Bankuli takes Chronicles of Afrobeat to four continents in historic global tour

From a Canadian Embassy partnership in Lagos to stages in New York, Atlanta, Winnipeg, and Toronto, the Afrobeat pioneer is building a diplomatic cultural movement that governments are taking seriously.

There is a version of this story that is easy to tell. Artist loves his music. Artist travels the world. People cheer. But that is not the story of Chronicles of Afrobeat, and it is certainly not the story of Bankuli. What he has built over the past several years is something far more deliberate, far more structurally ambitious, and far more consequential for the global standing of African music than a tour.

It started in Lagos, but it did not start with a stage. It started with a meeting room, a partnership, and a decision to attach institutional weight to a cultural movement that the world was only beginning to understand. Bankuli entered into a strategic partnership with the Canadian Embassy in Nigeria, and that single move changed the entire trajectory of what Chronicles of Afrobeat could become.

“The essence of that partnership is a strategic partnership. It gave us a sort of diplomatic backing. We were able to achieve that.”

Diplomatic backing is not a small thing. It means the project is not simply an artist touring for ticket sales. It is a cultural initiative with governmental credibility attached to its name. That distinction opens rooms that music alone cannot open. And Bankuli walked through every one of those rooms.

From Lagos, the Chronicles of Afrobeat moved to New York, where Prime Music Partners came on board as the convening partner for the city leg, bringing with them a network of industry relationships and a clear understanding of what it takes to position African music seriously in one of the world’s most competitive music markets. Their involvement gave the New York chapter of the tour a professional infrastructure that matched the diplomatic weight the project had already built.

Then came Atlanta, where the city’s most honoured community leaders presented Bankuli with a formal recognition for his contributions to culture and the arts. The Atlanta leg was anchored in partnership with Kelvin Boj, an artist and creative whose transatlantic identity made him a natural collaborator for a project that lives at the intersection of African heritage and global ambition. It was a moment that confirmed what many in the African music space had already begun to sense: this project was bigger than its founder.

But Winnipeg was where everything changed in scale. The city of Winnipeg came on board not as a venue host but as a full partner, and helping to shape the cultural presentation across both Winnipeg and Toronto was Art of Our Roots, an organisation whose entire mission is rooted in the preservation and celebration of diasporic identity through art and community. Their involvement was not decorative. It was structural. They brought the kind of on-the-ground cultural legitimacy that made the Canadian leg feel less like a foreign tour and more like a homecoming for a community that had been waiting for this moment.

The deputy mayor attended. The deputy premier attended. The Manitoba city museum opened its doors. This was not a Nigerian artist getting a warm reception abroad. This was a cultural institution being received with the protocols typically reserved for diplomatic delegations.

“We actually partnered with the city of Winnipeg. The deputy mayor was in attendance, the deputy premier were in attendance, the city museum, Manitoba. There were a lot of positivity.”

Toronto followed, with an event held at Del X, one of the city’s most prestigious hotel venues. Five cities across three countries, each one adding a new layer of credibility and reach to the project. And Bankuli is not slowing down.

The UK leg is confirmed for July and August. Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Dubai, and Saudi Arabia are all lined up in sequence. After that, Bankuli has something larger in mind, a platform he is deliberately not naming yet, because the announcement needs to be made at the right time and in the right way.

“We’re going to do UK between July and August. Then we’re going back to Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Dubai, and Saudi Arabia. Then we’ll push it to the bigger platform. We don’t want to name it.”

What Bankuli is building is not a tour. It is a diplomatic and cultural infrastructure for Afrobeat. A system of relationships, institutional partnerships, and media presence that will outlast any single event and give African music the kind of global architecture it has never had before. The cities are changing. The institutions are paying attention. And Bankuli is just getting started.

Kano: NSCDC operatives rescue 70-year- old Shepherd, 2 children from bandits

By Maduabuchi Nmeribeh/Kano

A 70-year-old shepherd simply identified as Alhaji Saleh, and his two children, were rescued from the shackles of bandits in Kano, on Friday.

The victims are safe, as the Shepherd is currently on medication, at a Kano hospital.

The two children of the attacked Shepherd have already been reunited with their immediate family for absolute care.

The rescue operation was carried out by operatives of Kano Command of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).

Our Correspondent gathered from security sources, that the criminal elements, also planned to rustle scores of livestock within the area.

The suspected bandits targeted their nefarious operation at Bakin Komau, Dangora community of Kiru Local Government Area, Kano state.

However, operatives of the NSCDC, rescued the two abducted children, repelled cattle rustling, and further attacks, within the area.

The Kano Command NSCDC, Public Relations Officer, Ibrahim Idris Abdullahi, also confirmed the development in a Statement issued in Kano, on Friday.

According to the statement, “a group of armed criminals attacked a Shepherd, leaving him with serious injuries, before abducting his two children during an attempt to rustle livestock in the area.

