Reflection, Reinvention, And Winning At Sixty-Five: A Field Note For Nigeria’s Next Chapter

I pen this article with a humble sense of responsibility hoping to contribute to this critical national discourse of proffering actionable insights to nation building. This article is informed by insights gleaned from my engagements with more than 1,000 leaders globally in the past year and close to a gross of this number fifteen years after I founded These Executive Minds (TEXEM) in the UK.

Sixty-five years after independence, Nigeria stands at a crossroads that is both sobering and promising. The sobering part is familiar. Too many citizens experience public services that arrive late or not up to par. Firms face a cocktail of inflation, logistics friction, and regulatory uncertainty. Civil society carries heavy loads where formal systems falter. The promising part is quieter but powerful. In the past year I have sat with more than a thousand leaders in ministries, agencies, boardrooms, factories, start-ups, cooperatives, and classrooms from Kano to Lagos to Abuja and cities in other emerging and developed countries. The appetite I have encountered is not for new slogans. It is for practices that produce compounding improvements citizens can feel.

My contention is that the leaders who will move Nigeria forward in the next decade will practise three disciplines with rigour: reflection that rebuilds trust and sharpens judgement, reinvention that converts constraints into design choices, and winning that scales what works and protects it from erosion.

Reflection must come first because progress without trust rarely survives the news cycle and more importantly does not lead to sustainable inclusive impact. In many of our institutions there is an inherited deficit of confidence. People discount statements before they hear them. Officials are assumed to be evasive until proven otherwise. In this context, the most strategic act a leader can take is to make the logic of decisions visible and testable. I have watched permanent secretaries and chief executives shift the temperature in a room by explaining the trade-offs behind a policy or a pivot in two pages of plain English, then inviting challenge before the implementation plan is final. That small ritual does more than inform. It signals that citizens and staff are not audiences but partners in judgement.

Rwanda’s experience with public performance contracts for officials is instructive because it illustrates how visible targets and steady follow-through can change the relationship between leaders and citizens. Nigeria does not need to copy the mechanism to embrace the principle. We can begin with published choice notes that state priorities, the reasons for those priorities, and the measures by which success will be judged.

Reflection also requires safety for truth. In utilities, hospitals, and agencies I often meet talented professionals who knew trouble was coming but said nothing because it did not feel safe to do so. The cost of that silence is measured in failed projects, service outages, and avoidable controversy. A modest institutional habit can reverse this dynamic. Start formal meetings by asking for the pieces of bad news that no one has voiced. Reward the messenger rather than the fixer. In a northern water board I watched how this practice reduced the number of last-minute crises and improved relationships with suppliers who were finally hearing about risks early enough to help. Psychological safety is not a fashionable idea. It is a governance advantage.

Strategy is the next frontier of reflection. Plans that attempt to please everyone end up straining everyone. Strategy is not an inventory of hopes but the courage to choose. What distinguishes Ethiopia’s early industrial zones, despite all the imperfections, is not simply the infrastructure but the choice to concentrate on a small number of sectors where jobs could be created quickly and learning could compound. Nigeria has too often pursued breadth without depth. A commissioner who commits to a two-page statement of where the state will compete in transport or health, how it will win there, and what will be left aside this year, has already advanced execution. The power of this clarity lies in how it enables other actors to align. Suppliers, investors, and civil society can only complement a public agenda they can see.

Foresight completes reflective leadership. Oil shocks, currency swings, (though the latter two have been quite stable in the past six months) import disruptions, and climate stress are not surprises. They are conditions of the game. The organisations that navigate them well do not predict the future. They rehearse it. In Vietnam, which has climbed the manufacturing ladder over the past two decades, routine scenario exercises allowed managers and officials to pre-commit to responses when supply chains wobbled. In our context the same discipline means agreeing on three or four numbers that, if breached, trigger specific actions within a week. It means deciding in advance which contracts can be slowed without losing capability, which social programmes must be protected under any scenario, and which suppliers or ports will be used if a route closes. When senior teams practise these drills quarterly, they do not eliminate volatility. They convert volatility from a reason to panic into a reason to act calmly and quickly.

Once reflection has cleared the fog, reinvention can proceed with precision. Reinvention in Nigeria must start with an unflinching acceptance of constraints. Capital is tight. Power is unreliable in too many places. The skills we most need are scarce and globally mobile. Rules sometimes move mid-stream. These constraints do not forbid innovation. They shape it. The leaders who make headway begin by asking what job the citizen or customer is hiring the service to do. In one health programme I observed, teams stopped designing features and started listening to mothers who simply wanted certainty about vaccination days. A low-cost text system that reminded families and local clinics of fixed days in each ward lifted attendance without expensive infrastructure. India’s Aadhaar system, whatever one thinks of it in the round, succeeded because it focused on a minimal identity layer that others could build upon. Kenya’s M-Pesa was born because the banking system ignored the unbanked. Both cases show the pay-off from designing to the job, not to the institution.

Reinvention demands learning before scale. In too many Nigerian settings pilots are a performance rather than a process. They lack a falsifiable question, a clear owner, and a path to either stop or scale. The fix is not complicated. Any initiative expected to touch a large population should be tested in two locations, with one sharp question set in advance and a date by which a scale or stop decision will be made. The results should be published in language citizens understand. Failure then becomes an investment rather than a secret. I saw a state education agency kill three shiny ideas quickly and redirect funds into a teacher coaching model that improved learning outcomes because it treated the pilot as an experiment rather than an announcement.

