Weak local responses threaten security gains

Nigeria has spent billions on strengthening security agencies and tackling insurgency, but weak responses at local levels are threatening to undermine those efforts.

Security agencies have struggled to respond to terrorist attacks on communities as a result of lack of personnel, sabotage and lack of funds.

Sometimes, villages are raided for hours without security intervention. Analysts say the situation is a recent phenomenon not seen in the 1990s and 2000s.

Speaking with BusinessDay in Abuja, peace experts and security analysts say while the federal government has recorded significant gains, weak grassroots structures, elite interference, and compromised local authorities continue to leave dangerous gaps in the country’s security architecture.

As Nigeria marks 65 years of independence, analysts highlighted progress, challenges, and the way forward for sustainable peace.

Sadeeque Abba, professor of Political Economy and Development Studies at the University of Abuja, said Nigeria’s security situation requires urgent collaboration across all tiers of government.

According to him, while the federal government has made significant efforts in tackling insecurity, state and local governments have failed to play their parts effectively.

‘In security terms, the federal government is doing an excellent job, but the state and local governments are not doing anything.

‘That is why Nigeria is not well secured. Federal government cannot secure the entire nation.

‘It is going to be a collaboration, a partnership between the federal, the state and the local government,’ Abba stressed.

The professor noted that local governments, which ought to be the cornerstone of national development and grassroots security, have been weakened by elite interference and state capture.

He argued that Nigeria must adopt a ‘bottom-up’ security model rather than the current ‘top-down’ approach.

‘If you go to some developed countries like Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, or even Norway and Finland, security is not about top-down, it’s about bottom-up.

‘In Africa, countries like Botswana, Seychelles, Lesotho, Madagascar and Algeria have bottom-up security models.

‘But in Nigeria, security is defined from the point of view of state security and elite security, leaving the grassroots unprotected,’ he said.

Abba explained that the disconnect between growing national resources and declining security is one of the contradictions undermining Nigeria’s development.

‘We were far more secure in the 1960s, 70s and 80s than now, even though we have more resources today. The further away from 1960, the less the security, yet the higher the resources. That imbalance is frightening,’ he added.

On her part, Dayo Kusa, former director of the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution and a member of the Coordinating Committee on the Forum on Farmer-Herder Relations in Nigeria, described Nigeria as being in”turmoil’ but urged continuous transformation of conflicts rather than seeking absolute resolutions.

‘The presidency and all involved are doing their very best, but the infestation has gone so far-rooted.

‘We shall continue to prevent conflict in areas not yet prone and transform existing conflicts.

‘Resolution is almost like peace of the graveyard, which is unattainable. Transformation is more practical and sustainable,’ Kusa explained.

Also speaking, Olusola Odumosu, commandant, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) in the Federal Capital Territory, said Nigeria should be grateful for the relative peace it enjoys compared to other parts of the world.

‘Except we want to be unfair, Nigeria is enjoying relative peace compared to other countries within Africa and across the globe. Sixty-five years is not an easy journey. We may not be where we ought to be, but we’re not where we used to be,’ he said.

Odumosu highlighted the collective efforts of the security community in sustaining peace, noting that the NSCDC works in close collaboration with the Nigerian Police, Armed Forces, and other paramilitary agencies.

He also pointed to recent security reforms and government policies under the Renewed Hope Agenda, which have strengthened agencies through increased funding, improved welfare, and training.

‘Before now, Nigeria was bedevilled with insurgency, violent extremism, and kidnapping. As we speak today, those challenges have reduced drastically.

‘We may not have completely obliterated them, but they are not as menacing as before,’ he said. On grassroots security, the NSCDC Commandant agreed with experts that community participation remains essential.

‘Peace is everybody’s business. We should not leave peace enforcement and building at the doorstep of security agencies alone. ‘Intelligence-led policing works best, and we rely on credible information from the people.

‘When you see something, say something. Don’t be indifferent, because it might affect someone close to you,’ Odumosu urged.

Checks by BusinessDay Newspapers revealed that Nigeria has in recent years embarked on a series of reforms aimed at strengthening national security, modernising its armed forces and improving the accountability of law enforcement agencies.

The measures, which range from legislative changes to increased funding and procurement of modern equipment, reflect government efforts to address the country’s complex security challenges while balancing concerns about human rights, governance and accountability.

A step in this direction was the signing of the Nigeria Police Act in 2020, which repealed the outdated 2004 law.

The new legislation emphasises accountability, respect for human rights and the need for community policing as a foundation for effective law enforcement.

However, while the Act provided a clear legal framework, observers note that its implementation has been slow, with limited impact so far on police culture, training and public trust.

Alongside domestic reforms, Nigeria has received international support for strengthening police accountability and transformation.