“Upon receiving a distress call, NSCDC personnel stationed around the nearby Dansoshiya Forest swiftly mobilized to the scene and engaged the suspects in a gun duel.

“The operatives’ rapid intervention forced the assailants to abandon the victims, and flee into the forest with gunshot wounds.

“The rescued victims were safely reunited with their family, while the injured Shepherd, 70-year-old Alhaji Saleh, was immediately taken for medical treatment.”

The authorities of Kano NSCDC further explained that its operatives were deployed to the area as part of efforts to secure the ongoing Dam construction project and protect surrounding grazing reserves and farming communities from criminal activities.

The Kano State Commandant of the NSCDC, Mohammed Hassan Agalama, reaffirmed the Corps’ commitment to protecting lives, property, and critical national assets across the state.

He also urged residents to continue supporting security agencies with timely and credible information to enhance rapid response to threats of lives and property, and strengthened security within communities.

Man arrested for frustrated murder

Police arrested a 40-year-old man in a hot pursuit operation after he allegedly shot and wounded another man in Barangay Canbanua, Argao, Cebu on Friday evening, June 12, 2026.

The victim, identified only by the alias ‘Jay’, sustained gunshot wounds to his left abdomen and leg during the incident at around 7 P.M.

Personnel of the Argao Municipal Police Station responded to reports of gunfire and found the victim lying on the ground and bleeding from his injuries. He was immediately brought to the Isidro Kintanar Memorial Hospital for treatment.

While receiving medical attention, the victim identified the suspect as alias ‘Felip’, a 40-year-old married resident of Barangay Talaga, Argao.

Acting on the information, police launched a hot pursuit operation that led to the suspect’s arrest in Barangay Talaga shortly after the incident.

Authorities later brought the suspect to the hospital, where the victim reportedly confirmed him as the assailant.

Police said initial investigation showed that the incident stemmed from a personal grudge between the two, as the suspect’s mother and sibling had earlier filed a theft complaint against the victim, with the suspect acting as a witness.

Police further said tension between the two escalated after the victim’s release from detention, with confrontations reported between them.

The victim was also said to have allegedly chased the suspect with a knife on a prior occasion, while the suspect reportedly retaliated after being repeatedly challenged to a fistfight.

Didn’t the Twelve just complicate Jesus’ mission?

Our Gospel today (Matthew 9:36-10:8) opens with: ‘At the sight of the crowds, Jesus’ heart was moved with pity for them because they were troubled and abandoned, like sheep without a shepherd.’

To dive deeper into this one line, we have to put it in the context of what came before. Jesus heals a paralytic, then calls Matthew the tax collector-not curing him of a bodily ailment but rescuing him from the path he was pursuing and from the way he was perceived by others. He heals the woman suffering from hemorrhages and raises a little girl from the dead. He restores sight to two blind men and drives a demon out of a mute person. Yet even as Jesus brings healing, his methods are questioned, and he is accused of being in league with the very demons he casts out. Still, he continues moving from town to town, teaching and lifting the burdens of those he meets.

Imagine Jesus now looking at the crowds…

If I were Jesus, at the sight of the crowds, I would have just thrown up my arms in resignation, ‘My God, it never stops!’ Or maybe, after having encountered so much suffering, I would have already been calloused and unfeeling, ‘It’s just another day on the road.’ But Jesus is ‘moved with pity.’

‘Moved with pity’ is probably not the best translation for the Greek esplanchnisth?. The root of this word is from splanxna, which refers to our bowels, entrails, and internal parts, laman-loob. A better translation might be ‘moved with compassion.’ But the Filipino language gives us better alternatives: galing sa bituka, ramdam sa puso, tagos sa kaibuturan ng pagkatao at pagka-Diyos ni Hesus.

When we are troubled, he is also deeply troubled. And Jesus doesn’t just empathize; our Lord acts. Because the people are like sheep without a shepherd, you might think that his next move would be to shepherd them. But he does something else: He prays for more laborers, and then he calls the Twelve. He appoints other shepherds.

Reading their names, I find myself wondering, ‘Would Jesus’ mission have been easier if he did it solo?’ When I was still a student, I never liked group projects. For me, collaborations just added to the labor. You would have to coordinate with classmates, take pains to arrive at a consensus, and negotiate assignments which you would have to redo anyway because you can’t always depend on people to do their parts well.

Working with others means navigating conflicting opinions, clashing personalities, and colliding egos. Among the Twelve, you have Matthew, who, being a former tax collector, would have colluded with the Romans. But you also have Simon the Cananean, a member of the Zealots, a political group willing to use violent means to expel the foreign invaders. You have Bartholomew (also called Nathanael) who was sincere and whom Jesus described as having no guile. But you also have Judas Iscariot who deceived and betrayed Jesus.

