Kachikwu said the group told him during their meeting that their main interest was reclaiming power.

He dared the coalition leaders to prove him wrong by publicly declaring that the 2027 presidential ticket would be zoned to the South.

Kachikwu stated, “It’s a coalition that has been designed and engineered to produce Atiku Abubakar as its flag bearer, and that is the absolute truth.”

When questioned about his next steps to regain control of the party from the Mark-led faction, Kachikwu responded, “We will get INEC involved and also go to court if need be.”

Recounting his encounter with the coalition leaders, he stated, “Late last year, they approached me concerning this coalition. Eventually, early this year, I agreed to have a meeting with them; a close friend of mine persuaded me to go for a meeting and hear these people out.

“I went to this meeting that had former ministers, highly placed persons in the last government, and they presented their case to me: the need for a coalition. Everything they said was about Bola Ahmed Tinubu and how his government has destroyed Nigeria.

“But I had only one question, because in opposition, you have only one ambition: for you to be the ruling party. So, for us as a party, our plan is how, in the next election, we can win the elections, or we can ensure that we have more people from the party emerge in various offices across the country.

“So, if somebody wants to speak about coalition and how to achieve this, we are willing to listen. But I had one question, and my question was this: seeing that we just finished eight years of President Buhari and that President Tinubu is in his first term, and that you people here, you old politicians that practice politics of north and south, of regions, do you agree and accept that, if there is a coalition, the south is in its first term and that the south will produce the flagbearer of this coalition? And the response — not considered, immediate response—was, ‘We are taking our power back.’

“Now, imagine my situation as someone who was the presidential flagbearer of a party that came fifth in the last elections. You are saying to me that I cannot aspire for office, that I should foreclose my ambition, that because I happen to be from the south of Nigeria and that there is a presumed majority from the north of Nigeria, you will take your power back.

“So, that’s a question for me, and that was an absolute no-no for me, and that ended every talk about coalition, because it was very clear that the coalition was engineered to produce Atiku Abubakar as its flag bearer.

“Now, I still say this today: I’m throwing this challenge to this coalition, to make a pronouncement today that the flag bearer of this coalition will be someone from the southern part of Nigeria so that the second term of the southerners will be finished. Make a categorical statement and we’ll admit you through the front door and say that there is a conversation to be had.”

PDP, LP chieftains

A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party and National Coordinator of the Alternative Movement, Otunba Segun Showunmi on Thursday said the newly formed coalition with the

Showunmi stated that the coalition lacked the capacity to unseat President Bola Tinubu in 2027 and Nigerians should rather not give them any befitting attention.

“Can’t you see the kind of people calling themselves coalition now? People who at every election season it must be about them, and the Quran and the Bible is very clear. God will not give you what he will not give you and man will not give you what God has not given you.

“You cannot be using your inordinate ambition to disturb the country up and down. The ADC as a party has been there for some time, some of our people are having been there.

“Yet today they have left their own party and rushed into another party and if they had gone in there quietly like decent people, may be one one would have respected them but they are coming in with their destructive attitude which they had used to destroy their former parties.

“They are just puffing and behaving as if the party is without people before they join, who will follow these people? In any case, where is the evidence of the development that they have done in all the places that they had been given responsibilities?”

Also, the National Publicity Secretary of the Labour Party, Abayomi Arabambi, said the arrowheads of the coalition were failed leaders only trying to recycle themselves.

He stated that while President Tinubu “was working to stabilise the patient, the very physicians who poisoned the nation have returned with new prescriptions.”

“What we reject – what every sane Nigerian must reject – is the repackaging of certified failures as reformers. I call on all Nigerians to reject them; it is a coalition of failures.”

 

Credit: The Punch

BIG STORY

Mayor Akinpelu’s Diary: Rauf Aregbesola’s Perfidy

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I was a member of the inauguration committee of then Governor Bola Ahmed Tinubu of Lagos State in 1999. Senator Babafemi Ojudu was the chairman. Mr. Rauf Aregbesola, former commissioner for works in Lagos State, two-time governor of Osun State, former minister of interior and now general secretary of the newly formed coalition party, African Democratic Congress (ADC), was also a member.