In 2024, the United Nations Development Programme launched the Supporting Police Accountability and Transformation (SPAAT) project, the third phase of a long-running initiative to improve professionalism in the Nigeria Police Force.

The project, which runs until December 2025, is designed to deepen reforms in police leadership, governance and community engagement, complementing government policies on institutional change.

Funding for security has also risen sharply, as defence and security received one of the largest allocations in the 2025 federal budget, with about N4.9 trillion set aside for personnel, operations and capital projects.

This represents around 13 percent of total government spending, according to budget analysis by BudgIT. The allocation continues a trend that began in 2024, when security already commanded one of the highest shares of national expenditure.

The spending has been matched by significant procurement and modernisation moves. In October 2024, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approved borrowing of over $600 million to acquire M-346 fighter jets, part of a plan to boost the Nigerian Air Force’s capacity for counter-insurgency and border security.

Earlier this year, the United States approved a potential $346 million arms sale to Nigeria, covering rockets and munitions, although the deal is still subject to congressional approval in Washington.

These acquisitions are expected to bolster ongoing military campaigns, including operations against oil theft in the Niger Delta and counter-terrorism missions in the North-East.

Beyond the military front, Nigeria’s leaders are grappling with an increasingly urgent debate over the creation of state police. Advocates argue that devolving policing powers to state governments will bring law enforcement closer to communities and help tackle insecurity more effectively.

Opponents, however, fear the arrangement could be politicised and abused by state governors.

The debate has gained momentum in 2024 and 2025, with public hearings and legislative proposals sparking both support and resistance, but no final decision has been reached.

Despite these reforms and investments, concerns persist about accountability and respect for human rights.

Rights groups point out that abuses linked to security operations remain common, undermining public trust and raising doubts about the effectiveness of reforms.

Analysts also warn that without stronger intelligence-sharing, multi-agency coordination and robust oversight, rising budgets and new equipment may not translate into improved security outcomes.

The government, however, insists that reforms are moving in the right direction, pointing to renewed strategies on counter-insurgency, greater emphasis on community policing, and operational successes against criminal networks as signs of progress.

International partners also continue to express support, highlighting Nigeria’s willingness to tackle long-standing gaps in its security architecture.

Experts caution that the true measure of these reforms will hinge on whether legislative intent, international backing, and security spending can be effectively translated into real improvements in public safety and citizens’ trust.

The balancing act between equipping security forces, respecting human rights, and building public confidence will likely define the next phase of Nigeria’s security sector transformation.

Ladoja promises to promote justice, fairness, as Atiku, Ayu, El-Rufai, Imoke visit

Oba Rashidi Adewolu Ladoja, Olubadan of Ibadanland, has promised to promote justice and fairness in his reign as he is no longer a politician.

Olubadan, who was a former governor of Oyo State, made the promise while receiving some eminent Nigerians, who paid homage to his palace recently.

They include: Abubakar Atiku, former vice president in company of Nasir El-Rufai, former governor of Kaduna State, Liyel Imoke, former governor of Cross River, Iyorcha Ayu, former senate president, among others.

Oba Ladoja, who was installed as the 44th Olubadan of Ibadanland recently, welcomed the delegation and assured that he would use his reign and the rest of his life to serve Ibadan people, Oyo State, Yorubaland and Nigeria at large. ‘I promise to make everybody proud of me as the Olubadan of the ancient city, by ensuring fairness and justice for all,’ he said.

Recalling his good old times with Atiku and other politicians in the country, he said that as the Olubadan, he is no longer a politician.

The former governor recalled, ‘We started from SDP, we were in exile together, we were in PDP together. When I wanted to create an identity, I went to the Accord Party, which became a household name here. I know you politicians have a way of coming back. ‘I was an active politician before but with my new status now, I have to quit politics, but am a father to all now’.

However, Atiku congratulated the monarch and said that the delegation regretted not attending his coronation.

‘It was not intentional, protocol arrangements did not allow us to come during the coronation, not that we don’t want to come,’ Atiku said.

He pointed out that Oba Ladoja had played a crucial role in nation-building saying, ‘We are here to say congratulations to the new Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Ladoja, we know your roles and relationship with some of us’.

Meanwhile, the new Olubadan of Ibadanland has unveiled his socio-economic plans for the ancient city by assuring investors of an enabling environment.

While speaking at a thanksgiving service in his honour at the Ascension of Christ Catholic Church, Bodija, Ibadan, he called on both local and foreign investors to come to Ibadan and invest, assuring of a favourable environment. ‘My major assignment as the Olubadan of Ibadanland is the growth of Ibadanland. I implore investors to come and invest in Ibadan as I will collaborate with the government at all levels to ensure that Ibadan and Oyo State at large maintain their pace-setter status,’ the royal father said.

