Renewed Hope Mo’Feed unveils project to tackle child hunger, empower families

Nigeria’s fight against child malnutrition and out-of-school children took a major step forward with the official launch of the Renewed Hope Mo’Feed Project, Fundraising Gala and Humanitarian Award Night in Lagos.

Speaking at the event, Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu of Lagos State, represented by the Commissioner for Basic and Secondary Education, Mr. Jamiu Tolani Alli-Balogun, described the project as a ‘timely intervention’ that aligns with the state’s food security roadmap.

‘Food is dignity and hope. By targeting over 600,000 vulnerable Nigerians across all six geopolitical zones, this project sends a bold message: hunger will not define our people,’ Sanwo-Olu said.

The Senior Special Assistant to the President on School Feeding Programme, Dr. Yetunde Adeniji, who represented President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, declared that the project was more than a feeding scheme, it was ‘an agenda to secure Nigeria’s future through nutrition, education and empowerment.’

‘Eight out of every ten children in rural Nigeria suffer one form of malnutrition or the other. Feeding is not just about giving food, it is about keeping children in school, reducing crime, and supporting farmers and women across communities,’ Dr. Adeniji said.

She stressed that the school feeding programme, first introduced in the last administration and now revived under Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, had already shown life-changing results in rural communities, where children rush to school for what is sometimes their only meal of the day.

Founder and President of Bella Amor Global Aid Foundation, Mirabel Etuk, whose foundation partnered with the Presidency to scale the initiative, framed the launch as a vision of ‘compassion in action.’

‘The Mo’Feed Project was born from the conviction that a simple meal can restore dignity and transform futures. Feeding a child means opening the door to education and a brighter tomorrow,’ she said.

The night also celebrated individuals and leaders driving humanitarian impact. Awardees included Lagos State Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, Nasarawa Governor Engr. Abdullahi Sule, Dr. Yetunde Adeniji, Dr. Chika Nwokedi, and Bluemath Realty CEO Akinwale Abidakun, among others.

Receiving his award, Abidakun called on Nigerians to support the project:

‘This is not just about feeding, it is about empowerment. More Nigerians of means must rise to back initiatives like this, because the wellbeing of our children defines the future of our nation,’ he said.

The Akwa Ibom Festac Forum, represented by

Mrs. Helene Usenekon commended Mirabel for her humanitarian efforts, describing her foundation’s launch as a ‘beautiful initiative’ that reflects the values of love, care, and hospitality for which the Akwa Ibom people are known.

Mrs. Usenekon, said the group is proud to support Mirabel, who hails from Akwa Ibom. She urged the founder not to relent in her commitment to helping the less privileged, assuring her that ‘every good seed will definitely germinate and the blessings will follow her.’

The Renewed Hope Mo’Feed Project, anchored on Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, aims to bridge hunger gaps, improve school enrolment, support women and local farmers, and provide dignity for vulnerable families nationwide.

Herders proffer solutions to crisis with farmers

National President of Kulen Allah Cattle Rearers Association of Nigeria (KACRAN), Hon Khalil Mohd Bello has proffered solutions to the lingering crisis between farmers and herders.

Hon Khalil spoke at the National Conference on the Farmers-Herders Conflict History organized By Lje Nigeria at Yar’ Adua Center, Abuja.

Addressing the participants, he said: ‘Based on our research, the painful conflict between farmers and herders can be brought to an end if we reclaim and revitalize. Northern governors must face reality by reclaiming all reclaimable grazing reserves. If the governments of the Northern states do this and provide animal feeds and water points, our pastoralists will be able to stay in one place instead of moving to Benue, Plateau, and Southern states in their thousands and millions, which inevitably leads to conflict.

‘Another is for us to restore blocked cattle routes. Northern governors must reclaim all blocked cattle routes that were blocked for farming expansion and not for development projects. We are optimistic that this will provide herders with the opportunity to move freely between grazing reserves without entering anyone’s farm, which will prevent fighting between the two inseparable brothers.

Hon Khalil also listed enforcement of accountability and justice as another solution, adding: ‘Pastoralists must stop destroying people’s farms and must compensate farmers for any accidental destruction. Similarly, farmers must stop encroaching on grazing reserves and blocking cattle routes.

‘We must also promote dialogue and forgiveness. The cycle of violence must be broken through dialogue. We must apply forgiveness and dialogue to all herders, farmers, and offended Nigerians. The government should also confiscate all guns and weapons from both bandits and vigilante groups.’