Reinvention gains momentum when public institutions become conveners of ecosystems rather than providers of every function. Big problems yield when government, private firms, and civic actors share accountability for outcomes that citizens feel. Bangladesh offered a vivid lesson. Partnerships between government, a major telecom, microfinance institutions, and social enterprises created rural digital kiosks run by women that offered identity, market information, and payments. The result was a commercial model that advanced connectivity and income at the same time. There was no philanthropic afterthought. Incentives were aligned at the design stage. Nigeria’s agriculture and health sectors can embrace the same logic. Shared cold chain investment for vaccines, joint platforms for farmer data, and managed marketplaces for produce are all areas where no single actor can win alone, yet every actor can win if the rules of cooperation are clear.

The final discipline is winning. By winning I do not mean a one-off success that makes good copy. I mean the craft of scaling what works, protecting it from erosion, and compounding advantage. The first move is to pick a narrow transformation where citizens will feel the difference within months, ‘a low hanging fruit’. A permit workflow, a claims process, a land registry, or a targeted procurement system are good candidates. The rule is simple. The process must be completed end to end in a single digital flow. A named leader must own service levels. The model that drives decisions must be monitored so that it does not drift. Small wins matter because they change expectations. Once a citizen experiences a permit that takes days rather than months, tolerance for delay declines across the board. Indonesia’s progress on e-procurement and tax administration, while uneven, shows how patient systems work can raise revenue and trust at the same time. We should be stubborn about this kind of boring progress because it pays compound interest.

Winning also requires decision-making that treats a downturn as a time to prune and plant rather than to freeze. The instinct in a crisis is to cut across the board. The better move is to cut visible waste, protect muscle, and pre-fund two moves that will pay off when others are distracted. When India’s Tata Group bought Jaguar Land Rover in the depths of the 2008 crisis, it was not a gamble on prestige. It was a calculated bet on future capability. In Nigeria the equivalent in the public sphere could be a state securing a long-term power arrangement for critical social infrastructure when prices soften. In the private sphere it may look like acquiring a distressed logistics asset that reduces cost to serve for essential goods. These are not headline moments. They are compounding moves.

The strongest fosses in emerging economies are often social and institutional as much as technological. A company that ties its profit engine to a farmer’s gain by reducing post-harvest losses creates an affinity that is difficult to copy. A ministry that becomes the trusted orchestrator of identity or payments in a sector makes duplication wasteful for others and partnership sensible. Vietnam’s rise in manufacturing is instructive here. Once clusters matured and supplier development programmes took root, firms preferred to deepen rather than exit. In Nigeria we can replicate the principle if not the exact model by choosing the lever we will own, whether identity rails for SMEs, last-mile logistics in a large state, or a vocational pipeline that gives investors’ confidence.

Every serious proposal invites counterarguments. The first is that our constraints are too severe. It is true that power, security challenges, still high inflation and undervalued Naira shape the feasible frontier. Yet they rarely block the first disciplined step. Narrowing focus, publishing choices, and testing cheaply are possible even in tough conditions. The second counterargument is that pilots never scale here. That is not a law of nature. Pilots fail to scale when ownership is vague and money is episodic. Tie each pilot to a named leader with a budget gate and an adoption target. If the target is met by a stated date, the next release triggers automatically. If not, the idea is retired without controversy because the condition was agreed up front. The third objection is that openness hands advantage to rivals or invites misuse. Opacity is more expensive. Clear interfaces, shared dashboards, and pre-agreed escalation channels protect the public interest while letting private actors bring energy and ingenuity. The fourth objection is that our context is unique and therefore resistant to lessons from elsewhere. Culture and politics matter. So does execution. The underlying disciplines of reflection, reinvention, and winning have travelled across Asia, Africa, and Latin America because they are grounded in human behaviour and institutional incentives rather than in fashion.

Actionable suggestions matter most when they become routine. A practical rhythm helps leaders avoid performative announcements. Each quarter, senior teams should meet for a candid review of trust, choices, and scenarios. The output should be three objectives with dates and owners that are shared with staff and, where appropriate, with citizens. Each month, the organisation should pilot two new practices and retire one legacy habit that no longer serves. A one-page learning note in plain English should capture what moved, what did not, and what will be changed as a result. Each week, leaders should review a single measure that protects their moat, whether adoption, cost to serve, or ecosystem leverage, and then remove one blocker that slows progress. This cadence is not a ritual for its own sake. It is the mechanism through which reflection feeds reinvention and reinvention feeds winning.

The independence anniversary invites a final reflection. Nations and subnational do not become trustworthy because they declare it. Companies do not become competitive because they wish it. NGOs do not become impactful because they are earnest. Trust grows when leaders expose their logic to scrutiny and follow through. Competitiveness grows when organisations choose a place to compete and then refine how they win there through fast learning. Impact grows when coalitions form around measurable outcomes that citizens experience in hours saved, income gained, and safety improved. I have seen these habits in pockets across Nigeria. A cooperative that became a disciplined buyer and seller on behalf of its members and cut their losses. A state-owned entity that digitised a creaking process and recovered weeks of time for small businesses. A private firm that opened its platform to complementary services and grew by letting others create value. These are not miracles. They are crafts. Crafts improve with practice.

Examples from other emerging economies are not medals to hang on a wall. They are reminders that the work is doable. Rwanda’s visible performance contracts demonstrate how public accountability can reset expectations after trauma. Aadhaar in India shows that a minimal, interoperable public good can unlock many private innovations when designed with restraint. Kenya’s mobile money revolution proves that leapfrogging can occur when a clear job is served on a platform people already use. Vietnam’s steady climb through manufacturing illustrates how clusters, supplier development, and predictability attract commitment. Indonesia’s progress on tax administration and procurement shows how patient system building raises revenue and trust together. Bangladesh’s rural digital models illustrate the power of aligned incentives across public, private, and social actors. None of these examples is a blueprint. Each is a provocation to ask what the Nigerian equivalent would look like under our constraints and with our strengths.