NEXIM bank records ?30.47bn profit in 2024

The Nigerian Export-Import Bank (NEXIM) has posted an operating profit of ?30.47 billion for the 2024 financial year, representing more than double the ?13.75 billion recorded in the previous year.

The performance highlights the Bank’s financial resilience and operational efficiency in delivering on its development finance mandate.

Reflecting this growth, Agusto and Co. Limited, a leading credit rating agency, assigned NEXIM Bank a Bbb+ rating, affirming its satisfactory financial condition and strong capacity to meet obligations relative to other development finance institutions (DFIs) in Nigeria. Established to promote Nigeria’s non-oil exports and support import-substituting businesses, NEXIM is fully owned by the Federal Government of Nigeria through equal shareholding by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI).

The Bank has continued to maintain robust liquidity and capital adequacy ratios, with notable expansion in its loan book and equity instruments. Its financing interventions cut across key sectors, including manufacturing, agriculture, solid minerals, and services. According to Abba Bello, the bank’s Managing Director, NEXIM has intensified support for non-oil exporters, disbursing over ?495 billion, which has created and sustained more than 36,000 direct and indirect jobs.

Among the Bank’s flagship initiatives are: The Regional Sealink Project, a public-private partnership aimed at improving maritime logistics across West and Central Africa.

Promotion of Factoring Services, providing alternative export financing for SMEs. Joint Project Preparation Fund (JPPF), launched in partnership with Afreximbank to enhance the bankability of export-oriented projects.

Tailored Mining Finance Schemes, including contract mining, equipment leasing, and buyers’ credit/export credit agency (ECA) financing, designed to unlock the sector’s export potential.

Bello reiterated that NEXIM remains committed to strengthening local processing capacity, boosting foreign exchange inflows, and advancing Nigeria’s position in global trade by moving the country up the commodity value chain.

Newcastle United pile pressure on Postecoglou with crucial win over Forest

Nick Woltemade and Bruno Guimarães struck in the second half as Newcastle United earned a 2-0 win over Nottingham Forest, pilling more pressure on under-fire manager Ange Postecoglou.

The defeat extended Forest’s winless start under Postecoglou to seven games, with just one point from their opening four Premier League matches. With the club now sitting just above the relegation zone, scrutiny over the Australian’s future is set to dominate the international break.

After a tense first half at St James’ Park, Guimarães broke the deadlock with a curling effort from outside the box just before the hour mark. Forest players protested, claiming a foul by Guimarães on Morgan Gibbs-White in the build-up, but the goal stood after a VAR check. Newcastle, who had been the league’s lowest scorers heading into the match, pressed for a second. Matz Sels denied Sandro Tonali and Malick Thiaw with smart saves, but he could do nothing to stop Woltemade’s thumping strike off the underside of the bar following a corner.

The Forest goalkeeper kept the scoreline respectable with further stops from Harvey Barnes, but Newcastle sealed the result in stoppage time. Woltemade calmly converted from the penalty spot after Guimarães was brought down by Elliot Anderson.

Postecoglou endured chants of ‘you’re getting sacked in the morning’ from the home crowd as Newcastle celebrated their second league win of the campaign. Forest, meanwhile, remain mired in 17th and winless under their new boss, whose future looks increasingly uncertain.

Oyo to adopt sustainable power, irrigation initiative to enhance food security, agribusiness

In a bid to enhance food security, agribusiness, and sustain agro-economy, the Oyo State Government has expressed readiness to adopt Sustainable Power and Irrigation for Nigeria (SPIN) initiative to drive all-year-round farming and agricultural productivity.

The SPIN project is a transformative intervention that will provide dependable irrigation facilities and sustainable power sources for farmers. It will reduce over-reliance on rain-fed agriculture, guarantee uninterrupted food production, and ultimately promote food sufficiency across the state.

During an on-the-spot assessment visit to the Ogun-Osun River Basin Development Authority in Iseyin, Olasunkanmi Olaleye, Commissioner for Agriculture and Rural Development, explained that with a functional irrigation system in place, farmers will be able to cultivate high-value crops throughout the year, thereby creating wealth, reducing post-harvest losses, and ensuring stable food supply in both rural and urban areas. He further stressed that Governor Seyi Makinde’s administration remains resolute in promoting modern agricultural practices through strategic partnerships, infrastructural support, and technology-driven solutions that will make farming more attractive, especially to the youth.

The commissioner also commended the management of the Ogun-Osun River Basin Development Authority for their collaboration and assured that the state government would continue to engage with critical stakeholders to ensure seamless implementation of the initiative.

Esther Olaniyi, director, Irrigation and Drainage, in her remarks, noted that the SPIN initiative had been introduced across the 36 states of the federation and the FCT, with Oyo State emerging among the few that had shown genuine readiness to meet the prerequisites.

She emphasized that SPIN is not just about irrigation but also about sustainable development, as it would improve crop yield, expand employment opportunities, and contribute significantly to agricultural growth.