Hon Khalil further recommended that affected communities must be empowered. ‘Paying ransom to those who have lost their loved ones, livestock, and businesses is crucial to helping them start a new life.

‘The Livestock Productivity and Resilience Support Project (L-PRES) and the Federal Ministry of Livestock Development should be encouraged and supported by our government to revive the 417 grazing reserves in the country by providing animal feed, water points, and necessary social amenities to keep herders in one place and end their hardship.’

Onumonu bows out of football at 31

Nigeria international Ifeoma Onumonu has brought the curtain down on her playing career, announcing her retirement from professional football at the age of 31, Soccernet.ng reports.

The Super Falcons forward confirmed her decision in an emotional statement on Instagram, reflecting on a journey that began in childhood and stretched across two decades.

‘It is with a heart full of gratitude that I bid farewell to my playing career on the pitch,’ Onumonu wrote.

Born in California, Onumonu fell in love with the game at just eight years old while turning out for a local youth side called Magic.

‘All I wanted to do was run as fast as I could and score,’ she recalled. ‘I didn’t much care about winning or losing; I just loved playing. I loved discovering what my body could do and what I could do with the ball.’

That passion carried her from youth football in the United States to the top of the women’s game.

At club level she played for Montpellier in France and across the National Women’s Soccer League with stints at Portland Thorns, Boston Breakers, Utah Royals, Reign FC and Gotham FC.

Internationally, she committed to Nigeria in 2021, featuring at the Olympics, the FIFA Women’s World Cup, and the Women’s Africa Cup of Nations. She was part of the Falcons’ record-extending 10th continental title win.

‘I had the profound pleasure of lifting an NWSL championship trophy, representing Nigeria at the Olympics and a World Cup, and helping to lift the African Cup of Nations trophy with the Super Falcons for a historic 10th time.’

Kaduna rewards 23 of 115 outstanding teachers with N500,000, scholarships

Kaduna State Government has honoured 23 of the 115 outstanding teachers across its 23 local government areas with ?500,000 cash prizes and certificates of excellence at the maiden Best Teacher Award Ceremony.

The overall best teacher, Esther Affun from Chikun Local Government Area, received an additional ?500,000 and a special scholarship to upgrade her HND to B.Ed, with opportunities to pursue MSc and PhD degrees, courtesy of the state government.

The event, held on Saturday in Kaduna to commemorate the 2025 World Teachers’ Day, was organised with the support of UNICEF and other education partners. It aimed at motivating teachers and celebrating excellence in the teaching profession.

Governor Uba Sani, represented at the event, described teachers as the ‘architects of our future,’ reaffirming his administration’s commitment to investing in quality education. He disclosed that 26.14 per cent of the 2025 state budget was allocated to the education sector, making it one of the highest in the country.

In a further show of commitment, the Executive Secretary of the Kaduna Scholarship and Loans Board, Professor Yahaya Ibrahim, announced that all 115 awardees would benefit from soft loans under the Uba Sani Special Scholarship International Programme, with disbursement set to begin on Monday.

Acting Chairman of the Kaduna State Universal Basic Education Board (KADSUBEB), Alhaji Mubarak Mohammed, described the awards as a ‘defining moment for education in Kaduna,’ noting that the winners emerged through a rigorous process involving TRCN, KADBEAM, KSSQAA, NUT, SBMC, and the Ministry of Education.

He appreciated the support of development and corporate partners including UNICEF, Save the Children, PLANE, Zenith Bank, Nigerian Breweries, and ROOSC, saying their collaboration was vital to sustaining teacher motivation and learning outcomes.

Representing the Emir of Zazzau, the District Head of Kawo, Alhaji Jibril Muhammad Magaji, hailed teachers as the ‘backbone of society,’ stressing that no profession exists without them. He commended the state government for setting a national example in teacher recognition.

Delivering a goodwill message on behalf of Save the Children Nigeria’s Country Director, Mr. Duncan Harvey, Emmanuel Mbursa, Project Director of the Reaching Out-of-School Children Project, commended the initiative and pledged continued support for teacher development and capacity building.