As we enter the sixty-fifth year of independence, the choice before Nigerian leaders is not between idealism and realism. It is between a loud cycle of fresh promises and a quieter craft of institutional improvement that compounds. The second path is less dramatic, yet it is how countries change without fanfare. It begins with leaders who listen before they speak and who effectively communicate the reasons that informed their choices. It gains speed with teams who test efficiently, measure honestly, and stop what does not work. It consolidates with organisations that scale what works, protect their edge, and reinvest in capability in good times and bad. I wrote earlier that the mood is sober and promising. It will remain promising only if it becomes disciplined.

The most powerful sentence I have heard in the past year came from a nurse in a secondary hospital who said that the only thing that had changed her day was a new process that meant a critical drug arrived on Wednesday without fail. It made her sound less like a hero and more like a professional. That sentence is the heart of development. When essential functions become reliable, professionals emerge, and citizens begin to trust. The path to that sentence is neither glamorous nor impossible. It asks us to reflect with candour, to reinvent with humility, and to win with patience. If we make those verbs our habit in the year ahead, the country we will write about at seventy will look less like a set of crises to manage and more like a system that works. That would be an independence worth celebrating.

Nigerian Army Honours Late COAS Attahiru With Golf Range

The Nigerian Army has immortalised the late Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt. General Ibrahim Attahiru, by naming a golf range at the TYB Golf Course in his honour.

The unveiling ceremony drew senior military chiefs, dignitaries, and members of the General Ibrahim Attahiru Foundation.

Representing the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General O.O. Oluyede, the Chief of Accounts and Budget (Army), Major General Adetokunbo Fayemiwo, said the initiative underscores the Army’s commitment to preserving the legacies of its fallen heroes.

He described Attahiru as ‘a distinguished officer and visionary leader whose sacrifices and service to the nation will continue to inspire generations of officers and soldiers.’

Former COAS, Lt. General Faruk Yahaya, who commissioned the facility, praised his late predecessor, recalling his reforms, vision, and drive to build a professional, people-focused Army.

Secretary of the General Ibrahim Attahiru Foundation, Hon. Usman Shehu Bawa (ABG), hailed the gesture as ‘a symbolic effort to safeguard the ideals and values’ that the late Army Chief stood for. He also commended the Army’s leadership under General Oluyede, noting that it would strengthen military-civil relations while preserving Attahiru’s legacy.

Several dignitaries at the event applauded the move, stressing that immortalising leaders who paid the supreme price for the nation is vital to inspiring younger generations and reinforcing the spirit of sacrifice.

The golf range dedication adds to other initiatives by both the Nigerian Army and the Attahiru Foundation to honour the memory of the late COAS, who died in a plane crash in 2021 while on active duty.

I Wasn’t Born With Silver Spoon – Elumelu

Chairman of Heirs Holdings, Mr. Tony Elumelu has been conferred with the 2025 Appeal of Conscience Award by the Appeal of Conscience Foundation Founded by, Rabbi Arthur Schneier.

The award was received on his behalf by his wife, Dr Awele Elumelu who delivered his speech.

Elumelu, who is also the Chairman of United Bank for Africa (UBA) PLC, commended the organiser, saying humanity has been the core of his life and what keeps him up at night.

He said his preoccupation is how to transform lives across Africa and ‘how do we leave a legacy that uplifts people and creates opportunity for everyone?’

Elumelu said, ‘I was not born with a silver spoon, I was not educated abroad, I inherited nothing.

‘I was blessed with determination, but also luck. That determination, and that luck have brought material success. I have been rewarded with a wonderful family, with privileges, with the capacity to bring about change.

‘The American tradition of philanthropy, the tradition we see so clearly in this room today, has always inspired me.

‘The great names that built America in the Gilded Age, the new generation that have endowed universities, research and culture.

‘I was conscious right from the beginning that we needed to give back. And to give back in a way that catalytically changes our continent, Africa. I am not one to blame others.

‘I also – and my career demonstrates this – know that Africa is full of opportunity. In fact, I think no other continent offers such an opportunity.’

The billionaire businessman disclosed that his businesses span four continents employing over 40,000 people – including here in New York – ‘where we have the United Bank for Africa (UBA), the only African bank that can take deposits in the United States of America.’

He added, ‘I believe in the power of the private sector. This is the core of the philosophy I call Africapitalism.

‘I know the private sector’s long-term interests are inextricably linked to the health of our communities.

‘At Heirs Holdings, when we invest in energy and power, we see it as a mission to light up homes, schools, and hospitals.

‘When we create value in the financial services industry, we drive inclusion, offering the underrepresented a stake in the economy.

‘And through the Tony Elumelu Foundation, a personal commitment we made in 2010, we have identified, trained, mentored, and provided over USD100million in seed funding to over 24,000 young African entrepreneurs from all 54 African countries.’

According to him, by empowering a generation with economic opportunities and the means to shape

their own destinies, ‘we are combatting the despair that fuels economic instability, migration, and insecurity.’

The Worst Is Over – Tinubu

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has assured Nigerians that the country has made a decisive turn in its economic reforms, declaring that the worst is over and the hardships of yesterday are beginning to give way to relief.