Jesus appointed the Twelve because he was deeply moved by the plight of the sheep. Yet we are not certain that the Twelve shared his compassion or were guided by the same motivations. Consider Peter: When Jesus spoke of his willingness to suffer, Peter rebuked him-likely out of fear, since suffering was not what Peter had signed up for. Later, when Jesus again described what awaited him in Jerusalem, James and John asked to sit at his right and left, envisioning glory rather than sacrifice. Their request revealed how profoundly they had misunderstood Jesus’ mission.

Why did Jesus summon the Twelve if they would only impede his work? Perhaps forming a community was never meant to be just a way to support the mission. What if, instead, the very act of forming a community was at the core of the mission itself?

Note to my younger self: What if the point of a group project was not just the output? What if there are things you can learn only when you are part of a group?

Imagine Jesus looking at you now. Whether you are in a good place or feeling troubled, Jesus feels with you. And no matter how long you have already been troubled and no matter how many troubles you have shared with him, you can never exhaust his compassion. But imagine Jesus looking at the crowds also. He feels with them just as he feels with you-galing sa bituka, ramdam sa puso, tagos sa kaibuturan niya. Now imagine Jesus calling you to shepherd the crowds with him. Imagine Jesus asking you to allow yourself to be shepherded by others, too. Imagine Jesus forming us into a community.

To dive deeper into this call, we have to put it in the context of the Sundays that came before. Three weeks ago, we celebrated the Feast of Pentecost. Remember that the Holy Spirit came to the disciples while they were gathered as a community, probably huddled in fear but together as they waited with hope. Two weeks ago, we commemorated the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity. What God-as-Father-Son-and-Spirit teaches us is that at the very core of God is a community, and we who are created in the image and likeness of God are most like God when we also strive to thrive in community. Last week, we celebrated Corpus Christi, the Feast of the Body and Blood of Christ. Not only does the Body of Christ nourish us to fulfill the mission of community, community makes us the Body of Christ.

Your prayer assignment this week:

Reflect on Francis M’s ‘Kaleidoscope World.’

Every color and every hue

Is represented by me and you

Take a slide in the slope

Take a look in the kaleidoscope

The patterns you see in a kaleidoscope are not always beautiful. You still have to spin it around and make it twirl. You have to keep trying until you see something that gives you a glimpse of God.

The past week, my small community and I experienced the difficulty of being part of an even bigger community. I heard so many different opinions about the tragedies we are facing.

So many faces, so many races

Different voices, different choices…

Others grieve, while others curse

And others mourn behind a big black hearse…

There are times you just want to shut different voices out. But there is wisdom in difference. We slide down the slope. We fall. But we keep spinning and twirling, believing we will come closer to the truth in the kaleidoscope.

Bagani: Sowing hope for next-gen PH leaders

Isnihayah Sumndad, 22, said she found it difficult to speak out against corruption and political dynasties in her province because of fear for her family.

‘As a youth leader for how many years, I never spoke about politics in Lanao [del Sur] because of my fear,’ Sumndad, a member of the student council at Mindanao State University, said in an interview with the Inquirer.

But now that she has been selected to take part in the Bagani training program of the Development Academy of the Philippines (DAP), Sumndad said she hopes she can develop the courage to speak up about what is happening in Lanao del Sur.

‘Our province is [cited] as the poorest in the Philippines because of political dynasties and also lack of civic awareness of the voters. So, I hope Bagani will help me to confidently speak up,’ she said of the fellowship named after the Manobo term for ‘warrior’ or ‘leader.’

‘Influencing governance’

Under that monthlong program launched in Quezon City on Saturday, the DAP aims to develop a new batch of leaders by promoting such skills as management and communication.

The state academy has chosen 50 fellows between ages 18 and 30 who will be trained by professors from Ateneo de Manila and De La Salle University as well as current and former officials, including Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong, Pasig City Mayor Vico Sotto, former Education Undersecretary Alain del Pascua, and lawyer and educator James Ceasar Ventura, who previously served as a commissioner at the National Youth Commission. Sen. JV Ejercito is the main sponsor of the training program.

Speaking at the launching, Civil Service Commission Chair Marilyn Barua-Yap said the Bagani program seeks to form youth leaders who can transform mindsets in government so it can better serve the public.

‘Each of the program’s fellows is not only a participant in a learning fellowship, but public servants who are expected to meaningfully shape and influence the quality of our governance through their respective roles in their respective organizations,’ she said.

‘Polarized institutions’

Just like the ‘bagani’-a term for Manobo villagers tasked to protect against outside forces threatening their indigenous community-the fellows are also called to serve the public amid the ‘compounding challenges’ facing the country.

In his remarks, DAP Acting president and CEO Leocadio Sebastian cited, among these challenges, ‘economic instability shaped by successive economic crises’ and a ‘labor landscape being restructured by automation before many have secured their footing.’

Sebastian also noted how the country’s political environment has been affected by ‘declining public trust and polarized institutions that make stable civic judgment increasingly difficult.’