Olaniyi further disclosed that the project would be funded by the World Bank, while participating states are expected to fulfill certain conditions stipulated by the donor.

She urged the Oyo State Government to consider enacting legislation that would safeguard project lands, ensuring they are reserved strictly for agricultural purposes.

Meanwhile, the Oyo State Government has partnered with the state chapter of Women In Hospitality Nigeria (WIHN) to celebrate the 2025 World Tourism Day, aimed at promoting cultural heritage across the state. Wasiu Olatunbosun, Commissioner for Culture and Tourism, while speaking at the 2025 World Tourism Day, held at the National Museum of Unity, Aleshinloye, Ibadan, explained that tourism has become a central pillar of the state’s cultural revival and sustainability drive.

He highlighted the government’s achievements in line with Governor Seyi Makinde’s Omituntun 2.0 Roadmap for Sustainable Development.

‘Oyo State today is the most active in cultural promotion in the entire Southwest. We have revived festivals that were once at the brink of extinction, and people are now proud to identify with our heritage,’ Olatunbosun said.

The commissioner noted that in December 2023, UNESCO officially recognized and listed the Sango Festival of Oyo as a world intangible cultural festival.

He also revealed plans for the 2026 Egungun Festival, slated for May 2, which will include a symposium that will be done with the Institute of African Studies, University of Ibadan, aimed at documenting and preserving cultural history. He called on individuals, associations, and corporate organizations to partner with the state in sustaining cultural initiatives, stressing that the government cannot do it alone.

Oluwakemi Olusola, regional director, WIHN, in her remarks, expressed gratitude to the state government for its support for the Oyo chapter, which was launched less than two months ago.

She added that the collaboration with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism has already strengthened the association’s visibility and credibility.

‘The theme of this year’s World Tourism Day is Tourism and Sustainable Transformation. This partnership means a lot to us as women making an impact in the hospitality and tourism industry. Together, we are building not just an association but a community of strong women who have a voice in shaping the future of tourism,’ Olusola said.

Pamela Oriyomi Otuka, curator, National Museum of Unity, Ibadan, described the celebration as ‘historic,’ stressing that women, culture, and hospitality are critical to Nigeria’s sustainable tourism future.

Nigeria @65: Restructuring still the best way forward

One has over the decades discovered that any set of people, community or country who hates the bitter truth live to suffer for it. That perhaps, explains why yours truly has kept emphasizing the critical, yet deliberately foisted fratricidal factors that have cumulatively acted as the enemies to the variant of democracy that we currently practise here in Nigeria. One of the most painful of that is the conduct of fraudulent elections through which humongous state funds are wantonly wasted at the end of which those who are not the choices of the electorate are foisted on the people, to who they have no iota of allegiance. Ordinarily, free, fair and credible elections are supposed to be the strong and solid foundation on which to erect the house of democracy. But when the wrong politicians mount the pedestal of power, the consequences are dire on the pauperised populace.

‘And no less damned is he who puts a friend above his country.

When I see danger threatening my people,

Whatever it may be, I shall declare it.

Our country is our life;

Only when she rides safely,

Have we any friends at all.’

-Antigone (Sophocles)

Such a sad situation of having politicians who are not the true representatives of the people leads to personalization of political power. That is more so by some egocentric and self-righteous political helmsmen, who erroneously believe that the instrument of power they wield is meant to satisfy the self, rather than the state. They brazenly step over the constitution which should be the ground norm through acts of infamy that satisfy their choice or that of so-called friends, not minding the consequences on the people they were elected or selected to serve.

Added to this is the siphoning of state funds through several odious antics for self aggrandisement, or to satiate the gargantuan greed of members of their family, with scarce regards to the rule of law. With such an oddity in place the led majority are left to groan and grind in preventable poverty, yet some policy makers keep chasing the shadows of self righteousness at the expense of the people’s pains. And it hurts those with conscience because Nigeria is so naturally endowed with oil and gas, solid minerals, fertile fields for agricultural development, places od scenic splendour as tourist attractions and of course, the best of brains that we have no reason whatsoever to languish in the pit of poverty, if not for the recurring ugly decimal of successive poor leadership. One other querulous issue is that of ethno-religious sentiment. Going by the choice of people of one ethnic group holding plum political positions, against the federal character principle as we have witnessed over the past decade degrades us as a people -like it or not. In fact, that brings up an all-important question. Have you ever wondered, like my humble self, just how our crop of patriotic founding fathers would feel, should they be brought back to life to see the Nigeria of today?

