• https://guardian.ng/politics/dont-play-second-fiddle-lead-tinubus-re-election-bid-kalu-tells-southeast/
    https://guardian.ng/politics/dont-play-second-fiddle-lead-tinubus-re-election-bid-kalu-tells-southeast/
    GUARDIAN.NG
    Don’t play second fiddle, lead Tinubu’s re-election bid, Kalu tells Southeast
    Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Benjamin Kalu, has tasked the South East geopolitical zone not to engage in second fiddle politics in 2027 but to drive the re-election of President Bola Tinubu in 2027 and thus position itself to reap more benefits from his administration, positing that the time was over for just token support to Tinubu's-led federal government.
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  • Bauchi governor Bala Mohammed appoints 168 new political aides... #Aidee #News #Politics
    Bauchi governor Bala Mohammed appoints 168 new political aides... #Aidee #News #Politics
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    Okowa expresses regret over being Atiku’s running mate, says ‘I should have gone with my people’... #Aidee #News #Politics
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  • The Role of Inter-regional Parliamentary Dialogues in Enhancing Economic Integration and Shared Development Among Global South Countries – With a Focus on Nigeria’s Interventions.

    A Presentation by me at the South-South Parliamentary Dialogue Forum in Rabat, Morrocco, today 28th April, 2025

    In a world gripped by shifting tides and emerging uncertainties, the Global South stands at a crossroads—not of decline, but of destiny. We are not the periphery of history; we are its next great chapter.

    Bound by shared struggles yet endowed with unparalleled potential, the nations of the Global South must now move from dreams to deeds, from promises to partnerships.

    Today, we gather with the purpose to write a new story of integration, development, and shared prosperity. Our faith is anchored in the belief that dialogue can be our destiny. Our intent is fueled by the conviction that legislative collaboration can be the engine of transformation.

    Let us forge bonds that are stronger than geography, let us shape policies that are larger than politics, and let us build a future brighter than the past. Through sustained interregional parliamentary dialogue, we can be the architects of a new era—an era where no nation is too small to matter, and no dream too bold to pursue.

    Opening Context

    The Global South must respond to economic and geopolitical challenges through collaboration, not isolation.

    Interregional parliamentary dialogue is a vital instrument for synchronizing trade policies, legal frameworks, and institutional cooperation.

    Core Arguments

    Parliamentary Diplomacy as a Tool: No longer a passive extension of foreign policy, but central to economic integration, conflict resolution, and sustainable development.

    Existing Platforms:

    Institutions like the Pan-African Parliament, PARLATINO, ASEAN IPA, and BRICS Parliamentary Forum are effective models of regional legislative cooperation.

    Nigeria’s Strategic Interventions
    Pan-African Parliament: Advocating AfCFTA and shaping trade, customs, and digital laws.

    ECOWAS Parliament Leadership: Driving initiatives like the regional electricity market, ECO currency, and infrastructure financing.

    Bilateral & Multilateral Legislative Exchanges: Partnerships with Brazil, India, South Africa in agriculture, education, climate action.

    Peace through Parliamentary Diplomacy: Addressing conflict in Sahel and Lake Chad regions.

    Digital Legislative Transformation: Embracing virtual forums and e-governance to increase participation and transparency.

    Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) Reforms: Attracting regional/international investment in transport, housing, energy.

    Climate Advocacy: Supporting clean energy laws, sustainable development, and contributing to Africa’s climate negotiation stance.

    Proposing a South-South Legislative Council: Institutionalizing collaboration across Africa, Asia, Latin America, Caribbean.

    The Way Forward
    Deepen and digitize legislative collaborations.

    Build capacity and inclusive frameworks for sustained engagement.

    Integrate AI, green industrialization, and autonomous financial systems for future-readiness.

    Final Thoughts

    Economic integration among Global South nations must be intentional—legislated, negotiated, institutionalized.

    Nigeria is committed to leading and uniting for a shared future of the Global South.