‘Disarray’

Ejercito said he hopes the training program can be expanded as it can help address problems confronting the government, particularly those in the Senate.

‘The confidence is probably at an all-time low. Especially at the Senate, it is now in disarray when before, it was respected. Now, it is really the lowest of lows,’ he said.

‘But do not lose hope. As long as someone stands their ground, we will fight. The Bagani fellows are here to bring change in our country,’ said the senator, who vowed to have more funds allocated for the Bagani program next year.

Sebastian said: ‘With [the] many problems our country faces, we need leaders who do not put their own interests first [but] who truly feel the hardships of each Filipino.’

Explaining the selection of the Bagani fellows, program manager John Roel Gonzaga said the applicants’ credentials as well as their personality were considered. Each applicant was interviewed and also required to submit an essay, he said.

‘When we were screening them, what we were looking for is who among these youths [were] applying not just for themselves but [also] had something to offer,’ Gonzaga said. ‘They have a story. Every time we do interviews, we check what their story is.’

Joshua Echales, who is the same age as Sumndad, said he plans to bring attention to the ‘sinking’ islets in his home province of Bohol and the plight of the residents there.

Narrative to share

Echales wants to understand why some residents continue to live there instead of choosing to relocate, adding that he plans to pursue that topic as part of his thesis.

‘Because sometimes the government thinks relocation is best for the community when in fact it uproots the culture in itself and it displaces the communities psychologically from where they basically grew up,’ said the Bagani fellow, who will soon be in his fourth year as he finishes a human ecology degree at the University of the Philippines Los Baños.

Gonzaga said having a narrative to share is important for the Bagani fellows because they will not just learn from their instructors but also from each other as part of a ‘collaborative learning experience.’

Lacson lauds Erwin Tulfo for ‘speaking truth’

Sen. Panfilo Lacson on Saturday thanked Sen. Erwin Tulfo for ‘speaking the truth’ after the latter revealed that some fellow senators had discouraged him from signing a Senate blue ribbon committee report on alleged anomalies in flood control projects.

According to Lacson, Tulfo’s remarks confirmed what he had long believed was the reason the committee’s partial report failed to secure enough signatures to be sponsored on the Senate floor.

‘Thank you Sen. Erwin for speaking the truth to confirm what I had thought all along was the real reason-why the partial report was left to go stale and become spoiled. Where do you go from here, Philippine Senate?’ Lacson said on Saturday in a post on X.

In Lacson’s post, he included a snippet of Tulfo’s interview with broadcast journalist Jessica Soho, where Tulfo recalled being told not to sign because some of those who could be affected by the findings were also among them.

Only present senators should vote in VP Sara Duterte case

Manila Rep. Joel Chua on Saturday said that he believes that only the senator-judges participating in the impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte should decide on her conviction or acquittal, given the current composition of the Senate.

This is what Chua answered if the House prosecution panel thinks that the number of senators participating in the trial will be an issue, as Sen. Jinggoy Estrada is arrested over plunder charges, while Sen. Ronald ‘Bato’ dela Rosa remains hiding amid his arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court.

This was what Chua said when asked whether the number of senators participating in the trial would be an issue, given that Sen. Jinggoy Estrada is detained on plunder charges and Sen. Ronald ‘Bato’ dela Rosa is in hiding to evade an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court.

Duterte was impeached by the House of Representatives on May 11 on four grounds: alleged misuse of confidential funds under the Office of the Vice President and Department of Education (DepEd); alleged unexplained wealth; alleged distribution of monetary gifts or payments to DepEd officials; assassination threats against President Marcos, first lady Liza Marcos and former House Speaker Martin Romualdez.

Second lead prosecutor

Chua, a member of the 11-member House prosecution panel, was designated as the second lead prosecutor handling Article I-alleged misuse of confidential funds; and lead prosecutor for Article III-distribution of monetary gifts to high-ranking officials of DepEd.

Chua said that the impeachment trial could not be likened to ordinary Senate legislative measures, and that the impeachment court was more akin to a court hearing.

‘It can be compared to a court hearing where the judge can assess the demeanor of the witness if they are saying the truth or not. Part of their judgment rendering is based on mannerism on the conduct of witnesses in the witness stand,’ he said.

He reiterated that it is important for senator-judges to assess the demeanor of the witnesses and to determine if they are lying or not.

He said that the issue of the number of senators participating could be raised in the Supreme Court, but noted that the presence of a quorum could be applied on this matter.

If our children are truly our future…

IT is said that our children are our future. Another such saying is the one that describes the children and youths of today as the leaders of tomorrow. What it means is that whatever upbringing we give the children of today determines the kind of future we are going to have. In other words, as we make our bed…

Now, read the stories that follow and tell me the kind of future we are laying out for ourselves in this country!