Imagine if the likes of Herbert Macaulay, Sir Adeyemo Alakija, Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, Prof. Eyo Ita, Margaret Ekpo (all of the blessed memory) returning to witness the Nigeria of the 21st Century still bitterly enmeshed in ethno-centric and religious divides. Try and also imagine Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, Adeleke Adedoyin, Adeniyi Jones, Eric Moore, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Abubakar Dipcharima, Aminu Kano (of the blessed memory) returning to a Nigeria steeped in preventable poverty, mass youth unemployment, insecurity, kidnapping and sundry crimes!

Certainly, these heroes of the struggle for Nigeria’s political independence would ask what has made the difference between countries such as India, Malaysia, Indonesia and Nigeria, whose independence came within the same decade or two, if not quality leadership, or the absence of it. They would cringe at the crying shame of a people still struggling for economic survival in the midst of the vast natural resources, 65 years after political independence.

They would wonder just how, like the prodigal son, our successive political leaders have squandered huge revenues from our God-given oil and gas, solid minerals, agricultural and tourism potentials and ask our leaders to explain why we are currently trapped in state and federal government debts running into trillion of Naira. The likes of Michael Imoudu, T.A Bankole, A. A. Adio-Moses, M.A. Tokunbo and T.A. Songonuga, who once ran the affairs of the Nigerian Trade Union Congress would even ask our state governors to explain just how it has become difficult to pay a minimum wage of N70,000 at a time our lawmakers cruise around in luxury automobiles, with some state governors boasting of private jets; flying over children studying under trees in their long-forgotten states! So, what is the best way forward? That is the million-naira question.

The answer, my dear reader, is to read the handwriting on the wall, as it was back in the Biblical times. But some of our political helmsmen, with self-serving and greed-driven agendas, rather than nationalistic principles have blatantly refused to read it. The call for the holistic restructuring of Nigeria has reached a nerve-shredding crescendo, reverberating across the national space. But some have obstinately turned deaf ears to it, or heed its clarion toll.

So, we caution, as we have to do under trying times such as this, out of sheer patriotic fervor, that Nigeria can no longer be run the way it is being run against the ethos of equity and justice. Nigeria can no longer be ruled by the tools of treachery, the weapons of witch-hunt and the cudgels of coercion, worse still under a democratic dispensation. Recent signs in the political horizon are scary enough. This was my position some six years ago, under the then President Muhammadu Buhari. But are we any better today?

To begin with, not a few observers of the polity would agree that Nigerians have not been as divided along ethnic and religious cleavages as we found ourselves eight years ago. For instance, while some concerned Nigerians had expected President Muhammadu Buhari to be guided by the noble mantra of nationalism and give out political appointments to guarantee ethnic equity, that of his first term were obviously skewed in favour of the North and his political acolytes. The question again is that is much different as at 2025?

Lest we forget, barely five months of Buhari’s second term, the issue of which of the geo-political zones to produce the 2023 presidency took precedence over how to pull Nigeria out of the ignoble status of the world’s poverty capital. Or, how to get the army of our job-seeking youth running into millions out of the violent streets. There were then posters of the then Kaduna State governor, Nasir el-Rufai adorning, the walls of some cities as he reportedly geared up for the plum political post. Both Babachir Lawal and Ahmed Yerima of the Arewa Youth group were making it loud and clear that the North was not about to hand over the presidential baton to any other section of the country in the next dispensation. That was back in 2015, some ten odd years ago. But is the situation any different as at this day?

The current wave of mass distraction is fixated on the obvious determination of the Bola Tinubu-led government to keep holding on to power against the political angling of the ADC party. Meanwhile, hunger, high inflation, youth unemployment, insecurity remain the daily travails rather than the exception. So, the call for a holistic restructuring of the country resonates.

Let us therefore, listen to the voices of reason. According to the then President General of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, Chief Nnia Nwodo, restructuring Nigeria is the answer to the waves of agitations currently hitting across Nigeria. At a lecture titled: ‘Restructuring Nigeria: Decentralisation for National Cohesion’ delivered in 2017 at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House in London, Nwodo said, ‘Our present constitution is not autochthonous. It was not written by the people of Nigeria. It was not approved in a national referendum. In jurisprudence, its effectiveness will score a very low grade on account of its unacceptability.’

Interestingly, back then and in a similar tone, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the then National Leader of the All Progressives Congress, stated thus in 2017: ‘We all lined up to call ourselves Nigerians without gathering to discuss what it meant, so Nigerians should not condemn but listen and understand the agitations by the Indigenous People of Biafra .’ He however, warned against any attempt to split the country. Now, that he is the president of the country, we humbly remind him to do the needful. Restructuring remains the best way forward.

The basketball business and Nigeria

Each year, the National Basketball Association (NBA) in the United States of America (USA) chooses the most promising future basketball talents for the upcoming season. The key event, known as the draft, signifies the introduction of future top athletes. They join their teams, aiming to win games, and both the teams and the rookies make a lot of money too.