In a nationwide broadcast to commemorate Nigeria’s 65th Independence Anniversary, the president said his administration was concerned about the temporary pains of the reforms, but added that the alternative would have led Nigerians into bankruptcy.

President Tinubu, who went down memory lane, said the founding heroes and heroines of the country believed it was Nigeria’s manifest destiny to lead the black race as the largest black nation on earth, adding that the promise of independence has been tested by profound social, economic, and political challenges, and ‘we have survived.’

He said, ‘While we may not have achieved all the lofty dreams of our forebearers, we have not strayed too far from them as the country in the last 65 years has made tremendous progress in economic growth, social cohesion, and physical development. ‘While it is much easier for those whose vocation is to focus on what ought to be, we must recognise and celebrate our significant progress. Nigerians today have access to better education and healthcare than in 1960.’

Difficult decisions

President Tinubu explained that on assuming office, his administration inherited a near-collapsed economy caused by decades of fiscal policy distortions and misalignment that had impaired real growth, saying that ‘As a new administration, we faced a simple choice: continue business as usual and watch our nation drift, or embark on a courageous, fundamental reform path. We chose the path of reform. We chose the path of tomorrow over the comfort of today.

‘Less than three years later, the seeds of those difficult but necessary decisions are bearing fruit. In resetting our country for sustainable growth, we ended the corrupt fuel subsidies and multiple foreign exchange rates that created massive incentives for a rentier economy, benefiting only a tiny minority. At the same time, the masses received little or nothing from our Commonwealth.

‘Our administration has redirected the economy towards a more inclusive path, channelling money to fund education, healthcare, national security, agriculture, and critical economic infrastructure, such as roads, power, broadband, and social investment programmes.

‘These initiatives will generally improve Nigerians’ quality of life. As a result of the tough decisions we made, the federal and state governments, including local governments, now have more resources to take care of the people at the lower level of the ladder, to address our development challenges.’

The president said his administration is racing against time to ‘build the roads we need, repair the ones that have become decrepit, and construct the schools our children will attend and the hospitals that will care for our people. We have to plan for the generations that will come after us.

‘We do not have enough electricity to power our industries and homes today, or the resources to repair our deteriorating roads, build seaports, railroads, and international airports comparable to the best in the world, because we failed to make the necessary investments decades ago.’

He, however, said the present administration is setting things right: ‘I am pleased to report that we have finally turned the corner. The worst is over, I say. Yesterday’s pains are giving way to relief. I salute your endurance, support, and understanding. I will continue to work for you and justify the confidence you reposed in me to steer the ship of our nation to a safe harbour.

‘Under our leadership, our economy is recovering fast, and the reforms we started over two years ago are delivering tangible results. The second quarter 2025 Gross Domestic Product grew by 4.23%-Nigeria’s fastest pace in four years-and outpaced the 3.4 per cent projected by the International Monetary Fund. Inflation declined to 20.12% in August 2025, the lowest level in three years.

‘The administration is working diligently to boost agricultural production and ensure food security, reducing food costs,’ he said.

Achievements

Listing some of his achievements, President Tinubu said that in the last two years, his administration has achieved 12 remarkable economic milestones as a result of the implementation of sound fiscal and monetary policies.

He listed some of them as the attainment of a record-breaking increase in non-oil revenue, achieving the 2025 target by August, with over N20 trillion.

He said, ‘Following the removal of the corrupt petroleum subsidy, we have freed up trillions of Naira for targeted investment in the real economy and social programmes for the most vulnerable, as well as all tiers of government. We have a stronger foreign reserve position than three years ago. Our external reserves increased to $42.03 billion this September-the highest since 2019. Our tax-to-GDP ratio has risen to 13.5 per cent from less than 10 per cent.’

President Tinubu said the ratio is expected to increase further when the new tax law takes effect in January.

He further said, ‘Nigeria is now selling more to the world than we are buying, a fundamental shift that strengthens our currency and creates jobs at home. Nigeria’s trade surplus increased by 44.3% in Q2 2025 to N7.46 trillion ($4.74 billion), the largest in about three years. Goods manufactured in Nigeria and exported jumped by 173%. Non-oil exports, as a component of our export trade, now represent 48 per cent, compared to oil exports, which account for 52 per cent.

‘This signals that we are diversifying our economy and foreign exchange sources outside oil and gas. Oil production rebounded to 1.68 million barrels per day from barely one million in May 2023. The increase occurred due to improved security, new investments, and better stakeholder management in the Niger Delta.

‘The administration is expanding transport infrastructure across the country, covering rail, roads, airports, and seaports. Rail and water transport grew by over 40% and 27%, respectively.

‘The 284-kilometre Kano-Kastina-Maradi Standard Gauge rail project and the Kaduna-Kano rail line are nearing completion. Work is progressing well on the legacy Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway and Sokoto-Badagry Highway. The Federal Executive Council recently approved $3 billion to complete the Eastern Rail Project.

Insecurity

Speaking on the prevailing insecurity, Tinubu said he is working to enhance national security, ensuring that the economy experiences improved growth and performance as the officers and men of the armed forces and other security agencies are working tirelessly and making significant sacrifices to keep the country safe.

He said, ‘They are winning the war against terrorism, banditry and other violent crimes. We see their victories in their blood and sweat to stamp out Boko Haram terror in North-East, IPOB/ESN terror in South East and banditry and kidnapping. We must continue to celebrate their gallantry and salute their courage on behalf of a grateful nation.

‘Peace has returned to hundreds of our liberated communities in North-West and North-East, and thousands of our people have returned safely to their homes.’