    Conclusion:

    Let history record that when the Global South stood at the crossroads of uncertainty and opportunity, we chose unity over isolation, collaboration over complacency, and purpose over despair. Let it be said that through the bridges we built with dialogue and the laws we crafted with vision, we unlocked the gates of shared prosperity for generations yet unborn.

    The future we seek is not a distant hope—it is a living possibility, shaped by our courage, our convictions, and our collective will.

    Together, through the power of parliamentary cooperation, we will not merely witness change; we will be the architects of it.

    My sincere thanks to everyone for your kind attention. God bless us.
    The Role of Inter-regional Parliamentary Dialogues in Enhancing Economic Integration and Shared Development Among Global South Countries – With a Focus on Nigeria’s Interventions. A Presentation by me at the South-South Parliamentary Dialogue Forum in Rabat, Morrocco, today 28th April, 2025 In a world gripped by shifting tides and emerging uncertainties, the Global South stands at a crossroads—not of decline, but of destiny. We are not the periphery of history; we are its next great chapter. Bound by shared struggles yet endowed with unparalleled potential, the nations of the Global South must now move from dreams to deeds, from promises to partnerships. Today, we gather with the purpose to write a new story of integration, development, and shared prosperity. Our faith is anchored in the belief that dialogue can be our destiny. Our intent is fueled by the conviction that legislative collaboration can be the engine of transformation. Let us forge bonds that are stronger than geography, let us shape policies that are larger than politics, and let us build a future brighter than the past. Through sustained interregional parliamentary dialogue, we can be the architects of a new era—an era where no nation is too small to matter, and no dream too bold to pursue. Opening Context The Global South must respond to economic and geopolitical challenges through collaboration, not isolation. Interregional parliamentary dialogue is a vital instrument for synchronizing trade policies, legal frameworks, and institutional cooperation. Core Arguments Parliamentary Diplomacy as a Tool: No longer a passive extension of foreign policy, but central to economic integration, conflict resolution, and sustainable development. Existing Platforms: Institutions like the Pan-African Parliament, PARLATINO, ASEAN IPA, and BRICS Parliamentary Forum are effective models of regional legislative cooperation. Nigeria’s Strategic Interventions Pan-African Parliament: Advocating AfCFTA and shaping trade, customs, and digital laws. ECOWAS Parliament Leadership: Driving initiatives like the regional electricity market, ECO currency, and infrastructure financing. Bilateral & Multilateral Legislative Exchanges: Partnerships with Brazil, India, South Africa in agriculture, education, climate action. Peace through Parliamentary Diplomacy: Addressing conflict in Sahel and Lake Chad regions. Digital Legislative Transformation: Embracing virtual forums and e-governance to increase participation and transparency. Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) Reforms: Attracting regional/international investment in transport, housing, energy. Climate Advocacy: Supporting clean energy laws, sustainable development, and contributing to Africa’s climate negotiation stance. Proposing a South-South Legislative Council: Institutionalizing collaboration across Africa, Asia, Latin America, Caribbean. The Way Forward Deepen and digitize legislative collaborations. Build capacity and inclusive frameworks for sustained engagement. Integrate AI, green industrialization, and autonomous financial systems for future-readiness. Final Thoughts Economic integration among Global South nations must be intentional—legislated, negotiated, institutionalized. Nigeria is committed to leading and uniting for a shared future of the Global South. Conclusion: Let history record that when the Global South stood at the crossroads of uncertainty and opportunity, we chose unity over isolation, collaboration over complacency, and purpose over despair. Let it be said that through the bridges we built with dialogue and the laws we crafted with vision, we unlocked the gates of shared prosperity for generations yet unborn. The future we seek is not a distant hope—it is a living possibility, shaped by our courage, our convictions, and our collective will. Together, through the power of parliamentary cooperation, we will not merely witness change; we will be the architects of it. My sincere thanks to everyone for your kind attention. God bless us.
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  • Massive crowd as 10 governors, Ganduje, Shettima and others storm Delta to welcome Oborevwori, Okowa to APC... #Aidee #News #Breakingnews #Politics
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  • https://guardian.ng/politics/presidency-civil-society-clash-over-tinubus-alleged-one-party-state-agenda/
    https://guardian.ng/politics/presidency-civil-society-clash-over-tinubus-alleged-one-party-state-agenda/
    GUARDIAN.NG
    Presidency, civil society clash over Tinubu’s alleged one-party state agenda
    The Presidency and a coalition of civil society advocates differed yesterday over allegations that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration was making subtle moves to undermine democracy.
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  • https://guardian.ng/politics/destroying-pdp-would-collapse-opposition-democracy-in-nigeria-lamido-warns/
    https://guardian.ng/politics/destroying-pdp-would-collapse-opposition-democracy-in-nigeria-lamido-warns/
    GUARDIAN.NG
    Destroying PDP would collapse opposition, democracy in Nigeria, Lamido warns
    Former Jigawa State Governor and stalwart of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Sule Lamido, has warned against the ongoing efforts to undermine Nigeria’s main opposition party
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  • PEOPLE AND POLITICS
    With
    *Ochereome Nnanna,* Wednesday, 23rd April 2025