The NBA basketball industry is valued at about 133 billion US dollars, and the league has an estimated revenue of over 11 billion US dollars annually. In the highly profitable sporting industry, basketball comes next to American football and goes head-to-head with baseball as one of the most lucrative sports in the USA.

NBA and Nigerians

In the NBA 2019-2020 draft, an unprecedented number of eight players of Nigerian heritage were selected, the highest number ever from Africa. In the 2023-2024 season, three new players of Nigerian roots were chosen. From 2015 to 2024, a total of 19 players of Nigerian descent were drafted.

A high number of Nigerians play for the top NBA teams currently, and the steady presence of players of Nigerian descent in the NBA is assured for decades, alongside a few other players of African descent.

In the USA, as in many countries around the world, Nigerians also feature in American football, baseball, and soccer, the more recent major sport to gain popularity in the USA. But nowhere has the Nigerian footprint been as compelling as it is in basketball within the NBA.

It was not always this way.

First African in NBA

In October 1980, a skinny, shy and tall Nigerian boy took a flight from Lagos to New York, armed with only a note of introduction for possible admission to college, and to secure a scholarship based on his hopeful basketball skills. In the United States, he could try his luck with four colleges, thanks to an American coach who identified him, made the contacts in the colleges, and facilitated obtaining a visa for the USA in Lagos.

The 17-year-old boy was Hakeem Olajuwon, the first African to be selected in the NBA draft. Standing at six feet eleven inches, he was the trailblazer whose exemplary basketball skills opened the doors for many future African players.

Olajuwon was accepted by the first and only college that he visited, the University of Houston. He studied at the university, played there, and from there was drafted in the first round as first overall pick in the 1983-1984 season by the Houston Rockets, ahead of Michael Jordan, picked also in the first round but as the third overall pick by the Chicago Bulls.

Although Jordan came to have a higher name recognition and superior game than those who were drafted ahead of him, Olajuwon came first in the sport on several fronts during a career of some 18 years. Incidentally, both Jordan and Olajuwon were born in 1963, separated by a few weeks.

Olajuwon led his team, the Houston Rockets, to secure two NBA championships, and he holds records and awards in many aspects of the sport. He also played briefly for the Toronto Raptors. Worldwide, many Nigerians have kept emerging at the apex level of global sports, especially overseas. There is absolutely no question regarding the wealth of talent and physical capabilities in sports in Nigeria. Sorely lacking are the mentorship, training facilities, and exposure to first-class guidance and development.

Basketball, despite its early start in Nigeria, remains hardly visible as a sport or business. Yet, its potential is huge.

It is noteworthy that some past and current NBA stars of Nigerian descent have coaching clinics, academies, foundations and other services that encourage and develop interests and gifted players in basketball in Nigeria.

The list comprises Olajuwon, Precious Achiuwa of the Miami Heat (formerly of New York Knicks), Giannis Antetokunmpoh of the Milwaukee Bucks, Zeke Nnaji of the Denver Nuggets, Obinna Ekezie, formerly of the Washington Wizards, and Chiney Ogwumike, who has played for both the Los Angeles Sparks and the Connecticut Sun – in the Women’s National Basketball Association (WNBA). Masai Ujiri’s Giants of Africa scouts for talents, and promotes the sport in many African countries.

The Future of Basketball in Nigeria

The International Basketball Federation (FIBA) and the NBA established the Basketball Africa League (BAL) that organizes competitions and develops capabilities for male and female players. The Basketball Without Borders outreach is one of the means that they deploy to achieve the objectives. Many African countries have national basketball leagues and take part in BAL, founded in 2019.

Under the auspices of FIBA, the overarching governing body for international competitions, the Nigerian women’s national basketball team has performed brilliantly and won several championships, confirming the key role of women athletes in the sport.

There is room for much more to be done by Nigeria’s federal and state governments, and local authorities in amassing the untapped resources in basketball. The private sector has an important role to play, both from a purely investment point of view and as a contribution to the community.

Now and in the future, there should be greater attention paid to developing local talents, and bringing more women into the sport. For example, building on demonstrated and latent interest, the private and public sectors should cultivate and partner with the athletes in the diaspora to encourage and establish leagues in cities and states.

A massive industry awaits in basketball and sports in general, given the size, market and resources of Nigeria’s immense population of approximately 240 million people.

Hearts edge Hibernian 1-0 in first Edinburgh derby of 2025/26 season

Craig Halkett scored a stoppage-time winner as Hearts edged city rivals Hibernian 1-0 at Tynecastle to move five points clear at the top of the Scottish Premiership.

It was the third time in seven league matches this season that Hearts had scored a stoppage-time winner after beating Edinburgh rivals Hibernian on Saturday.

The first Edinburgh derby of the season had been heavily hyped in the build-up, but an attritional affair in the swirling wind looked like ending goalless after Hibs captain Martin Boyle missed two big chances in the second half.