Youth programmes

Addressing the youth, the president urged them to continue to dream big, innovate, and conquer more territories in various fields of science, technology, sports, and the art and creative sector.

He said, ‘Our administration, through policies and funding, will continue to give you wings to fly sky-high. We created NELFUND to support students with loans for their educational pursuits.

‘Approximately 510,000 students across 36 states and the FCT have benefited from this initiative, covering 228 higher institutions. As of September 10, the total loan disbursed was N99.5 billion, while the upkeep allowance stood at N44.7 billion.’

He said Credicorp, another initiative of his administration, has granted 153,000 Nigerians N30 billion affordable loans for vehicles, solar energy, home upgrades, digital devices, and more, even as YouthCred, which he promised last June, is already a reality, with tens of thousands of NYSC members now active beneficiaries of consumer credit for resettlement.

In his message of hope to Nigerians, the president acknowledged that his administration’s reforms have come with some temporary pains.

He said the alternative of allowing the country to descend into economic chaos or bankruptcy was not an option, insisting that ‘Our macro-economic progress has proven that our sacrifices have not been in vain. Together, we are laying a new foundation cast in concrete, not on quicksand.

‘The accurate measure of our success will not be limited to economic statistics alone, but rather in the food on our families’ tables, the quality of education our children receive, the electricity in our homes, and the security in our communities. Let me assure you of our administration’s determination to ensure that the resources we have saved and the stability we have built are channelled into these critical areas.

‘Now, we must all turn on the taps of productivity, innovation, and enterprise, just like the Ministry of Interior has done with our travel passports, by quickening the processing. In this regard, I urge the sub-national entities to join us in nation-building. Let us be a nation of producers, not just consumers. Let us farm our land and build factories to process our produce.

‘Let us patronise ‘Made-in-Nigeria’ goods. I say Nigeria first. Let us pay our taxes. Finally, let all hands be on deck. Let us believe, once more, in the boundless potential of our great nation. With Almighty God on our side, I can assure you that the dawn of a new, prosperous, self-reliant Nigeria is here,’ he said.

I Want To Build The Next Generation Of Civic Leaders – Mu’azu

After obtaining a National Diploma (ND), Higher National Diploma (HND), and Post Graduate Diploma in Computer Science from the Federal Polytechnic, Damaturu, and Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi, Mu’azu Alhaji Modu, popularly known as Village Boy, turned down a job offer with Guaranty Trust Bank (GT Bank). Instead, he chose to dedicate himself to community service and accountability.

As a Mandela Washington Fellow, Mu’azu committed himself to building the next generation of civic leaders and redefining Nigeria’s future through the Youth Civic Engagement Academy. The academy, launched in 2023, empowers and supports young people across the country to become active drivers of civic change in their communities.

His passion for change also inspired the creation of Spotlight Transparency and Accountability Initiative (ST and A), a non-profit organisation focused on preventing corruption, ensuring effective resource allocation, and promoting trust in public institutions.

Mu’azu recalls that his journey into civic leadership began in 2016 while pursuing his Postgraduate Diploma at ATBU, Bauchi. He became involved with the FollowTheMoney movement founded by Hamzat B. Lawal. A few months later, he was offered a bank job but chose activism instead. ‘My journey of civic leadership and development began in 2016, while doing my post-graduate diploma (PGD) at the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University (ATBU), Bauchi State. I started my activism with ‘FollowTheMoney’ movement founded by Hamzat B. Lawal. A few months later, I got a job with GT Bank, with a salary of N76,000, but in ‘FollowTheMoney’ I was only earning N3,000. I asked myself if I actually wanted the job or the money. I realised that I didn’t want the money, I wanted to impact the lives of others, so I turned down the bank job and continued with the movement in 2016.’

He explained that the movement soon expanded, and he became one of the first three people selected to run a state chapter in 2017. The group gained recognition for asking critical questions about governance in Yobe, and eventually eight government agencies began collaborating with FollowTheMoney to promote transparency and accountability.

With a background in computer science, Mu’azu ensured all their activities were properly documented and published online. This commitment to transparency opened more opportunities, including his selection as a Mandela Washington Fellow in 2018.

At a workshop for community leaders

‘I applied for a Mandela Fellowship; luckily for me, I was selected in the second year of my career, in 2018. I participated in a six-week-long programme in the United State (US). Because of the proper and constant documentation of what we do, the impact and the human angle stories helped me a lot in terms of getting these kinds of opportunities.’

On his return, he was encouraged by mentors to establish his own organisation. He also rose to become North-East regional lead, and later Country Director of FollowTheMoney in Nigeria. In 2019, he incorporated Spotlight for Transparency and Accountability Initiative (ST and A) as an independent trustee.

The African Youth Charter defines youth as individuals between 15 and 35. Now at the edge of that age bracket, Mu’azu says his mission is to empower others.

‘At FollowTheMoney and Spotlight for Transparency and Accountability Initiative (ST and A), something always comes to my mind. We are aging; and as young people, we ought to do things right now, because it is impossible to continue like this forever. I’m 35 now, next year, I will be 36 and based on the United Nations definition of youth, I will no longer be a youth from next year.’

This concern inspired the Youth Civic Engagement Academy. Launched in 2023 with 12 members across Yobe State, the initiative provided boot camp training, mentorship from UK-based Leadership Platform, and technical support from experts across sectors. Participants also received small grants to implement community projects.

The programme expanded to 20 fellows in 2024, and is now being scaled across the North-East, with plans to extend nationwide.

Through the academy, fellows have tackled issues in education, public health, environmental sustainability, gender-based violence, and civic engagement. Mu’azu said the first cohort reached about 50,000 people, while the second directly reached 200,000, and indirectly impacted over 500,000.