    *FULANI EXPANSION WAR, A FEDERAL GOVT PET*

    Before his sudden, mysterious death, former Head of State, General Sani Abacha left us with an enduring, prophetic soundbite. He said: “If an insurgency lasts for more than 24 hours, then, know that government has a hand in it”. Way back on 8th May 2014, The Cable newspaper published a retweet of the late General’s daughter, Ms Gumsu Abacha, quoting exactly the same one-liner in response to Boko Haram “exploits”.

    What would you say of the Fulani expansionism “insurgency” which has lasted 25 years? By “federal”, I do not necessarily mean the President Bola Tinubu administration, though it is also complicit as will be shown shortly. “Federal” here means the machinery of the Nigerian State, the ruling Establishment or dispensation, the power that be which produces and dictates to successive Federal Governments.

    Since 1999, this power dispensing machine has produced five presidents – Olusegun Obasanjo, Umar Yar’ Adua, Goodluck Jonathan, Muhammadu Buhari and Tinubu, always making sure it does not fall into “wrong” hands. Only such mechanism could enact the magic of making Obasanjo president from jail, ensuring that no Northern candidate would stand against him. To the best of my knowledge, the Fulani wars of conquest started around 2001 in the Plateau area. Armed Fulani “herdsmen” were routinely massacring the indigenes to take over their fertile farmlands. The military, police, security and what have you, have failed to stop them despite several eye-service deployments.

    But when the Tarokh people armed themselves and retaliated in May 2004, President Obasanjo declared a state of emergency and removed PDP Governor, Joshua Dariye, who was seen as encouraging his indigenous people to defend themselves. What did Dariye do later? He joined Muhammadu Buhari’s APC and helped the party capture the state in 2015. Buhari pardoned and released him from his 14-year jail conviction for stealing N2bn. Dariye could not beat them. He joined them, and was rewarded by Buhari himself, just as Adams Oshiomhole had promised all looters who join APC.

    Lionhearted governors who were crushed became a lesson to others. Fight the State and pay for it; collude with the State against your people and be rewarded. When you see Governor Monday Okpebholo of Edo State running kitikiti-katakata to lick the toes of fellow governors from the North over the Uromi lynching, you know the fear the State exerts over occupants of powerful or lucrative positions.

    When Buhari came to power in 2015, he saw himself as the Nigerian variant of Omar Al Bashir of Sudan, who armed Arab pastoralist militia, the Janjaweed, to conquer and annex the lands of black Sudanese, thus sparking the Darfur crises. Buhari was determined to make Nigeria the new home of his Fulani kinsmen from everywhere. He tried to enforce his Ruga, grazing routes, water resources and Livestock Plan policies throughout the country, but these were stiffly resisted. Buhari then threw open the borders for armed Fulani and their families, especially the nomads from everywhere, to relocate to Nigeria.