After Halkett forced in a cross from substitute Sabah Kerjota to secure a first victory over Hibernian in five attempts, the euphoric scenes among the home support went quite.

The Jambos – who have not lost in the Premiership since Neil Critchley’s last game in charge in late April, now boast their biggest lead at the top of the table since they were six points clear in October 2018. However, champions Celtic have the chance to reduce the deficit when they host Motherwell on Sunday. McInnes sent out the same Hearts XI that started the previous two victories against Rangers and Falkirk.

There were two changes to the Hibs side that started their 0-0 draw at Celtic Park as Chris Cadden and Josh Campbell replaced midfielders Miguel Chaiwa and Jamie McGrath.

At the other end, Claudio Braga’s low shot from the edge of the box was saved by Sallinger after Hibs got caught playing out, before Obita made a vital saving challenge to deny Lawrence Shankland from close range.

Boyle saw an effort ruled out for offside in the 68th minute and the Hibernian forward was left frustrated again five minutes later when he went clean through and took a heavy touch, allowing Schwolow to make a big save.

It proved pivotal as defender Halkett popped up two minutes into stoppage time to guide home Kerjota’s cross from six yards, sparking delirious scenes around Tynecastle.

Nigeria happened to ‘Sommie’: Her death, bleeding wound of a failing state

She was bright and beautiful. Courage and conviction defined her. At 29, Somotochukwu Christelle Maduagwu was an attorney, rising broadcaster, and advocate for women, children, and her nation. She could have remained in Britain, where she held citizenship, but she chose to return to Nigeria to help make it work.

But Nigeria failed her.

All her passion could not shield her from bullets-in her own home in the Federal Capital Territory. Reports say the police were alerted during the robbery, yet there was no response. She gave her heart to a nation that could not protect her in return.

Tributes have poured in from the high and mighty. The FCT Commissioner of Police offered condolences. But Nigerians must ask: Are the police a commiseration body, or a constitutional institution to protect life and property? Nigerians do not need sympathy; they need safety.

Nigeria failed her again. When rushed to a hospital, she was reportedly denied treatment for lack of identification; precious time was lost. Do we blame the hospital? Partly. But hospitals here have been punished for acting without paperwork. Like the robbery and the police inaction, this reflects a broken state that normalises death.

Her story joins a tragic chorus: Deborah Samuel lynched in Sokoto, Ammaye beaten to death in Niger, Ojo Peter, the journalist, slain by robbers, and Barnabas, the guard, who died resisting Christelle’s attackers. These are not accidents; they are symptoms of a failing state. Condolences without consequence

Every tragedy is met with promises: ‘We will investigate,’ ‘We will bring perpetrators to justice.’ Yet justice rarely comes. Deborah’s killers posed for selfies and remained free till date. Eunice Olawale’s killers were never prosecuted. Will Christelle’s case be any different?

The message is chilling: if a mob or a gunman kills you in Nigeria, your death may trend for a day, but justice will not follow. When life can be taken without consequence, law itself becomes optional.

Learning from our African sisters

Nigeria is not the only country facing violence or weak systems. But others on the continent show us what leadership can do:

?Rwanda invested in community policing and professionalised its police service through merit-based recruitment and accountability. Crime reduction and citizen trust followed.

?Kenya has developed national emergency medical care policies, devolving health responses to counties. Ambulance networks and hospital readiness are being strengthened-even if unevenly.

? Ghana built its National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), expanding access to care and reducing cost barriers, especially for the poor. These reforms are not perfect, but they prove something vital: African nations can, with will and vision, place value on human life. Why can’t Nigeria?

Way forward: From eulogies to reform

Nigeria’s security crisis is not inevitable; it is a product of choices. To change course, we need:

1. Police reform-better pay, merit-based recruitment, community trust-building. The police are themselves victims of a broken system.

2. Emergency care reform-laws that protect hospitals and staff when treating patients in emergencies, without fear of bureaucratic punishment.

3. Legislation that enforces accountability-swift prosecution of killers, whether mob or gunmen.

4. Grassroots organising-citizens cannot wait for the elite insulated by convoys. Organise, push, and support efforts like those of Randy Peters, who continues to fight for electoral and systemic reforms.

5. A shift in national priorities-like Rwanda, Kenya, and Ghana, Nigeria must decide that human life is sacred, not expendable.

A trumpet, not a whisper

Somtochukwu’s life was a light. Her death is a wound. Let it also be a trumpet-calling us not just to mourn, but to demand, move, organise and act.

No Nigerian deserves to die the way she did. Not the lawyer in Abuja. Not the farmer in Zamfara. Not the student in Sokoto. None.

We must not settle for a country where ‘Nigeria happened’ is the shorthand for tragedy. We must build one where ‘Nigeria happened’ means resilience, justice, and life preserved.