‘Yesterday, my son came back from his WAEC examination, but something was different. Normally, when he returns from school, there’s always something to talk about, how the paper went, which questions were difficult, who forgot their calculator, or even the usual laughter that comes with being a teenager.

‘But yesterday, he was quiet. Too quiet. As a mother, I immediately knew something was wrong. I asked him, ‘How was your Physics paper?’ He looked at me and said, ‘It wasn’t fine.’ I was confused! My son had prepared for this exam. I had watched him stay up late, reading. I had seen him sacrifice his playtime, endure power outages, and study under conditions many adults would struggle with.

‘So I asked again, ‘What happened?’ The answer shattered me. ‘Mummy, the invigilators said we should pay ?5,000 each or our papers would not get to the marking centre.’

‘For a moment, I thought I heard him wrongly. ‘What do you mean?’ He explained that the students were told to contribute money. Their principal reportedly had to beg for the amount to be reduced to ?3,000. Some students had no money and had to borrow from friends. Others were frightened that refusing to pay would affect their results.

‘Then came the statement that left me speechless: ‘They said for Mathematics and English, there will be no negotiation.’ I felt sick.

‘Imagine being a child. You spend months preparing for one of the most important examinations of your life. You wake up before dawn to read. You attend extra lessons. Your parents struggle to pay school fees and buy textbooks. Then, on the day of the examination, instead of being encouraged to believe in your abilities, you are made to believe that money matters more than preparation!

‘What exactly are we teaching these children? That hard work is useless? That success is for sale? That corruption is the real examination they must pass? I was furious and asked what the school authorities were doing about it.

‘My son said their proprietor claimed he had already paid over ?350,000 since the examinations began and could no longer continue carrying the burden alone. And that’s when reality hit me.

‘This problem is bigger than one student. Bigger than one school. Bigger than one examination centre.

‘We are witnessing the gradual destruction of the values we should be teaching the next generation. We tell our children to study hard. We tell them honesty pays. We tell them integrity matters. But the system keeps showing them the opposite.

‘How do you convince a child that education is the key to success when the adults in charge of education appear to be selling the lock? How do you tell a student to believe in merit when corruption is staring them in the face inside an examination hall?

‘Today, my heart aches not only for my son but for every child sitting in those examination rooms. For the brilliant student whose parents cannot afford extra money. For the honest student who just wants to pass through hard work. For the child who may eventually conclude that reading is pointless because everything has a price.

‘This is how dreams die. Not always through failure. Sometimes through disappointment. Sometimes through the moment a young person realises that the adults entrusted with their future are the very ones teaching them that integrity doesn’t matter.

‘And perhaps the saddest part is that when I shared this experience, another parent simply shrugged and said: ‘That’s normal.’

‘Normal? Since when did exploiting children become normal? Since when did intimidating students become normal? Since when did corruption in an examination hall become normal?

‘If this story is true across many centres, then we should all be worried. Because the greatest tragedy is not the money being collected. The greatest tragedy is the message being passed to an entire generation.

‘A generation that is watching. A generation that is learning. A generation that may one day become exactly what we are teaching them to be. The Ministry of Education, WAEC, and every relevant authority must investigate these allegations and take decisive action.

‘Our children deserve examination halls where their knowledge is tested, not their ability to pay. Nigeria cannot build a better future while teaching its young people that corruption is the price of opportunity.

‘Our children deserve better. And we must stop pretending that this is normal.’ – #annejenake.

One of the comments that followed this exposé was from Adeola Soetan, erstwhile students’ leader in his university days at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. He said: ‘WAEC, take note. Although examinations for sale are not new, it’s becoming a feast of cheating now in public and private schools. Private schools cheat more and (are) involved in exam malpractice to sell their schools. The sad reality is that most of these cheating proprietors, proprietresses, principals, teachers and WAEC officials are practising Christians and Muslims. Religion is indeed a big scam. A ‘boju-boju, oloro nbo’ stuff. ‘Kuru-kere, kuru-kere on Friday to mosques and kuru-kere, kuru-kere on Sunday to the church! Many school proprietors and principals go on pilgrimage to Mecca and Jerusalem for nothing.’

You will be mistaken if you think it is only WAEC examinations that are involved; NECO, too, is not spared from my own investigations. This rot, widespread, is fast becoming the new normal, as they say.

One commentator said it was because of this malaise that one-time Lagos State ‘action governor’, Alhaji Lateef Kayode Jakande (LKJ), cancelled private primary and secondary schools in the state.

Another said he abandoned teaching altogether a decade ago because he did not want to be part of the ‘entrenched malpractice system in virtually all schools!’ So the malaise is not a new phenomenon!

Yet another commentator suggested that this exposé should trigger a debate. Let this, then, be the trigger!

My own independent investigations reveal that it is not only when secondary school students are writing WAEC and NECO examinations that the schools are extorted by supervisors sent from WAEC and NECO offices; examination malpractice and extortion also take place when primary school pupils are writing common entrance examinations into secondary schools! Just imagine that!