Diana Agabi, PLANE State Team Lead, linked the ceremony to the 2025 World Teachers’ Day theme, ‘Recasting Teachers as a Collaborative Profession,’ urging educators to see the honour as a call to deepen professionalism, collaboration, and innovation. The Kaduna Best Teacher Award, she noted, will now become an annual event to reward excellence and inspire greater impact in classrooms across the state.

Jonathan and Jerry Gana’s categorical imperative

Two Saturdays ago, while exulting over the successful election of new officials for the Niger State chapter of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Jerry Gana, a party chieftain and former Information minister, issued the categorical imperative that Nigerians were disillusioned with the APC and wanted ex-president Goodluck Jonathan back. He didn’t make it a hypothetical imperative. He simply announced to the whole world and his party that the former president would be contesting the 2027 presidential poll on the PDP platform.

Prof. Gana put it elegantly but provocatively: ‘I can confirm that Goodluck Ebele Jonathan will contest the presidential election in 2027 as PDP candidate and you will vote for him to return as President again.PDP has tremendous opportunity in 2027 because it is truly a grassroots party. The people of Nigeria love the PDP because it came with programmes that were people-oriented. That is why they remember PDP immensely, and they are urging us to come back.’

Not only did his party issue a rebuttal the following day through its publicity secretary Debo Ologunagba, they also confirmed that Dr Jonathan was nothing more than one of the options they were contemplating. They may, however, be chasing a chimera, since the footloose Dr Jonathan may in fact be exploring other options. It is unclear that party chieftains who have spent so much to keep the party afloat would casually surrender the nomination to Dr Jonathan who had for years detached himself from the party. To reap where he did not sow would not only violate natural law, it would also fly in the face of Kant’s categorical imperative.

Abia Civil Service Commission debunks selling healthcare workers recruitment exercise

The Abia State government has debunked the news that the state has sold out slots of the ongoing recruitment of health workers in the state.

Rumours making rounds in the state were that some officials of the government had sold out slots of the recruitment to allies and other cronies outside the state.

This is coming on the heels of the statement by the governor of the state, Dr. Alex Otti, during a media chat last week, that even foreigners are interested in working as health personnel in the state.

The chairman, Abia State Civil Service Commission, Pst Eno Jerry Eze, in a statement described the information as fake, adding that the state as part of its moves to promote transparency, adopted the use of a computer-based Test for applications, adding that interviews were meticulously designed to eliminate biased by ensuring that the best and most qualified candidates were selected for available positions.

The Abia State Civil Service Commission chairman, while assuring the commitment of the commission to openness and transparency in the recruitment of the health workers encouraged anyone with verifiable information about potential infractions or attempts to misrepresent the Commission to report it immediately.

Eno said ‘The Abia State Civil Service Commission is compelled to address a recent publication alleging the sale of slots in the ongoing healthcare workers recruitment process. We wish to assure Abians that these allegations are baseless and unfounded.

‘The Commission has implemented a robust recruitment process that integrates technology and global HR standards, ensuring transparency, fairness, and meritocracy at every stage.

‘The application, Computer-Based Test (CBT) and interview processes have been meticulously designed to eliminate biases and ensure that only the best and most qualified candidates are selected for the available positions.

‘This process has received continuous praise from candidates and stakeholders, who acknowledge that it sets a new precedent in the public sector for its integrity.

‘We want to assure Abians that, just as with the Computer-Based Tests, the final results of the recruitment process, along with candidates’ documentation status, will be publicly published on the official recruitment portal.

‘This commitment to openness leaves absolutely no room for manipulation or alteration.

‘The Abia State Civil Service Commission is resolute in maintaining the highest standards of integrity and transparency throughout this process.

‘We urge all stakeholders to remain confident in our ability to deliver a fair and merit-based recruitment exercise.

‘We strongly encourage anyone with verifiable information about potential infractions or attempts to misrepresent the Commission to report it immediately through this link: https shorturi at EonF3.

‘We assure all stakeholders that these reports will be thoroughly investigated, and decisive, appropriate actions will be taken against any confirmed breaches.

‘The Abia State Civil Service Commission remains dedicated to ensuring that the recruitment process is conducted with the utmost integrity to build a highly competent and professional healthcare workforce for the state.’

Governor Otti, represented by the Commissioner for Health, Professor Enoch Ogbonnaya Uche, regretted that many women have lost their lives due to uncontrolled complications at the traditional birth attendants, saying that, his administration is intentional about the lives of the people, especially the mother and child, hence his government embarked on the retrofitting of 200 PHCs across all the wards in the state.