My recollection of Aregbesola was that of a scruffy looking man, with his ‘tebliq’ trousers. What he had going for him at that time was his capacity as a grassroots mobilizer in Alimosho, the most populated local government in Lagos State.

After the inauguration, Tinubu decided to use Rauf as the arrowhead of a new party structure independent of the Afenifere elders. Thus, he appointed him as commissioner for works and made his office the vehicle to compensate party faithful. The new structure started as BATCO (Bola Ahmed Tinubu Campaign Organization) and later became Mandate Group. The existing structure at the time was the Justice Forum led by Baba Olatunji Hamzat (of blessed memory).

As a result of his appointment as commissioner for works, Aregbesola became very influential. He, Aro Lambo and Tokunbo Afikuyomi were virtually in control of the party. I recall one evening. I was with Governor Bola Tinubu at the guest house. He was using the guest house at Isaac John in Ikeja GRA at the time. While we were discussing in the study room, Aregbesola came in and joined the discussion. At one point, Governor Tinubu asked Aregbesola; “Rauf, have you ever given Mayor Akinpelu a contract?” Aregbesola was surprised. Then he said, “Mayor does not need a contract.” Governor Tinubu then replied, “what do you mean he doesn’t need a contract? These are the guys you should empower.” Aregbesola turned to me and said, “Mayor, we will see later.” After we left the governor, Aregbesola told me that “Mayor, if you need a contract, you have to see me in the office.” I asked when and he said anytime from midnight. “Midnight, why?”, I asked. He replied that it was from midnight that he attended to party faithful. I told him that midnight was too late for me. That was why the contract never happened.

When Asiwaju Tinubu decided to win back the Southwest states that were lost to the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as a result of the trickery employed by then President Olusegun Obasanjo, who deceived the leaders of Afenifere into supporting him, it was Alhaji Lai Muhammed, Governor Tinubu’s chief of staff, that he sent forte. Babatunde Raji Fashola who later became governor of Lagos State, replaced Lai Muhammed. Then Asiwaju asked Aregbesola to move to Osun State to contest for governorship. That was how the Oranmiyan movement was formed. The battle was fierce because the sitting PDP governor in Osun State, Olagunsoye Oyinlola, was on ground. After a fierce contest, Aregbesola couldn’t retrieve his mandate until after the Appeal Court judgement. That was how Aregbesola became governor of Osun State.

While he was fighting for his mandate in the court, Governor Tinubu didn’t appoint another person to replace Aregbesola as commissioner for works. That post was kept for him in case he failed at the Appeal Court.

Apart from assisting him in becoming the governor of Osun State, Asiwaju still allowed Aregbesola to control the party machinery in Lagos State. He was that powerful. So powerful that he and late Bayo Osinowo ‘Peperito’ were responsible for Governor Akinwunmi Ambode’s failure to get a second term ticket. They were the ones who influenced his removal. Ambode didn’t have any problem with Asiwaju Tinubu! So, it is not out of place to say that Aregbesola owes his political success to God and Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

How did Aregbesola pay his benefactor back? When he became governor of Osun State, Asiwaju Tinubu influenced the appointment of his cousin, former Governor Gboyega Oyetola (now a minister) as Aregbesola’s chief of staff. After spending his constitutional two terms as governor, Oyetola signified his intention to succeed Aregbesola. Meanwhile, Aregbesola had someone else in mind. Eventually, Asiwaju prevailed on him to allow Oyetola to succeed him. He agreed but was not happy.

Perhaps, because he didn’t support the candidature of Oyetola initially, Aregbesola’s relationship with Oyetola became fractured. Each had his own faction and the party was divided down the line. As the 2023 general elections approached, things became very bad. A bitter Aregbesola held Asiwaju Tinubu responsible for not only imposing Oyetola but also for not calling Oyetola to order. He threw decency to the winds and started attacking his benefactor openly. He was aware that Asiwaju Tinubu was contesting for president but he didn’t care. He joined the ‘Abuja gang’ who were determined to deny Tinubu the presidency.