A school principal said he was pissed off by the impunity of a WAEC supervisor. ‘She commanded us as if we were under her. She demanded what she wanted and we begged and begged before she accepted what we could raise. After that, she threatened not to sign the OMR until each student parted with ?500.00.’ She reportedly said she had been lenient enough – that she could have demanded as much as ?3,000.00 per student!

I spoke to some invigilators and supervisors and their excuse: When they return to base, the ‘Custodian Officers’, as they are called, always demand, ‘What did you bring for us?’

Corruption struts in the open. Bribes are demanded brazenly. Bargains are conducted in the open – within the hearing distance of students and pupils! Reports made to the appropriate authorities do not yield dividends, further emboldening the corrupt elements.

As they say, if you cannot beat them, join them! So, in many schools, teachers lobby to go on invigilation/supervision of examinations not because of the stipends they are paid but because of the opportunity to extort money from students, parents and consenting school authorities alike.

School authorities that frown at these practices said they were helpless because appropriate authorities have not acted on reports made in the past. As a result, WAEC and NECO officials are emboldened to continue to perpetrate their odious acts. WAEC and NECO officials hold the yam and they also hold the knife. It is their reports that their offices would accept and act upon. Any school indicted for exam malpractice – even where none existed – is made to pay steep penalties, depending on the number of subjects involved, for three consecutive years.

Matters are made worse for such schools if students are actually caught cheating! The WAEC and NECO supervisors take advantage and pile misery upon such schools. But which is worse, cheating students or brazenly corrupt public officials ruining our tomorrow?

Another angle to the rot – which the outgoing JAMB Registrar, Professor Ishaq Oloyede, had repeatedly drawn attention to – is that parents are also involved. One of the invigilators I interviewed recounted how some parents rained insults on him because he refused to allow them to pass answers to their pupils writing common entrance examinations. ‘They threatened to beat me up,’ he said.

Ex-President Muhammadu Buhari once said if Nigeria does not kill corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria. If we have nothing good to say of Buhari, at least we benefitted from that! Corruption is not only killing Nigeria, it is also killing its future.

Will our leaders act to stem the tide? I have no confidence they will! Their children go to school elsewhere. They are also the proverbial horse running ahead, which the pack imitates.

Says Karl Marx (in ‘The German Ideology’, 1845): ‘The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas.’ Can a corrupt ruling class tame corruption?

Going by the harm we are inflicting on the leaders of tomorrow, I have no assurance, not any longer, that this country’s tomorrow will be alright. If, truly, the youths of today are the leaders of tomorrow and our children are our future, then we are, with our own hands, destroying that future.

But let it be said, when the chickens come home to roost, that I spoke out. How about you?

If we are serious people, anyone involved in this type of criminal venture laying landmines and time bombs that will destroy our collective future deserves the death penalty. Unfortunately, experience teaches that we are not! I stand to be corrected!

When some other folks were laying the time bomb of Boko Haram and Fulani terrorists destroying us today, we kept quiet. Now that the chickens have come home to roost, we run helter-skelter. In the fullness of time, the consequences of the ongoing destruction, not just of our educational system but also of the morals of our younger generation, will be worse. You will say I said so!

Insecurity as Nigeria’s ride on the tiger’s back

One early morning in 1997, I was deployed to interview Lagos lawyer and human rights activist, Chief Gani Fawehinmi, SAN. As usual, the chief was ready for the interview, but I noticed he was not in his usual jovial mood that morning. I was ushered into the compound as he was just completing his daily exercise routine. ‘Welcome, Mr Adisa,’ he said, his face showing a bit of a frown. He nevertheless asked me to enter the living room – a library of sorts, with major parts of the walls decorated with framed newspaper cuttings detailing Gani’s activism, media interviews, and anti-government crusades.

When Chief Fawehinmi returned to the living room, he burst into something louder than a soliloquy, pacing from one end of the room to the other. ‘I warned him, I warned Olu not to ride on the back of the tiger. He who rides on the back of the tiger will definitely end up in the belly of the tiger.’ Of course, I knew what the subject matter was. It was all about Chief Olu Onagoruwa, Gani’s one-time ally. When they were in accord, they were known as ‘twins in activism.’ They shared ideas and offices. The bond was that close.

Gani’s lamentation that day concerned the tragedy that had befallen his former alter ego, Onagoruwa, who had offered to serve in the cabinet of the late dictator, General Sani Abacha, as Attorney-General and Minister of Justice. Though Gani had objected vehemently to the appointment, Onagoruwa defended his decision, citing the need to soften Abacha’s dictatorship from within.