He reiterated his resolve to take decisive action against operators of such traditional birth attendants to safeguard the lives of expectant mothers.

He urged community leaders to take ownership of the facility.

The governor disclosed that the state government would also build staff quarters for health workers and encouraged residents to make full use of the centre.

He later conducted a tour of the facility with the State Director of Orientation Agency, Mrs. Ure Abazie, and the traditional ruler of Ohiya, Eze Abel Uhuegbu.

He informed that the centre is equipped with modern facilities including an automatic external defibrillator, radiant warmer, vital signs monitor for pregnant women, ultrasound, parameter machine, weighing scale, general laboratory, and auto analyser among others.

Also speaking, the Mayor of Umuahia South LGA, Engineer Chinedu Enwereuzo, expressed gratitude to Governor Alex Otti for embarking on life-touching projects, describing the projects as a true sign of love for the people.

He urged the Ohiya traditional ruler to ensure the protection of the equipment and called on the community to reciprocate the governor’s gesture at the appropriate time.

He also commended the state for giving health proper attention and encouraged Abians to obtain their Permanent Voter Cards to strengthen their civic responsibility.

Speaking with journalists, the Director General of the Abia State Orientation Agency, Ure Abazie, lauded Governor Otti and the Ministry of Health for prioritising the well-being of Abians.

Human rights artists deserve awards

Adeyinka Akinwande’s desire for activism may have started from school, but it was fully showcased during the June 12 struggle. The singer and dramatist consider himself a hero of June 12, among many other artists, while speaking on President Bola Tinubu’s recent honours for heroes of June 12.

He said: ‘I totally agree with the honour. But many other people who fought are not honoured. Many of them are gone, many still living. The honour should not be only those in politics or people who are loyal to a party. Gbenga Adewusi got his place of business destroyed because of June 12. His office at Idumota was set Ablaze. I was among those who worked with him during the production of ‘Babanginda Must Go’.

‘Late Fuji exponent, Chief Sikiru Ayinde Barrister should also be honoured, dead, or alive. He was fearless. Dr Orlando Owoh was fearless. I was working with Dr. Sikiru during the June 12 struggle as one of the production crews at that period. The songs he made were straight and direct. During one of the studio sessions, his set drummer, Mufu Lanihun, was beginning to roll drums and play the kick drum in a dancing style. Barrister warned him to stop. He said it did not align with the mood of Nigeria at that time. We were working on ‘Prophecy.’ I asked him if he wasn’t troubled after State Security invited him but later let him go. After that, he made another and another. He didn’t stop. We know many people who were two-faced at the time. Orlando Owoh sang, ‘Na democracy we want’ during the deadly Abacha reign. Such people should be honoured for their contributions to the well-being of the country and to entertainment in general.

‘Barrister was already a sick man, Orlando himself was sick. Even then, they did not compromise. They worked day and night to produce those songs. I was there when Alhaji Sikiru burst into tears during a studio session because he was having a lot of pain. His feet were swollen, his voice was unstable. Orlando just survived a partial stroke, he was lean and coughing. He often cleared his throat, even then he didn’t stop producing protest songs against the wicked men in uniform.’

‘For example, Paul McCartney is a Knight. Anthony Joshua is an MBE. If Victor Osimhen and other footballers and athletes could be honoured, why not look into the entertainment industry and give kudos to them too. The same Babangida who turned Nigeria upside down at the time is being highly praised as a national treasure now. We didn’t fight for Abiola, we fought for Nigeria, our right because in all honesty, Abiola was not clean.’

‘After we produced ‘Babangida must go,’ the late ewi (poem) exponent Adewusi also did ‘Ologini tajode’, produced by Julie king and Julius Olagoroye. Adewusi mentioned the names of those who worked on the poem. Then we heard that the State Security was looking for us, I also worked in the production of the protest poems released by Kunle Ologundudu. Those were risky periods for anyone to be involved in activities against those wicked guys in power. We raised our voices; put our talents together to cry out against injustices and oppression. The state security was looking for us, and we were informed that they visited Afrodisia studios where the ewi was recorded and made enquiries. Gbenga Adewusi fled. Some people said he was in Benin Republic. Those of us who were too young, we were just living under the grace of God just like most Nigerians were. Later, Gbenga Adewusi appeared with some kind of long beard that covered almost his entire face because he was disguising.’

