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Former President Olusegun Obasanjo on Wednesday said that voting out President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019 is in the interest of the South East geopolitical zone. Speaking at a meeting of the Coalition of Nigerian Moment in Awka, Anambra State, Obasanjo said the Igbo would be the most beneficiary in Buhari’s ouster.

He asked the Igbo not to believe the promise that the Igbo would produce the President in 2023, describing it as “a grand deceit and evil machination.” Represented at the event by the South East convener of CNM, Dr. Okey Nwosu, the ex-president asked the people of the zone to “collectively work with the CNM towards ousting Buhari from office in the 2019 general elections.

He accused the All Progressives Congress government of perpetrating “carnage and wanton destruction of lives and property across the country.”

He said, “The meeting is a wake-up call for Nd’Igbo to dump APC and collaborate with CNM, which is the best alternative for their rescue from poverty, hunger, recklessness and ethnic cleansing in the hands of the Hausa/Fulani marauders. “Every Nigerian leader is very much embarrassed with the state of the nation where people are attacked, killed, raped and made refuges in their own homes.

“Political leaders must advocate action against these senseless killings and seek how to design a new democratic action plan to ensure we take care of this conundrum democratically, and say, ‘Enough is enough.’

“If unchecked, these unethical activities will lead to the destruction of the country. It does not augur well for Nigeria’s development.”

He said the objective of CNM was mostly on how to “sack Buhari from Aso Rock in 2019 and ensure that a visionary government is elected.”

According to him, “Nigeria’s eminent personalities, including Generals Yakubu Gowon, Ibrahim Babangida and T.Y. Danjuma have all spoken and condemned the killings and destruction in the country.

“If these people can say that the nation needs to be saved from these calamities, the South-East geo-political zone must add their voice to the clarion call.”

He disclosed that the CNM had mobilised no fewer than five million Nigerians to realise its objectives in 2019.

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PDP Would Be Destroyed If Peter Obi Returns To Party — Wike

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The Federal Capital Territory Minister, Nyesom Wike, has asserted that welcoming Peter Obi back into the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) would spell disaster for the party.

During a media session in Abuja, Wike noted that key PDP figures like Bauchi Governor Bala Mohammed and Senate Minority Leader Abba Moro have been engaged in discussions with both Obi and former President Goodluck Jonathan regarding a potential return to the party.

Obi officially left the PDP days before its 2023 presidential primary and later joined the Labour Party—a move that positioned him as its presidential candidate that year.

Wike said Obi’s character disqualified him from returning, citing past insults against the party: “Obi was abusing the party, saying it is rotten. So now the party is suddenly good enough for him to come and contest on its platform?”

He continued, criticizing the idea as incompatible with the party’s integrity: “That kind of ambition can make people even go to Satan’s house.”

Wike warned that the party stands to lose credibility and its guiding principles if Obi is welcomed back. “Anybody suggesting that Obi should return is entitled to their opinion. But if you want to destroy this party, then bring Obi back,” he declared.

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Politicians Pushing Jonathan To Contest In 2027 Betrayed Him In 2015 — Wike

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The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyesom Wike, has urged former President Goodluck Jonathan against returning to the 2027 presidential race, saying he should continue to serve Nigeria as a respected statesman instead.

Speaking at a media briefing in Abuja, Wike noted persistent rumours that Jonathan might vie for the presidency again on the PDP platform, though the ex-president has not publicly addressed the speculation.

“I know Jonathan very well. He enjoys being respected internationally as a statesman and I believe he will continue in that role,” Wike remarked.

He sharply criticised those encouraging Jonathan’s return, arguing they are the very figures who undermined him during the 2015 election.

“People pushing Jonathan — what strength do they have? Were they not the same people who worked against him in 2015?” he queried.

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ONSA Replies El-Rufai, Says Federal Government Not Paying Bandits

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The Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) has rejected claims by Nasir el-Rufai, former governor of Kaduna State, that the federal government is funding or incentivising bandits.

During a Sunday interview, el-Rufai alleged that the government’s so-called non-kinetic approach to insecurity was essentially a policy of paying and feeding armed groups.

“What I will not do is to pay bandits, give them a monthly allowance or send food to them. Non-kinetic is nonsense. We are empowering bandits. That’s what is going on,” he said.

He further described the policy as misguided, insisting that the only way forward was a hardline strategy: “My position has always been that the only repentant bandit is a dead one. Let’s wipe them out, bomb them, reduce them to nothing. And then the five percent that still want to be rehabilitated can be rehabilitated.”

ONSA: Allegation “baseless and false”

In a statement signed by Zakari Mijinyawa, head of strategic communications at ONSA, the agency said el-Rufai’s allegations are unfounded.

“Neither the ONSA nor any arm of government has been involved in ransom payments or inducements to criminals,” the statement read, adding that the government has instead warned Nigerians against ransom payments.

The NSA’s office explained that its counter-banditry framework has always relied on a dual strategy: aggressive military campaigns alongside community engagements to address root grievances.

It cited successes in Kaduna State—particularly Igabi, Birnin Gwari, and Giwa—where once-terrorised areas now enjoy relative calm. Mijinyawa also listed captured or neutralised bandit leaders, including Boderi, Baleri, Sani Yellow Janburos, Buhari, and Boka, as well as the arrest of former Ansaru commanders who had built camps in the region.

He criticised el-Rufai’s remarks as a dismissal of security forces’ sacrifices: “Denial of the sacrifices made by security personnel is unfair and insulting to their memory.”

The NSA’s office urged the ex-governor to stop politicising national security, stressing that the fight against banditry requires collective responsibility, not political point-scoring.

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