Eventually, Onagoruwa’s sojourn with the military did not work out as planned. He had to resign after ordering the release of Turner Ogboru, brother of Great Ogboru, who had been accused of financing the 1990 coup against General Ibrahim Babangida. The government categorised the release order as treason, while Onagoruwa believed he was protecting the rights of a supposedly innocent man. In December 1996, Onagoruwa lost his son, Oluwatoyin, in controversial circumstances when unknown gunmen shot him dead in Lagos. The young man was a lawyer with the National Intelligence Agency at the time. The late Attorney-General suffered his first stroke a few months after the killing of his son.

The interview appointment with Gani coincided with the breaking of the news of Onagoruwa’s stroke to him. Chief Fawehinmi had lamented loudly, but as they say, the deed had been done.

The story of those who ride on the back of the tiger is instructive. Tigers and their look-alikes, leopards, are solitary beings. Unlike their big brother in the cat family, the lion, tigers don’t keep family ties. Once a male and female tiger mate, they hardly remain together for long. The female is soon left to care for the pregnancy and the cub(s). Once it is time to wean the little tiger, the mother puts up a brutal fight, which easily convinces the offspring that the time for their association is up. So the elders who chose the tiger to illustrate this proverb knew exactly what they were driving at.

If an animal can kill its own kind for supper, you don’t befriend such an animal and expect the friendship to last. That is why tigers kill zookeepers, even those who have tended to them from cubhood. It is much the same with lions – a slight slip by the zookeeper, and the animal will pounce and send the man to the great beyond.

The Nigerian political and security scene is replete with stories of men – and systems – that have ridden on the back of the tiger. Strangely, they expect such rides to be as smooth as a trip on a luxury yacht. Let’s examine the nation’s security system, for example. The nature of insecurity blossoming across the length and breadth of Nigeria is one long ride on the back of the tiger – and it is clearly not leading to a good end.

Abubakar Kawu Baraje was the leader of the breakaway New Peoples Democratic Party (nPDP), formed to deal a fatal blow to the administration of Dr Goodluck Jonathan in 2013. In 2014, the group aligned with the All Progressives Congress (APC) in their bid to oust Jonathan from the presidency. On the occasion of his 70th birthday in Ilorin, Kwara State, in 2021, Baraje – perhaps pressured by conscience – spoke about the genesis of the rising insurgency. He told the nation that APC leaders had imported Fulani militants from Mali, Niger, Sierra Leone, and Chad to cause violence if Jonathan refused to hand over power in 2015.

He said, unfortunately: ‘After the election, the Fulani have refused to leave. I and other like minds wrote and warned those we started the APC with that this (rising insurgency) was going to happen, but nobody listened.’

Baraje’s confession affirmed the desperation of the Buharists for power in 2015. Indeed, Buhari himself had been quoted during electioneering as saying that the streets (of Nigeria) would flow with the blood of baboons and monkeys – and he was not questioned by Jonathan’s government about what he meant.

In essence, the Nigerian security architecture has been on this long ride on the back of the tiger. The cries of citizens we hear today about insurgency, kidnapping, banditry, and Boko Haram tendencies are all offshoots of this unwholesome ride.

If anyone doubts that our security system has been on a jolly ride on the back of the tiger, let them ask the operatives what happens each time a food supplier to the insurgents is arrested, or what becomes of the intelligence gathered from such prime suspects. Ask them what has happened to the many insurgents’ logistics providers arrested over the years. Ask them what brought about the deradicalisation policy even as insurgents continue to wage a ferocious war, beheading soldiers and civilians, kidnapping, and ridiculing retired generals who should be resting peacefully after meritorious service to their fatherland.

The list of riders on the back of the tiger is long. You may also ask the judiciary why courts hand out paltry five-year jail terms to those who participated in the kidnapping of dozens of innocent schoolchildren, keeping them from their mothers’ care for as long as the captors fancied. You would need to ask the Ministry of Interior, especially under the late President Buhari, why it experienced several jailbreaks across correctional centres and what became of the criminals – especially the incarcerated insurgents who ‘escaped’ (or were set free?).

In case you still harbour any doubt that our political system is in bed with danger, consider the words of Sheikh Abubakar Gumi. He stated that the government knows every bandit leader and their hideout, and that he always visits the enclaves of the bandits in the company of security operatives. In March, during an interview with DRTV, Gumi said: ‘The government knows every terrorist by name and by location. I don’t go alone to negotiate; I go with the police and other security agencies.’ The government has yet to respond to or interrogate him since that statement went viral.

But that’s not all about this dangerous ride on the back of the insurgents’ tiger. Former Borno State governor, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, was once reported to have had dealings with the leader of Boko Haram before the sect’s brutal campaign intensified. It has been claimed that the sect had a handshake with Modu Sheriff as he moved to oust then-Governor Mala Kachalla in Borno State, and that his administration, which took over in 2003, rewarded persons aligned with the group with political posts. Today, Sheriff, as a chieftain of the ruling party, who supposedly knew the sect in its infancy, should be able to tell the nation about its roots and how it transformed into a deadly force. One wonders why he has not been called upon to render that service to his country.