‘We’ve a system in place that tracks their performance and progress through our monitoring and evaluation system. These young people are doing an amazing job beyond our expectations. The money we are giving them is just small but they manage to do massive projects which are directly touching the lives of young people in their communities.’

In 2019, Mu’azu also introduced citizen-led tracking, a project that has monitored over 200 government initiatives across North-East Nigeria, impacting more than two million lives in five years.

‘Under the citizen-led tracking project, we have tracked over 200 projects across North-eastern Nigeria. We directly reached over 200 communities and tracked over N6 billion earmarked for basic education, primary healthcare, as well as affordable and potable drinking water, which impacted over two million people.

Also, under our ‘Know Your Legislators’, I believe we are the first organization in Nigeria that published the names, pictures, gender, political party, disability status, and other information of all 993 elected members of the 36 States Houses of Assembly.

Under the Youth Civic Engagement Academy, we have trained over 33 people, and an additional set of 25 people will be joining in September. We have also trained more than 500 people through our citizen-led tracking across communities in the North East.’

Despite numerous awards and recognition, Mu’azu believes the real success will be measured by the next generation of leaders.

‘These kinds of recognitions that we received, beyond the impact that we are making, are really encouraging us to do more but no matter how well you think you are doing it, you cannot do it forever. So we are looking at building the next generation to take over from us because in the next two or three years, we might be doing other things. So, before we leave, we want to see that there are people who will continue or even do better than what we have done in communities across Nigeria.’

He added that his vision is to use technology, including artificial intelligence, to strengthen democratic governance.

‘The legacy that I want to leave is to bring in people that are better than I am to continue doing the work, and I’m confident that the vision is already here. A lot of young people that we trained are doing amazing work, they are even two steps ahead of what we are doing. Because we are in the era of AI, they are using AI to do amazing work.’

Graduates of the academy testify to its impact.

Abubakar Musa Waziri, a member of the first cohort, said:

‘The Academy has equipped me with knowledge that for years I have been looking for but I did not get. Now, I understand what local government is all about. I also learnt how to identify a problem in the community and strategically provide a solution to that challenge or problem.

After rigorous training, I was given a mini grant to implement a civic action project in my community, which is in Fune LGA. I selected two people per ward, and trained them on the roles of local government and how they can demand accountability and transparency from the local government councils.’

Similarly, Aisha Alhaji Abba, a sociology graduate with a passion for civic engagement and humanitarian work, described her experience as transformative.

‘After six months of training at the Youth Civic Engagement Academy, I was given a mini-grant to do a project. So, I engaged with stakeholders and developed a step-down training for more than 20 young people, where we talked about the process of demanding accountability within the Almajiri system of education.’

Nigeria At 65: Together, We Are Overcoming, Together We Are Rising – Uba Sani

Today, Nigeria marks 65 years of independence; a significant milestone in the journey of a nation that has weathered many storms, yet continues to stand tall, proud, and unbroken. This anniversary is both a celebration and a call to reflection: a celebration of our collective resilience, and a moment to honour the sacrifices and vision of our founding fathers, who won for us the freedom we now enjoy.

Their legacy was not forged in ease, but in unity, faith, and an unwavering belief in the greatness of Nigeria. It is a legacy that inspires us to continue building a nation where peace, justice, and opportunity prevail. We must not merely commemorate independence: we must make it meaningful for every Nigerian.

Our path as a nation has been defined by resilience. Through challenges; political, economic, and social. Nigerians have demonstrated an extraordinary capacity to endure and hope. The strength of our people, especially here in Kaduna State, continues to be the bedrock of our shared progress.

This is why, on this historic day, I extend a sincere call to all of us: let us work together, across our communities, faiths, and backgrounds; to confront our challenges and unlock our collective potential. It is in unity that we will continue to give life to the dream of a peaceful, just, and prosperous Nigeria.

Here in Kaduna State, we are translating vision into action. Our administration is pursuing inclusive development and renewal through strategic and people-centred investmentsespecially in the following areas:

1. Infrastructure and Economic Connectivity

We have prioritised infrastructure as the engine of development. To date, we have launched 85 urban and rural road projects, covering 785 kilometres across the state. Nearly half of these are completed, facilitating trade, reducing travel time, and improving access to markets for farmers and entrepreneurs alike. We are rebuilding urban roads, bridges, and essential public utilities to stimulate investment and elevate living conditions.

2. Rural Transformation and Agricultural Revival: Our Rural Revitalisation Agenda is reawakening the economic potential of previously marginalised communities. With the reopening of key markets such as the Birnin Gwari Livestock Market and the Kidandan Market in Giwa, we are seeing a resurgence of local commerce and a renewed sense of community confidence. More than 500,000 hectares of abandoned farmland have been reclaimed, equipping our farmers to produce more while enhancing food security across the state.

3. Human Capital Development: Education and health are not luxuries – they are the pillars of our future. We are executing a comprehensive reform of our educational system to ensure that every child, regardless of background, has access to quality learning. This includes infrastructure upgrades, teacher training, and the integration of digital tools. Through the Reaching Out-of-School Children Project, we have successfully returned over 10,728 children to the classroom. Moreover, we have reopened 535 schools previously shut due to insecurity, reaffirming our belief that education is a right, not a privilege.

In healthcare, we have turned promises into action. We have upgraded 255 Primary Health Care Centres across the state, bringing vital services closer to rural communities. These efforts are supported by our investments in three world-class vocational institutes, which are empowering our youth and women with marketable skills to thrive in an evolving economy.