    During the Covid-19 lockdowns, he and his powerful kinsmen used food and cement trailers and trucks to distribute armed Fulani youths in forests all over the Middle Belt and Southern states. It was clearly a well-organised operation aimed at forcefully grafting alien, violent Fulani elements among unwilling indigenous communities. They were camped in the forests where they killed people in their farms and harvested organs for sale. They kidnapped for ransom and used livestock to destroy farms. They flushed people out of their ancestral lands and occupied communities.

    The Federal Government and its organs of security and coercion protected them from those seeking to defend themselves. They were promptly released when arrested by vigilante groups and handed over to the supposed law enforcement agencies. Government and (unfortunately, sections of the media) deceived the public, calling attacks on innocent Nigerian farming communities “farmers-herders clashes”. Government kept promising displaced people they would be restored to their ancestral lands but have now become permanent occupants of Internally-Displaced Persons (IDP) camps. The invaders are settling down and renaming conquered communities.

    Federal Government refused to even acknowledge Fulani invaders as terrorists. Instead, they turned around to falsely slap that moniker on the Eastern Security Network (ESN) formed by the concerned diaspora Igbo through Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), to defend Igboland.

    When Tinubu mysteriously won the 2023 presidential election, I consoled myself that Buhari the Fulaniser was out and Tinubu, being a Southerner, would check the Fulanisation agenda. It has also been wreaking even more havoc in the South West, Tinubu’s home zone. But we were in for a shock. After initially arresting and detaining Bello Bodejo, the leader of the loquacious and violent Miyetti Allah Kyautal Hore, Tinubu quickly released him when the Fulani elite threatened him. He even went ahead to create Federal Ministry of Livestock to appease them, thus fully resuscitating Buhari’s Fulanisation agenda.

    Tinubu holds on to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu even after releasing Fulani’s Bodejo and Sunday Igboho of Yoruba Nation. Under Tinubu, the cuddling of Fulani herdsmen terrorism continues unabated, and so do the endless barrages of meaningless condolence messages and empty promises. The entire landscape is filled with cowardly governors and political leaders who sell out their people for political power and lucrative posts. At this rate, the indigenous people of Nigeria are doomed.

    Retired Lt-General Theophilus Danjuma warned before (and has just repeated the warning) that the Government is an enhancer of Fulani expansionism. “They collude”, he says. “They will not protect you! Arm and protect yourselves”. Danjuma, a hero of the Nigerian side of the civil war, has written off the armed forces he once served and led. Who are we to believe otherwise? Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, IPOB and ESN have once again been vindicated, even by Danjuma!