You have also heard statements such as ‘the insurgents are our brothers… they are our children,’ and similar remarks from some commentators across the Niger. Such talk must have emboldened the 50 elders from Magamin Diddi Village in the Maradun Local Government Area of Zamfara State to enter the Muntsira forest to negotiate farm access with the bandit leader known as Jammo. The elders were promptly abducted. As of press time, the elders on that ‘peace mission’ were still in Jammo’s custody. Talk of a ghastly ride on the back of the tiger. You can’t expect a smooth ride out there, anyway.

Insecurity : Kogi bans night travels on state roads after 7 p.m.

The Kogi State Government, yesterday, announced a ban on night travels on all State roads after 7 p.m. as part of immediate security measures to further protect lives and property.

A statement by the State Information and Communications Commissioner, Kingsley Fanwo, said the measures were also aimed at cutting off logistics and supply routes to criminal elements currently under sustained military and security pressure in parts of Kabba/Bunu Local Government Area.

The statement made public in Lokoja reads, ‘Following a comprehensive review of ongoing security operations in Bunu District after the recent terrorist attack on Iluke community which was successfully repelled, intelligence and operational reports indicate that significant progress has been made by Joint Security Forces. Several of the attackers have been confirmed neutralised, while many others sustained varying degrees of injuries and are currently trapped within forested areas across the district as security clearance operations continue.

‘ To consolidate these gains and deny the criminals access to food, water, medication, fuel and other essential supplies, the Kogi State Government has approved the immediate ban on the use of commercial motorcycles, popularly known as Okada, within designated hinterland corridors of Bunu District.

‘ The affected areas include the corridor stretching from Idoyi Bunu through Illah Bunu, Iluke Bunu and Kiri, as well as the route from Iluke Bunu through Odai Bunu, Igbo Bunu, Ilogun Bunu, Olle Bunu, Ayede Bunu, Oke-Ofin Bunu and Edumo Bunu. The restrictions shall also apply to the Ayede Bunu, Aherin, Eshi and Ighun Bunu corridor and all other routes within the Bunu hinterlands.

‘Intelligence available to security agencies has revealed that motorcycle operators constitute a major channel through which food items, water, drugs and other logistics are transported to bandits hiding within the forests. Investigations have also established that some criminal elements utilise motorcycle transportation to conduct reconnaissance and gather intelligence on targeted communities before launching attacks.

‘Consequently, any motorcycle rider found transporting passengers, goods or supplies along the designated routes shall be apprehended and dealt with in accordance with the provisions of the Kogi State Anti-Terrorism Law.

‘ The Motorcycle Operators Association of Nigeria (MOAN) is hereby directed to immediately sensitise all its members on this directive, which takes effect from today, Saturday, June 13, 2026.

‘ In addition, all markets located along the affected corridors shall remain closed until further notice. Mobile medicine vendors and distributors are also directed to suspend the transportation and sale of drugs on motorcycles within the affected areas for the duration of the operation.

‘Furthermore, the sale of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) and Automotive Gas Oil (Diesel) in jerry cans is hereby prohibited across the entirety of Kabba/Bunu Local Government Area with immediate effect.

‘As part of measures to strengthen security across the state and deny criminal elements the opportunity to operate under the cover of darkness, the Kogi State Government hereby announces a ban on night travel on all state-owned roads across Kogi State.

‘Consequently, all movements on state roads must cease by 7:00 p.m. daily until further notice. Any person found travelling on a state-owned road after 7:00 p.m. shall be arrested and prosecuted in accordance with the law.

‘The Kogi State Government wishes to reiterate that it possesses credible intelligence regarding individuals collaborating with criminal elements and providing support to their activities. Appropriate actions are already being taken against such persons in line with extant laws.

‘While the Government acknowledges that these measures may impose temporary inconveniences on law-abiding citizens, the protection of lives and communities remains paramount. Extraordinary security challenges often require difficult but necessary decisions, and these directives are designed solely to safeguard the people and secure lasting peace across the affected areas. The Government wishes to assure residents that the security situation will be reviewed every two weeks to assess the impact of these measures and determine the appropriate next line of action regarding the restrictions, based on the progress and successes recorded by security agencies in ongoing operations.

‘The Executive Governor of Kogi State, His Excellency Alhaji Ahmed Usman Ododo, has directed all security agencies to ensure strict enforcement of these measures and full compliance by all residents and stakeholders.

‘The Government further warns that any individual found aiding, supplying, harbouring or collaborating with terrorists in any form shall be treated as an accomplice to terrorism and prosecuted accordingly.

‘The Kogi State Government calls on residents to cooperate fully with security agencies, remain vigilant and continue to provide credible information that will assist ongoing operations aimed at permanently eliminating criminal elements from the state.’