4. Agriculture and Food Security: Recognising the strategic importance of agriculture, we have allocated over 10% of the 2025 budget to the sector – the highest in recent years. This demonstrates our commitment to empowering smallholder farmers, promoting climate-smart practices, and strengthening the agricultural value chain to ensure long-term food security and economic growth.

5. Peacebuilding and Social Inclusion: We understand that meaningful development is impossible without peace. This is why we have deepened our investment in community security, reconciliation, and dialogue. We are expanding community policing initiatives, strengthening collaboration with security agencies, and supporting victims of conflict. Through these efforts, we are rebuilding trust across diverse communities and reaffirming our collective commitment to peaceful coexistence.

Justice, equity, and inclusion are the cornerstones of our governance approach. We are building a Kaduna State where policy is driven by fairness, leadership is guided by empathy, and every community, no matter how remote, has a voice in shaping our shared future.

These achievements reflect our determination to build a Kaduna that is safe, strong, and inclusive. Yet, the path ahead requires even greater cooperation between government and the people. Development is a shared responsibility. I urge every citizen to contribute, through acts of peace, through civic participation, and through unwavering belief in the promise of our state and nation.

Nigeria’s future remains bright, and Kaduna’s role in that future is significant. Under His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, the nation is undergoing bold reforms to secure peace, restore prosperity, and strengthen democratic governance. Kaduna stands fully in support of this vision.

As we celebrate today, let us renew our commitment to building a nation where hope thrives and unity endures. With God’s guidance and our collective resolve, we will overcome our challenges and realise the full potential of our state and country.

Happy Independence Day.

May God bless Kaduna State.

May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Customs Hands Over Seized Donkey Bones, Skins, Warns Traffickers

The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Federal Operations Unit, Zone B, Kaduna, has handed over a massive seizure of donkey bones and skins to the National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA), describing the move as a critical step in protecting Nigeria’s biodiversity.

The seized items – 700 bags of donkey bones and 2,500 pieces of donkey skins – were intercepted in separate anti-smuggling operations and formally handed over to NESREA’s Kaduna State Coordinator, Mr. Hene Emmanuel, during a brief ceremony on Tuesday.

Speaking at the event, Comptroller Aminu Sule said the illegal slaughter and trade of donkey parts posed severe ecological and socioeconomic risks.

‘The Nigeria Customs Service is committed to enforcing environmental laws, protecting endangered species, and preventing Nigeria from being used as a transit point for illegal wildlife trade,’ he declared.

According to him, donkeys remain an essential means of transportation and livelihood for rural communities, making their illegal exploitation a direct threat to local economies.

Man Docked Over Alleged N40m Fraud

A 27-year-old man, Kingsley Ighodalo, was on Tuesday arraigned before an Ogudu Magistrates’ Court for allegedly defrauding a company of a Mercedes-Benz, valued at N40 million.

He is facing a three-count charge bordering on conspiracy, obtaining by false pretense, and stealing.

The prosecutor, Insp Donjour Perezi, told the court that the defendant committed the offences on May 22, 2024, at about 11.30 am within the Ikeja Magisterial District.

Perezi alleged that the defendant fraudulently obtained a 2016 Mercedes-Benz GLE 400 with registration number BDG 390 HA, valued at N40 million.

He said the defendant acquired the vehicle on loan from Auto Check Company under the false pretext of repayment.

He said that instead of making repayments, Ighodalo allegedly removed the vehicle’s tracker and sold the car for N38 million without the company’s consent, though the original documents were with auto check.

Magistrate Mrs S.K. Matepo granted the defendant bail in the sum of N10 million with two sureties in like sum and adjourned the case until Oct. 13 for mention. (NAN)

I Started Community Service At 17 – Idris Lau

At age 17, while his peers were busy on the social media platforms, Idris Bilyaminu Ndasadu’Lau had already made up his mind to dedicate his life to the service of humanity.

He founded Connected Youth for Accountability, Peace and Development Initiative (YAPD4Africa), a Pan-African youth-led civil society organization, in 2017 whose dedicated mission is to build strong people and sustainable communities in Africa.

He said while growing up, he realised the lack of access to health and youth exclusion in the decision making process in his immediate community.

‘What really motivated me was the lack of access to health and WASH (Water, Sanitation and Hygiene) facilities in my community, and also the fact that despite the high population of young people, they were often excluded from decision-making processes and community development issues,” he told the Daily Trust in Kaduna.

He said his organisation is involved in community engagement, focusing more on health, education, and WASH facilities. ‘We also do civic engagement, policy advocacy to influence policies that protect the rights of young people, and youth empowerment projects.

‘We educate the youth on their rights and how they can actively engage in governance. We also work in hard-to-reach, marginalised grassroots communities in Nigeria. These are underserved areas where government presence is almost absent, except during elections. We make sure to include such people in our projects and connect them with partners who can support them.

‘We support them through the construction of water supply systems, providing access to quality education, and meeting other basic needs,”Idris said.

He said his NGO has worked in communities in Kaduna, Kano, Jigawa and several other states in Nigeria.

‘We have implemented more than eight projects in Nigeria. One of our projects was selected among the 100 best youth-led projects in the world. I recently returned from China, where the project was showcased. It has impacted over 5,000 people in Nigeria and Cameroon. Overall, our organization has impacted more than 20,000 lives in over 100 communities across Nigeria.

Another session with youths

Idris said one of the special projects his organisation was engaged in was the promotion of sanitary pads among rural women.