    Self-defence is the first law of nature. The ball is in our court.
    PEOPLE AND POLITICS With *Ochereome Nnanna,* Wednesday, 23rd April 2025 *FULANI EXPANSION WAR, A FEDERAL GOVT PET* Before his sudden, mysterious death, former Head of State, General Sani Abacha left us with an enduring, prophetic soundbite. He said: “If an insurgency lasts for more than 24 hours, then, know that government has a hand in it”. Way back on 8th May 2014, The Cable newspaper published a retweet of the late General’s daughter, Ms Gumsu Abacha, quoting exactly the same one-liner in response to Boko Haram “exploits”. What would you say of the Fulani expansionism “insurgency” which has lasted 25 years? By “federal”, I do not necessarily mean the President Bola Tinubu administration, though it is also complicit as will be shown shortly. “Federal” here means the machinery of the Nigerian State, the ruling Establishment or dispensation, the power that be which produces and dictates to successive Federal Governments. Since 1999, this power dispensing machine has produced five presidents – Olusegun Obasanjo, Umar Yar’ Adua, Goodluck Jonathan, Muhammadu Buhari and Tinubu, always making sure it does not fall into “wrong” hands. Only such mechanism could enact the magic of making Obasanjo president from jail, ensuring that no Northern candidate would stand against him. To the best of my knowledge, the Fulani wars of conquest started around 2001 in the Plateau area. Armed Fulani “herdsmen” were routinely massacring the indigenes to take over their fertile farmlands. The military, police, security and what have you, have failed to stop them despite several eye-service deployments. But when the Tarokh people armed themselves and retaliated in May 2004, President Obasanjo declared a state of emergency and removed PDP Governor, Joshua Dariye, who was seen as encouraging his indigenous people to defend themselves. What did Dariye do later? He joined Muhammadu Buhari’s APC and helped the party capture the state in 2015. Buhari pardoned and released him from his 14-year jail conviction for stealing N2bn. Dariye could not beat them. He joined them, and was rewarded by Buhari himself, just as Adams Oshiomhole had promised all looters who join APC. Lionhearted governors who were crushed became a lesson to others. Fight the State and pay for it; collude with the State against your people and be rewarded. When you see Governor Monday Okpebholo of Edo State running kitikiti-katakata to lick the toes of fellow governors from the North over the Uromi lynching, you know the fear the State exerts over occupants of powerful or lucrative positions. When Buhari came to power in 2015, he saw himself as the Nigerian variant of Omar Al Bashir of Sudan, who armed Arab pastoralist militia, the Janjaweed, to conquer and annex the lands of black Sudanese, thus sparking the Darfur crises. Buhari was determined to make Nigeria the new home of his Fulani kinsmen from everywhere. He tried to enforce his Ruga, grazing routes, water resources and Livestock Plan policies throughout the country, but these were stiffly resisted. Buhari then threw open the borders for armed Fulani and their families, especially the nomads from everywhere, to relocate to Nigeria. During the Covid-19 lockdowns, he and his powerful kinsmen used food and cement trailers and trucks to distribute armed Fulani youths in forests all over the Middle Belt and Southern states. It was clearly a well-organised operation aimed at forcefully grafting alien, violent Fulani elements among unwilling indigenous communities. They were camped in the forests where they killed people in their farms and harvested organs for sale. They kidnapped for ransom and used livestock to destroy farms. They flushed people out of their ancestral lands and occupied communities. The Federal Government and its organs of security and coercion protected them from those seeking to defend themselves. They were promptly released when arrested by vigilante groups and handed over to the supposed law enforcement agencies. Government and (unfortunately, sections of the media) deceived the public, calling attacks on innocent Nigerian farming communities “farmers-herders clashes”. Government kept promising displaced people they would be restored to their ancestral lands but have now become permanent occupants of Internally-Displaced Persons (IDP) camps. The invaders are settling down and renaming conquered communities. Federal Government refused to even acknowledge Fulani invaders as terrorists. Instead, they turned around to falsely slap that moniker on the Eastern Security Network (ESN) formed by the concerned diaspora Igbo through Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), to defend Igboland. When Tinubu mysteriously won the 2023 presidential election, I consoled myself that Buhari the Fulaniser was out and Tinubu, being a Southerner, would check the Fulanisation agenda. It has also been wreaking even more havoc in the South West, Tinubu’s home zone. But we were in for a shock. After initially arresting and detaining Bello Bodejo, the leader of the loquacious and violent Miyetti Allah Kyautal Hore, Tinubu quickly released him when the Fulani elite threatened him. He even went ahead to create Federal Ministry of Livestock to appease them, thus fully resuscitating Buhari’s Fulanisation agenda. Tinubu holds on to Mazi Nnamdi Kanu even after releasing Fulani’s Bodejo and Sunday Igboho of Yoruba Nation. Under Tinubu, the cuddling of Fulani herdsmen terrorism continues unabated, and so do the endless barrages of meaningless condolence messages and empty promises. The entire landscape is filled with cowardly governors and political leaders who sell out their people for political power and lucrative posts. At this rate, the indigenous people of Nigeria are doomed. Retired Lt-General Theophilus Danjuma warned before (and has just repeated the warning) that the Government is an enhancer of Fulani expansionism. “They collude”, he says. “They will not protect you! Arm and protect yourselves”. Danjuma, a hero of the Nigerian side of the civil war, has written off the armed forces he once served and led. Who are we to believe otherwise? Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, IPOB and ESN have once again been vindicated, even by Danjuma! Self-defence is the first law of nature. The ball is in our court.
    0 Yorumlar 0 hisse senetleri 243 Views 0 önizleme
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