‘I know many musicians who were visiting Aso Rock to perform every weekend or those who were lobbying for contracts. Felix Lebarty converted to Islam, and he changed his name. Generally, people in the entertainment industry are not honoured in our country. Another example is Laolu Akins. Alade Aromire who made the first indigenous home video drama,’Aje’niyami’

‘For Abiola, we exercise our rights. We were denied our rights and we protested. Many were killed. In fact, those who died in their homes were many due to stray bullets. June 12 should be a reminder to the many souls that were lost; innocent souls, students who were killed during protests at school. Now the country has forgotten about them. A young girl was killed inside her home by a stray bullet.’

Akinwande is also mentoring youths in the area of talent development.

‘I have always been working with the youths to develop their talents in religious and non-religious areas. I did ‘A Day of Unity’ in the United Kingdom, bringing the different tribes together for dinner. I organised a prayer service with the Church of England to pray for Nigeria and its people. I arranged for the youths to sing and pray for Nigeria. It is titled, ‘Nigeria by Adeyinka Akinwande and the Youth Fellowship. Now I am preparing to work with some Muslim Youths to encourage them to record a song.’

High point of Nigeria’s participation at UNGA 80

A major human foible is the tendency to pursue symbolism at the expense of substance. It is not a particularly Nigerian flaw. But the desperation that has characterised our politics, especially amongst the opposition, often makes it seem so.

An example is the criticism of President Bola Tinubu’s inability to personally attend the recently concluded 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA 80).

Meetings are memorable, not just for the faces present, but also for the things said. Those who take unnecessary umbrage should look for something else to do with their time.

The point should not be about the President’s presence or absence at the UNGA annual global event; it should be about the content, the quality of the country’s national statement, and the President’s message at that extraordinary gathering of world leaders.

Held under the theme, ‘Global Partnerships, Local Prosperity,’ this year’s session of the United Nations provided a platform for Nigeria’s leaders to promote reforms, woo investors, and assert Africa’s place in global decision-making, international finance, and trade.

Vice President Kashim Shettima led the Federal Government delegation to the talks. As he did last year at the behest of President Tinubu, the vice president was in his best elements as he delivered Nigeria’s national statement on Wednesday, September 24, on that global platform.

In that national statement, President Tinubu restated his advocacy over which he had been vocal and consistent: reform of the world body to include a permanent seat for Africa, particularly Nigeria, at the UN Security Council; nuclear disarmament; equitable access to global trade and finance; debt forgiveness; and climate justice, among others.

President Tinubu is passionate about these issues and never misses any opportunity to highlight them. The President has utilised every forum, including the 78th UNGA, which he attended a few months after his inauguration in 2023, and the Conference of the Parties (COP28) in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, in 2024, to advocate for these demands strongly. He restated them in the message delivered by Vice President Shettima in 2024 at the 79th session of UNGA and in his message to a meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement in 2024 in Kampala, Uganda, among others.

President Tinubu must underscore these issues repeatedly in a bid to promote global peace, stability, and economic growth. The continental imbalance in representation at the UN, the imbalance in international trade among the regions, the Israeli genocide in Gaza, wars and threats of war in some parts of the world, among other agonising global issues, deserve to be stated, restated, and frontally tackled.

Delivering Nigeria’s national statement, Vice President Shettima said, ‘We are here to strengthen the prospect for peace, development, and human rights. Madam President, I would like to make four points today to outline how we can achieve this. First, Nigeria must have a permanent seat at the UN Security Council. This should take place as part of a wider process of institutional reform. Second, we need urgent action to promote sovereign debt relief and access to trade and financing. Third, the countries that host minerals must benefit from those minerals. And fourth, the digital divide must close. As our Presidential Secretary-General has said, AI must stand for Africa Included.’

Expatiating on this, he said the United Nations would recover its relevance only when it reflects the world as it is, not as it was. ‘Nigeria’s journey tells this story with clarity. When the UN was founded, we were a colony of 20 million people, absent from the tables where decisions about our fate were taken. Today, we are a sovereign nation of 236 million people, projected to be the third most populous country in the world, with one of the youngest and most dynamic populations on Earth, a stabilising force in regional security, and a consistent partner in global peace-making.’

The Vice President followed up his presentation with a meeting with the UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, where he further reiterated the demands.