The shocking aspect of it was when Aregbesola openly humiliated and derided Asiwaju Tinubu. In the presence of his supporters and the media, Aregbesola said, Tinubu did not deserve the respects he accorded him! He said he had realized that Tinubu was playing God and he had asked God to bring him down! Perhaps the most shocking was when he mocked publicly that Asiwaju had started urinating on himself, which was blatant falsehood. Many were astounded at Aregbesola’s latest attitude. Could this be the same Aregbesola? What could Tinubu have done to him to deserve this level of humiliation from him? In truth, Tinubu was not even the cause of the problem. The issue was between Aregbesola and Oyetola. The betrayal was shocking and disappointing. Naturally, there’s bound to be disagreement but the ‘omoluwabi’ in you determines how you show loyalty.

Governor Raji Fashola who was handpicked as chief of staff succeeded Asiwaju Tinubu as governor of Lagos State and was almost denied a second term. When Tinubu‘s predecessor, President Muhammadu Buhari, picked Fashola as minister, the rumour was that Tinubu did not support it initially. Prior to that, some nasty stories emerged in the media, well packaged to rubbish the image of Governor Fashola. Throughout the scenario, Fashola never attacked Asiwaju publicly. Yet, he was hurting. There was an interview he granted in the press where he said “may our loyalty never be tested”. Despite this, Fashola proved to be an ‘omoluwabi’. He never insulted or openly criticised his boss.

Not Aregbesola. He is still continuing with his perfidy. Instead of him finding a way to make amends for his betrayal, he has joined the enemies of Asiwaju Tinubu in the so-called coalition party, ADC. He not only joined the party, he is holding a principal post as the secretary general, boasting that their coalition would stop Asiwaju Tinubu from getting a second term as president!

This is the same Aregbesola that Asiwaju Tinubu met as a struggling party man in 1999 and made a commissioner and later governor of Osun State. Now that Tinubu is president, should a man like Aregbesola be in a gang-up against his benefactor? Aregbesola is a religious man. He should know that no man can repay good with evil and get away with it.

There’s a Yoruba song I would like to share with Aregbesola.

“Kosi’dariji f’eni t’oba da’le”
“Kosi’dariji f’eni t’oba da’le”
“Kosi’dariji f’eni t’oba da’le”
“Ayafi k’o ba’le lo”

In simple terms, there’s no forgiveness for a traitor.

  • Akinpelu is the publisher, editor-in-chief of Global Excellence magazine

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BIG STORY

Military Re-Evaluating Strategy To End Insecurity In Plateau — Defence Chief Christopher Musa

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Christopher Musa, the chief of defence staff (CDS), said the military is reviewing its operational strategies to address the increasing insecurity in Plateau and other areas under Operation Safe Haven.

According to Tukur Gusau, the defence director of information, Musa made this known on Friday during his visit to the operation’s headquarters in Jos, the capital of Plateau State.

The CDS stated that the military is adjusting its approach to align with the asymmetric nature of the conflict in the region. He also appealed to local leaders to discourage young people from protecting criminal elements within their communities.

“We must take decisive actions to halt the cycle of violence affecting Plateau and neighbouring states,” the statement reads.

He added that military commanders will be held responsible for any form of negligence and assured that there would be enhanced logistical support for troops.

Eyitayo Oyinlola, the commander of Operation Safe Haven and general officer commanding the 3 Division of the Nigerian Army, outlined recent successes and efforts to improve collaboration with other agencies.

He noted that the command is developing a strong intelligence network aimed at safeguarding vulnerable communities and will continue to promote peace initiatives.

The CDS also visited the Nigerian Army Medical Centre in Tigi and Sector 6 in Jebbu Bindi, located in Riyom LGA, where he pledged to improve healthcare services for both soldiers on the frontlines and civilians.

Musa’s visit follows a recent incident near Chirang village in Bokkos LGA, where 14 people were killed by suspected bandits.

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BIG STORY

Falcons’ N150m Gift Sparks Outrage Among Retired Soldiers, Cops Battling Poverty

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President Bola Tinubu’s N150m reward to the Super Falcons for clinching their 10th WAFCON title has sparked varied public responses.

While some praised the gesture and lauded the President, others—especially retired military and police officers—criticised it as excessive.

Those opposed to the gesture described it as ill-timed, especially considering the “poor welfare and neglect” faced by military veterans who served the nation.

Retired police officers under the Contributory Pension Scheme voiced discontent, accusing the government of favouritism toward athletes, particularly female footballers, while those who risked their lives for national security are left struggling.