‘We discovered that many women cannot afford sanitary pads. So, we came up with a solution called Reusable Pads. We trained the women ourselves and sought funding to produce the pads.

‘Initially, we funded it from our own pockets, but later, we were able to secure support from international partners like Connected Development and Share Yourself, who gave us $1,000. Beyond that, we have raised other funds to continue supporting girls and women, because we believe that the lack of access to menstrual pads affects girls’ education.’

He said his organisation’s focus was more on the rural communities because they were often left behind in terms of development. ‘We want to emphasize that these people are citizens too, and they deserve development like everyone else. When we uplift their voices, the government and institutions will be pressured to act.

‘I have visited many grassroots communities, and the reality is heartbreaking: no schools, no health facilities, nothing. But going to such communities gives me confidence that, one day, insha’Allah, people will get what they deserve.’

He said running a non-profit organisation at a young age has been difficult, especially without funding but he’s been able to get through most of the challenges by being consistent and by leveraging his network and social media.

‘I was able to secure support from different places. Funding challenges still exist, but we are exploring local sources of support to sustain our work.

‘By staying faithful to what I am doing. I believe strongly in my vision, in Nigeria and in Africa’s future. That belief has kept me going.

‘Again, my parents have always been proud of me. One of the good things is that my father has been behind the camera supporting me for so long. He is here today, watching me during this interview, and I am very proud of that.

Lau said, so far, he has not received any support from the government.

‘Honestly, I have not received any support from the government in the eight years I’ve been doing this. I never reached out directly to the government because I don’t want to be entangled in politics. That is why I refused to reach out to the government.

‘What we do instead is document the needs of the people and send letters to the government, so they understand the situation. For instance, we recently launched a project called Moria, where we documented the voices of 14 communities still lacking education and basic needs, and we shared the findings with the local government chairman to see how they can help those communities.’

Lau said he was confident that he could bring change to the society, especially among the youth in Northern Nigeria who are mostly unemployed.

‘For youths, one of the most important things is to provide them with networks and opportunities to grow. Currently, I am working with more than 1,000 young people, not just in Nigeria but across Africa. Recently, we implemented a project in Jigawa State called the Local Accountability Watch Project. It was funded by the EU and focused on helping young people demand accountability from local governments.

‘Over 400 youths applied for just 20 available slots, which shows how widespread unemployment is. We selected 20 and trained them on how to engage governance and demand accountability at all levels.’

Looking at the future, Idris said his biggest hope was to see that every community has access to basic facilities to enhance the living conditions of its members.

‘My biggest hope is to ensure that every community has access to basic needs such as education, health, among others. I believe these are fundamental human rights. I also want to see myself at decision-making tables where the needs of ordinary people are addressed and their voices are heard.

‘I would like the world to know more about what we are doing, especially in amplifying the voices of grassroots communities and equipping young people with the skills and knowledge to demand accountability and good governance.

‘These are the kinds of initiatives young people are capable of leading, and in many cases, they can do them even better than the older generation currently in leadership.’

He advised young people to be more courageous in facing challenges in life.

‘Many believe money is everything, but money is not everything. I started this work without funding or external advice. What kept me going was courage and belief. Many young people have great potential, but they lack the courage to act on it. My advice is for them to wake up. We are the future of Nigeria and Africa, and there is still so much for us to catch up with,’ Idris said.

One of the beneficiaries of the project in Joga village, Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State, and also a youth leader, Abdulaziz Zubairu, said the organization helped his community by repairing an old borehole that now provides them with drinking water.

‘After the borehole was constructed, we barely used it because it broke down shortly after completion, and so we continued to face the problem of getting drinking water. But by the grace of God, when the YaPD4Africa came to this village, they repaired the borehole for us, and since then, we have been benefiting from it.

‘Truly, the young man who leads the organization has become like a brother to us in this village because of the good work he has done for us.

‘In addition, they taught us the importance of helping one another without relying solely on the government at all times. That is why, a few days ago, when the borehole developed another fault, we (the villagers) contributed money and repaired it ourselves for our own benefit.’

Attacks: Residents Flee Community As Troops Neutralise Bandits In Kwara

Residents of Oke Ode community in Kwara State have started relocating following bandits’ attack last week.

This is just as troops launched a coordinated air and land assault against the gunmen, killing many in the process.

Oke Ode was attacked on Sunday by the terrorists, leaving several people dead and others abducted.

The police confirmed 12 deaths, including hunters, newly recruited forest guards, vigilantes and civilians. A viral video showed fleeing residents packed into trucks, buses and tricycles, among other means of transportation.

A resident, Mrs Esther Amode, said they were leaving the town without a clear destination.

‘Some of us will get down at Ajase Ipo while others are heading to Offa, among other places, we feel we can find refuge as this is getting out of hand,’ she said.

A driver, Amuda Onaolapo, stated that the town was being deserted, with many residents stranded due to a shortage of vehicles.

He added that residents could no longer continue to live in an atmosphere of fear.

Daily Trust reports that there have also been peaceful protests by affected residents in Ajase Ipo, Isanlu-Isin and other communities.

Meanwhile, the state government, in a statement by Rafiu Ajakaye, Chief Press Secretary to the Governor, said criminals have been under massive attack from combined security forces following the launch of a major onslaught on their hideouts in Ifelodun on Monday.

He said the operation took place around Baba Sango forest on Monday night and along the Kogi border with Kwara, adding that the development resulted in multiple casualties among the gunmen.

‘The Nigerian Air Force also confirmed aerial strikes on the criminals’ positions in the area, introducing a new phase in the efforts to dislodge them,’ he said.