Given the UN Secretary-General’s temperament and positive posture towards reforms, Nigeria’s demands must have struck a resonant chord. Elected Secretary-General in October 2016, succeeding Ban Ki-moon, Guterres reformed the UN and addressed multiple global refugee crises.

On the sidelines of the 80th UN session, Vice President Shettima addressed a Global Champions Roundtable on Housing, led bilateral talks with investors on agriculture, solid minerals, and technology, and engaged with Nigerians living in the United States.

Two other important side events, among others, took place on the sidelines of UNGA 80 leaders’ talks. One was put together by the Minister of Trade and Investment, Dr Jumoke Oduwole, to showcase investment opportunities in Nigeria and demonstrate that the country is ready for business.

The other, the 2nd Africa Minerals Strategy Group (AMSG) High-Level Roundtable on Critical Minerals Development in Africa, which Nigeria’s Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dr Dele Alake, chaired, stood out this year.

The vice president attended both events and delivered important statements on behalf of President Tinubu.

At the first event, the consensus was that Nigeria has become one of the best places to invest, given its reform momentum and investment profile-namely, a large consumer market of over 200 million people, an over $280 billion economy, the largest in West Africa, and a 4.23% GDP growth rate that is still accelerating, among other things.

President Tinubu, in a message delivered by VP Shettima, canvassed a total re-drawing of the global financial architecture for Africa’s mineral resources, saying it was time for its nations to begin not only financing their mineral sector but also asserting their influence and power in the global supply chains of African products.

According to the President, this has become necessary if the sovereignty of African nations is to be protected. He recommended collective action by development allies and partners to bring Africa’s mineral economy to reality for the benefit of the continent and its people.

It was just as imperative for Alake, Solid Minerals’ minister and AMSG’s chair. He called for cohesion among African nations, saying that with a determined focus and a reinvigorated sense of partnership and transparency in the minerals sector, Africa will harness the benefits of a sustained, deepened, and well-harmonised mineral sector in all ramifications. ‘These resources are indispensable for global sustainable development and remain catalysts for Africa’s rapid industrialisation,’ he said.

Indeed, from the intermittent applause that greeted the delivery of Nigeria’s national statement on the floor of the UN General Assembly and the overwhelmingly favourable response to the country’s presentations and positions on issues canvassed at the side events held on the margins of the conference, there was little doubt that Nigeria’s messages resonated well at UNGA 80. That is indeed what matters, not whether President Tinubu physically attended.

-Rahman is Senior Special Assistant to President Tinubu on Media and Special Duties.

Kwara killings: AbdulRazaq, Saraki in verbal war

Kwara State governor Abdulraman AbdulRazaq and opposition Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state are at each other’s throat over the current security challenges in the state.

While the governor traced current insecurity in parts of the state to bloody 2018 Offa robbery, the PDP said equating Offa robbery to the current situation amounted to executive cluelessness, asking AbdulRazaq to face his responsibility as the governor.

ý The PDP in the state had last Monday accused AbdulRazaq of failing to confront the escalating banditry crisis in the state.

The comment came on the heels of last Sunday’s deadly attack in Oke-Ode, Ifelodun Local Government Area, which left several residents and vigilante members dead.

The opposition party, in a statement signed by its Publicity Secretary, Olusegun Olusola Adewara, described the massacre as ‘a despicable and senseless act’ that had thrown the state into mourning, blaming the governor for what it called ‘monumental leadership failure.’

‘The gruesome videos of the casualties circulating online make it look like Kwara is now at war. Under AbdulRahman’s watch, terror is reigning, kidnappers are taking over rural villages, and nowhere is safe again.’

ýReacting to the remark at the weekend, Special Adviser to Governor AbdulRazaq on Media, Bashir Adigun, said: ‘The attention of Kwara State Government has been drawn to yet another uncouth, unintelligent, and desperate statement by the tattered opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), attempting to ‘trivialise the blood-soaked tragedy of the 2018 Offa robbery while trying to whitewash the dark legacy of 16 years of PDP misrule in Kwara.

‘Offa robbery was not just ‘a single bank robbery,’ as they arrogantly described it.

‘It was a national tragedy that claimed dozens of innocent lives, including mothers, fathers, students, children, and uniformed law enforcement officers, whose blood was spilled by criminals that had undeniable links with their political godfather.