History will not forgive endless condolences. It will only remember whether we turned grief into governance.

Ukoh, an alumnus of the American University of Nigeria, Yola, and PhD student at Columbia University, writes from New York.

Why trust, precision are critical in hospitality and high-end residential construction

The global luxury real estate and hospitality industry operates on two fundamental principles that determine success: precision and trust. In markets from Dubai to Singapore, where luxury construction drives tourism, investment, and urban transformation, these values separate enduring landmarks from costly failures.

In Nigeria, the stakes are equally high-arguably higher. The country’s luxury real estate sector is projected to grow significantly alongside rising urbanization and foreign direct investment in hospitality. PwC’s African Real Estate Insights report forecasts that Nigeria’s hospitality sector will attract over $1 billion in new investment by 2030. Yet recent controversies around missed deadlines, cost overruns, and high-profile disputes between construction firms and government agencies have exposed a critical vulnerability: can Nigeria’s luxury construction sector be trusted to deliver to global standards?

Precision: The invisible standard of excellence

Globally, precision defines luxury construction. Dubai’s iconic projects-Atlantis, Burj Al Arab-earn acclaim not merely for their scale but for meticulous attention to detail, from engineering tolerances to bespoke finishes. South Africa’s high-end hospitality developments, such as OneandOnly Cape Town, demonstrate how precision in planning and execution translates directly into international recognition and sustained investment returns.

Nigeria’s luxury construction landscape faces unique challenges that make precision even more critical: unreliable supply chains, infrastructure deficits, and skills gaps. In this environment, precision becomes a competitive discipline requiring detailed planning, world-class project management, and uncompromising quality control. Without these foundations, Nigeria’s luxury sector cannot compete on the global stage.

Trust: The foundation that cannot be rebuilt

Trust in the Construction industry, especially the high-end niche is the most critical success factor. The ability to deliver on time and to specification boost investor/client confidence in the market and stimulates investment. It enables long-term partnerships between governments, developers, and investors that drive successful projects. In markets like Morocco and Kenya, where tourism-fueled luxury real estate thrives, investor confidence in a developer’s ability to deliver-on time, on budget, to specification-is as crucial as the project financing itself.

Recent disputes in Nigeria between prominent construction firms/developers and subscribers/investors/ state governments have demonstrated how quickly this trust can erode. When projects stall or promises unravel, the consequences extend far beyond the immediate parties: investor confidence weakens, sectoral reputation suffers, and the credibility of ‘Made in Nigeria’ luxury developments faces global scrutiny.

As Africa’s most populous nation and one of its largest economies, this represents more than reputational damage-it’s a squandered economic opportunity. Nigeria’s expanding middle and upper classes represent significant demand for premium real estate and hospitality experiences. Without consistent delivery and reliable partnerships, this demand will inevitably migrate to competing regional hubs in Accra, Nairobi and Dubai..

The global standard Nigeria must meet

These International and regional leaders offer clear lessons: precision and trust are not aspirational goals-they are baseline industry requirements. Nigeria’s construction sector must embrace this reality. The bar is even higher for the niche construction companies in high end construction because of the sophistication of clientele and capital that it is involved.

These requirements can be achieved through: Transparent governance: Implementing clear procurement and project management practices that withstand scrutiny and build confidence among all stakeholders.

International benchmarking: Adopting globally recognized quality standards and certifications that demonstrate commitment to excellence.

Long-term thinking: Prioritizing sustainable reputation over short-term profit maximization.

Stakeholder trust: Building credible relationships not only with clients but with regulators, communities, and the broader investment ecosystem.

Nigeria’s defining moment

Nigeria stands at a critical juncture. Growing demand for high end residences and hospitality facilities creates unprecedented opportunity, but heightened scrutiny on delivery capabilities will separate serious players from pretenders. Precision must be evident in every design decision and construction detail. Trust must be embedded in every contract and stakeholder relationship.

Success here will deliver more than iconic hotels, resorts, and residences-it will establish the market confidence that attracts global brands and sustains long-term investment. True luxury construction excellence is measured not by marble quality or architectural flourishes, but by the confidence it inspires, the standards it maintains, and the trust it preserves.

The current debates around reliability in Nigeria’s luxury construction sector represent both challenge and opportunity. To achieve global competitiveness, precision and trust must become the industry’s fundamental blueprint-not eventual goals, but immediate imperatives.

At WL Construction, we are building our reputation on these exact principles. Every project we undertake-from luxury hotels to high end residential developments-reflects our unwavering commitment to precision in execution and trust in partnerships. We don’t just construct buildings; we create lasting value through meticulous attention to detail, transparent processes, and reliable delivery that meets international standards. As Nigeria’s luxury construction sector evolves, we remain dedicated to setting the benchmark that attracts global investment and builds enduring confidence in Nigerian excellence.