The Super Falcons overcame a two-goal deficit to secure a 3–2 victory and their 10th WAFCON trophy last Saturday.

In celebration, Tinubu hosted the squad at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on Monday.

During the event, each player and coaching crew member received the national honour of Officer of the Order of the Niger.

The President also awarded $100,000 to each player and $50,000 to each technical crew member.

Additionally, he promised each team member a three-bedroom flat at the Renewed Hope Housing Estate in the Federal Capital Territory.

At the exchange rate of N1,500 to the dollar, the $100,000 equates to N150m.

The announcement has stirred conversations across social media, with many questioning the rationale behind the gesture and Tinubu’s motives.

The reward also came shortly after a nationwide protest by retired police officers over what they described as disgraceful pension packages and ill-treatment.

On July 21, 2025, the former officers called for their removal from the Contributory Pension Scheme, saying it consistently shortchanges them.

Retired Soldiers Question Government’s Priorities

Lukmon Aderibigbe, who retired as a Corporal in 2024, questioned why footballers could earn in a single match what seasoned soldiers are denied over a lifetime.

He expressed disappointment with how soldiers are treated.

Aderibigbe said, “It is often said that no country can truly compensate a soldier for their sacrifice. While that may be true, the Federal Government has not been fair in terms of soldiers’ welfare.

“How can someone earn N150m for playing a game for under two hours, while a soldier who gives 35 years of his life to defend the nation receives only a fraction of that in gratuity?”

He recalled a colleague injured during a 2013 anti-Boko Haram operation who was neglected by the government during recovery.

According to Aderibigbe, the soldier was referred to the Nigerian Army Reference Hospital in Yaba, Lagos, but was told his gunshot wound wasn’t covered by the National Health Insurance Scheme.

The injured officer bore his medical costs.

“The situation worsened when his salary was stopped after he was ordered to return to his unit in Borno State (Monguno), even though his injury had not fully healed. All efforts to convince his commanding officer of his condition failed.

“Tragically, he was later killed during an attack on his unit by Boko Haram in 2014. He couldn’t escape because of his injury. What kind of country do we serve, where a soldier who sacrifices everything is treated this way?”

Aderibigbe also criticised the compensation soldiers receive, calling it grossly inadequate.

He said, “I am not satisfied with the reward I received for my service. After serving for over 15 years, I was paid less than N3m as gratuity.

“Recently, we (a set of retirees) wrote an observation letter to the Military Pension Board stating that we were underpaid. The basis of the complaint was that the new minimum wage, which was approved on July 29, 2024, and made effective from May 1, 2024, should apply to us, since we were still in active service during that period.

“Our official date of disengagement from service was July 1, 2024. Logically, our benefits should be calculated based on the current wage structure. Unfortunately, we were told by the Military Pension Board that we are not entitled to the adjustment. We are still pursuing the matter. But clearly, this is not a fair reflection of the sacrifices we made.”

He urged the government to support retired soldiers, stating that such recognition would boost morale and allow veterans to continue contributing to national security.

Adamu Bashar, another retired officer, echoed similar sentiments.

Bashar, who left service eight years ago, said the N150m gift was “a complete waste of scarce resources.”

He urged the government to extend such generosity to retired military personnel who protected the country throughout their careers.

“To me, that is a complete waste of money. Most of us, the retired soldiers, are being paid peanuts. We who defended this country with our lives are not even asking for N150m. Let the government give us even N20m and see whether youths will not show interest in joining the military.

“One of the reasons youths these days refuse to join the Army is because of the treatment those in service and veterans receive, which is not encouraging,” he stated.

Olumayowa Akogun-Abudu, a retired Lance Corporal injured in an insurgency attack, described Tinubu’s reward as excessive.

He argued that military veterans, not athletes, should have been prioritised.

Akogun-Abudu, in an interview with Saturday PUNCH, said, “They have always been wasteful in spending. I sacrificed my all for the country. I took the shots and bled all night, and N150m cannot even be worth the sacrifice.”

He called the military job “suicidal” and said he received no help after his 2017 battlefield injury.

“I was wounded at Kamuya by a suicide bomber while on advance with the 27 Task Force Brigade on April 27, 2017.

“They (government) gave me nothing. I was even spending my money while recuperating. It was one of the reasons I left the military, because I felt our sacrifices were not valued, neither were our efforts applauded.”