ý’Kwarans have not forgotten that the RX Toyota mini-SUV used by the robbers bore the personalised plate number with Saraki’s name, and that the said vehicle was later hidden in a government ministry to evade justice.

ý’The PDP’s attempt to separate their bloody legacy from today’s security challenges is laughable.

‘This is the same party under which Kwara was turned into a theatre of fear, sorrow, cultism, and gangsterism-when so-called ‘Good Boys’ and political thugs unleashed terror on Ilorin residents and rural communities.’

For 16 years, he said, Kwara was a fiefdom under the Pharaoh-like grip of Saraki, until the people rose in a revolution in 2019 to reclaim their freedom.

ý’Governor AbdulRazaq has never shied away from acknowledging the nationwide challenge of banditry and insecurity. But Kwarans are wise enough to know that those who laid the foundation of bloodletting, impunity, and armed thuggery in this state cannot turn around today to pontificate about security.

ý’The PDP should cover its face in shame instead of attacking a Governor who, within six years, has rebuilt schools, upgraded hospitals, opened up rural roads, empowered women and youths, and given Kwarans a new lease of freedom and dignity.’

ýReacting, the Abubakar Bukola Saraki Media Office took a swipe at the Kwara Sate governor.

The head of the media team, Yusuph Olaniyonu, in a statement signed by him, said: ‘Our attention had been drawn to the video clip of the statement made by Kwara State Governor, Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq during his belated visit to Oke Ode where bandits recently killed 21 innocent persons in another episode in the series of violent attacks that have become daily occurrences across the Kwara South and North Senatorial Districts.

‘In a reckless manner that put on display his usual clueless and weird way of responding to issues, Abdulrazaq equated the frequent attack by bandits ravaging two of the three senatorial districts in the state with the Offa robbery incident and made false, defamatory, and irresponsible insinuations about former Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki concerning the sad event that happened seven years ago.

‘Our view is that it is either insensitivity or a lack of capacity to appreciate and process issues that will make a governor equate the widespread killing, kidnapping, and maiming of people across two of the three senatorial districts with a robbery incident.

‘The state of insecurity has forced residents of over 50 communities in the two senatorial districts to abandon their homesteads and relocate to Ilorin or leave the state entirely.’

Continuing, he said: ‘If Dr. Saraki called the attention of the state governor and the entire government to the widespread violence against the people and called for action from federal agencies, it amounted to dereliction of duty, lack of valid appreciation of the plight of the people, and total disregard for the safety of the constituents for the governor to resort to throwing tantrums and blackmail over an unrelated incident that has nothing to do with the former Senate President.

‘This Office believes Dr. Saraki has achieved his objective if his statement has led to national attention being paid to the killings in Kwara State.

‘Also, Dr. Saraki’s speech had eventually compelled the governor to pay a visit to Oke Ode, one of the many towns that have witnessed killings, kidnappings, and maiming of innocent people.

‘The handling of the security situation has proven Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq to be an incompetent, insensitive, irresponsible, clueless, and unresponsive governor.

‘Using the words of the governor, ‘it is laughable’ that a state governor whose state experienced the killing of 21 people in just one community with many others being killed in other communities waited for five days before visiting the affected town while he had the time to junket to another state outside his zone to rejoice with another governor in faraway Imo State who was commissioning projects for the benefit of his people.’

Olaniyonu said ‘now that he has been compelled to visit Oke Ode to assess the situation on the ground, we would like to know when he will visit other local government areas in the state like Edu, Patigi, Isin, Irepodun, Oke Ero, and other towns in Ifelodun that have been witnessing incessant attacks by the bandits.

‘Again, using Abdulrazaq’s words, ‘it is also laughable’ that after six and a half years as governor, one could count on the fingertips how many times the Kwara State Governor called a security council meeting in the state.

‘Dr. Saraki’s advice is that the governor needs to expand the membership of the Security Council to include all first and second class traditional rulers so as to engage them in fighting the menace.

‘If he fails to tackle the crisis squarely, it will define his eight years in office and this will be a horrible legacy to bequeath to his successor.’

Olaniyonu further said the governor made ‘reckless insinuations against Dr. Saraki because the former Senate President called him out on his failure to do his job.

‘We wonder what he would do to the Governors of the Southwest states who were reported in yesterday’s edition of the Punch Newspaper to have ‘Tighten Borders Amid Banditry Surge in Kwara’.

‘We also expect Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq to descend on the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Abimbola Akeem Owoade who has expressed concern over the recent killings in Oke Ode.

‘Dr. Saraki is not interested in bandying words with the Kwara State Governor. His call is meant to get the governor to show more empathy for the plight of the people and live up to his responsibility as the state’s chief security officer.

‘It is obvious that never in the history of Kwara State has the State of Harmony witnessed this level of insecurity which is also being fueled by the insensitivity of the government of the day.

‘Like Dr. Saraki stated in his speech in Ilorin on September 27, 2025, we challenge anybody who has a contrary claim that there was any time in the past that Kwara State had been this unsafe and confronted by the threat to lives and property at this level to come up with the evidence.’

Speaking on the Offa robbery case which the governor brought up in the video under reference, Olaniyonu said: ‘The Abubakar Bukola Saraki Media Office would like to put on record for the benefit of the members of the public that Dr. Saraki has nothing to do with the Offa robbery incident.

‘This is a fact known to the powers that be then. It was also confirmed by the legal machinery of the federal government despite their hostility to the person and office that Dr. Saraki occupied at the time.

‘In two separate reports dated 22nd June, 2018, and 23rd August, 2018 respectively, the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP) of the Federation, in the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed U. E. stated that there was no evidence directly or indirectly linking Dr. Saraki to the Offa robbery.

‘We know that the Kwara State Governor will not only find it difficult to comprehend the contents of such reports, but he will also not believe the fact that one of the planks of the campaign of calumny which propelled him to the Governor’s Office has since collapsed like a pack of cards.’

In the video clip under reference, Olaniyonu said, ‘Abdulrazaq gave himself out on his dubious move that we have known all the while.

‘We knew that he had induced some family members of victims of the Offa robbery to file a civil case in court against the state government, himself as governor, and join Dr. Saraki as a party as a way of further embarrassing the former Senate President.

‘The fact is not lost on us that the lawyer defending the aide of the governor, Michael Yinka Fafoluyi, in a libel case filed by Dr. Saraki is also the same lawyer who has been briefed to handle the case filed on behalf of the so-called selected families of Offa robbery victims.

‘We also called the attention of members of the public to the press conference by some members of the Offa community under the platform of ‘Offa Koya, Offa Kowosi’ where they distanced the community from the dirty politics of using an unfortunate robbery incident as a tool of blackmail and smear campaign.’

He emphasised that some members of the families of the victims of the Offa robbery represented by Alhaji Abdul Oseni Aditu Eniolohunopa, Hajia Mulikat Jimoh, and Mrs. Danjuma Comfort on August 17, 2025, spoke on a radio Programme at the TNT Radio Station, Offa, where they publicly dissociated themselves from the malicious case in court and warned politicians to ‘stop seeking to score cheap political points at the expense of their grief’.

‘We would like the governor to know that if this slanderous and ridiculous statement he made at Oke Ode is his way of diverting attention from his failure to live up to his responsibility as the chief security officer of our dear state, then he has failed.’

The Abubakar Bukola Saraki Media Office advised Abdulrazaq to stop politicising the unfortunate plight of the victims of the Offa robbery and their families.

‘His devious scheme and dirty politics have delayed getting justice and closure for the victims, their families, and the Offa community,’ he said.

2nd Annual Charity Cup empowers youths, vulnerable

Founder of Nonso Ezeagu Foundation (NEF), organizer of the Annual Charity Cup, Nonso Ezeagu says the annual football tournament is aimed at empowering the youths and the vulnerable.

Ezeagu stresses that the rationale behind the annual tournament was to unite the youths, and to keep them off the streets and out of crime.

‘As we all know, football has the potentials of uniting communities, even when you may have had quarrel with people, but once its football time, all the acrimony would easily be forgotten, and you will see the same people discussing and analyzing football together,’ He averred.

The CEO noted that he was motivated into giving back to the society from what God has blessed him with, adding that it was also a way of saying thank you to the Almighty who has provided all the resources.

Ezeagu expressed that some of his class friends and family have supported in making this year’s edition a reality, saying that he is also grateful to the Mayor of Aguata LGA, who out of his ver busy schedule, carved out time to grace the occasion.

On his part, the Mayor of Aguata Local Government Area, Dr. Chibueze Oforbuike, who declared the tournament open, commended NEF for the huge resources expended in putting smiles on the faces of people, notwithstanding the current economic realities.