After 13 years and 66 days of service, Akogun-Abudu said his retirement pay was shockingly low.

He said, “I was paid N2,185,000, and my special debarment allowance was N911,000. That’s my worth. Why would I be happy with such ill-treatment?”

In Yobe State, retired Army Corporal Abdullahi Idris said veterans are treated as “third-class citizens.”

Abdullahi, who retired in 2003 after 12 years, suffered a leg fracture during service.

He said he gets a monthly pension of N72,900 and faces issues like unpaid entitlements and lack of recognition.

“We have started receiving the security debarment allowance, but it suddenly stopped for no reason. If the government can pay us all outstanding entitlements, we will feel regarded as first-class citizens who served to defend the Nigerian state,” Abdullahi stated.

He said spending on things like the Falcons’ reward reflects misplaced government priorities.

Abdullahi said, “It shows that retired army officers are no longer considered first-class citizens, but rather third-class citizens.

“The situation is highly disheartening, with many retired army officers feeling neglected and demoralised. Some have total disabilities and are left stranded and uncared for, while others struggle to access medical care.”

He urged both the Federal Government and the Nigerian Army to settle the outstanding entitlements of retired personnel.

In Yobe State, retired Army Captain Yahaya J. Umar stressed the need to adjust pensions in line with economic conditions.

Umar, who joined the Army in 1992 and retired in 2014, called on the government to support veterans and their families with education and employment.

Police Retirees Demand Equity

Mannir Lawal, a leader among CPS-retired police officers, said the reward for the Super Falcons highlights the government’s reluctance to resolve retirees’ long-standing complaints.

He said, “We were surprised when we saw what was given to our female footballers, while we had been made to believe there is no money.

“If they released this kind of huge sum to the Falcons simply because they won a competition, it shows they are not ready to take care of retired police officers. That is the conclusion I can draw now.”

Lawal argued that police retirees deserve more than “a three-bedroom apartment and some token money,” given the dangers they faced during their service.

“Without our efforts, you can’t imagine what would have become of this country. Some of us had life-threatening injuries, and others died while serving Nigeria. Let them just exit us from the CPS. That scheme has led to the deaths of many of us, while others are still dying,” he lamented.

Another retired officer, Buba Danjuma, criticised the government’s spending priorities.

He said it was hurtful to see footballers receive massive payouts for a 90-minute match while lifelong security officers live in poverty.

“We watched it on TV — our daughters who played football for 90 minutes collecting this huge amount of money, while those who sacrificed their lives are being neglected by the government. What kind of government is that?” Danjuma asked.

He also criticised the National Health Insurance Scheme for failing to support retirees with basic medical needs, despite years of contributions.

“They collected our money when we were serving. Now that we are retired and need the scheme, they say drugs are out of stock. You will need not less than N10,000 to N15,000 to buy them yourself. Meanwhile, what we receive monthly is peanuts,” he lamented.

Danjuma said the way retirees are treated discourages serving officers from giving their best.

“Those still in service are watching. How do you expect them to give their best when their future is not bright? They have seen how we are suffering.”

Nigerians happy Tinubu gave Super Falcons N150m each – Onanuga

Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, said many Nigerians supported the rewards given to the female footballers.

He urged critics not to connect the reward to unrelated issues and defended the President’s gesture.

Onanuga said, “As much as there has been criticism on this, there have also been praises, lots of praises. In fact, more praises for that gesture.

“Let’s not complicate matters. We cannot link the reward given to the Super Falcons to other things. I’ve read someone saying that the money can pay 16,000 doctors. They’re two different things. You can’t link it to ex-service men and women’s payments. They’re different issues. Let’s not mix them up. The President and the country were proud of those girls’ achievement for the 10th time. So, this was at the back of the President’s mind when he was showering them with those gifts. He rewarded them for their hard work, their spirit in the field of play. That’s the reason.

“From what I read, many Nigerians supported that gesture. And don’t forget, some veteran sports people like Aisha Falode said this is the first time in all their 10 victories that a sitting President will give these girls such a grand reception. First, it is a record — 10 victories. And the 10th one was even more spectacular. Many people gave up after the first half. Some saw the news of our victory the next morning.”

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