OPINION
Of Gemade’s Concentric Circle of Conspiracy, APC and the Evil Waiting to Consume Benue

By Sam Adzegeh
When, at last week’s retreat at Abuja for Benue APC guber aspirants, Chief Barnabas Gemade, one of them, made reference to “concentric circles of conspiracies”, in the ongoing jostling among the party’s contenders, few understood what he was talking about.
A few days later however, realities behind Gemade’s warning have emerged.
While warning of those concentric circles, the Chief said they pose a grave danger to the party in the State, as is currently the situation in the PDP where against all odds, top level manipulations have thrown up a possible candidate who, given his pedigree and beggarly disposition, ought not be anywhere near where serious discussions the guber primaries are being held!Unknown to even himself however, Gemade had touched on an issue which could spell the final doom in the existence of this outrageously gifted State and plunge millions of its populace into final catastrophe.
What is unravelling in the APC which is poised to (rightfully) take back Benue State from the destructive clutches of the PDP, is an evil plot to plant the State firmly in the laps of a devil incarnate. This is actually a war for the very soul of Benue State; sadly, if this evil plot succeeds, it would mark the end of Benue State as we know it. Not even the devastating effects of the last seven years the locusts ate can match it!
It is no longer a secret that the governorship of Benue State has been zoned to the Jerchira axis comprising Vandeikya and Konshisha local governments as well as Zone C, which is the Idoma/Igede speaking area. A simple calculation will reveal that, since the Zone (C) already holds the State Chairmanship position in the very personable Austin Agada, it is technically out of contention.
Narrowing down to Jechira which is comprised of Vandeikya and Konshisha, it is a simple truism that Rev. Fr. Adasu, from the latter, had done a stint in the Makurdi Government House.From the foregoing, it is obvious that it all finally boils down to Vandeikya local government area (Kunav) which has never held the slot.
Here, the aspirants have been narrowed down to three. These are Prof. Terhemba Shija, Surveyor Godwin Ityoacimin and Rev. Fr. Hyacinth Alia. It is necessary to subject each of these three to critical analysis, for the future of millions of people may sooner than later depend on them. Contrary to opinions in certain quarters, this writer believes that anyone who avails him or herself for public service deserves to be subjected to such exhaustive scrutiny of both his or her private life.
This may stop paedophiles, closet queens and homosexuals as well as all manners of recalcitrant elements from finding their way into top echelons of public service. Anyone who willingly steps into the arena of electoral contests automatically transmutes into a gold fish which has no hiding place.
Prof. Terhemba Shija: Few people in the current political dispensation can match the pedigree of this maverick politician/academician. A member of the House of Reps at merely 32, Shija rose through the political and academic ranks, fighting against all odds to attain his current enviable status both politically and academically.
This fact can best be appreciated when one investigates the political status of today’s leading politicians in Benue State like Governor Samuel Ortom, Senator Gabriel Suswam, GSM George Akume, etc.A humble and consumate team player, Shija’s educational background ranges from seconday school graduation from the prestigious Bristow Secondary School Gboko to Universities of Calabar, Maiduguri, which took him through the years and lots of hard work, to a professorship from Nasarawa State University, Keffi.
In carreer development, Shija rose from a lowly position as a TV/Radio reporter in NTA and later Radio Benue to become two time Commissioner in the State. Shija is widely renowned for humility and generosity, a free mixer who accepts every one on equal terms.
He is known to have handed over his nomination for Senate to the well respected Prof. Daniel Saror, after the latter was schemed out of the race in his own party! Saror went ahead to win the election and served two tenures at the upper Chambers.
In spite of this towering profile, Shija also was later to serve as campaign DG to first Akume and later Suswam, successfully delivering both to the Benue Government House! He had earlier backed the Zone C struggle for Benue governorship by serving as campaign DG to Mike Onoja, a mission which was later betrayed by elements of Idome extraction themselves.
Betrayed by those he selflessly served in the PDP when he earlier contested the governorship, Shija again presents himself for service to the Benue community. He comes fully prepared with a developmental blueprint called The Benue Rebuild Agenda 2023.
It is a blueprint which exhaustively x-rays and suggests workable solutions to the problems bedeviling this immensely endowed State and its hardworking populace. Shija’s major obstacle is that, coming from the classroom, he is not known to be rich, and may not afford the N50,000,000.00 cost of the APC guber form.
Surveyor Godwin Ityoacimin: Not much is known about this silent operator, but it is a measure of his quality that he ranks among the last three aspirants in the Benue APC’s search for a credible candidate in the 2023 governorship race.
After secondary education in Command Secondary School Jos (where he was once Head Boy), in 1977, Ityoacimin later graduated from University of Nigeria, Nsukka in 1986 with a B.Sc. (Hons) in Estate Management.
Shortly after graduation, Ityoacimin became MD of a Quantity Surveying firm which he established. Shortly after however, he got employment with the Federal Ministry of Works where he rose steadily through the ranks to the position of Director.
Believed to be highly cerebral and dependable and reliable, Ityoacimin is an Associate Member of the Nigeria Institute of Estate Surveyors and Valuers (1996), a Registered Estate Surveyor and Valuer by the Estate Surveyors and Valuers Registration Board of Nigeria (1998) as a Member of the Board of the Estate Surveyors and Valuers Registration Board of Nigeria (ESVARBON). In the course of a career in the Federal Public Service spanning over 35 years, Ityoacimin is proud that ‘I have risen steadily to the peak of a career as Director of Lands and Co-coordinating Director (Lands & Housing Development) in the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing.
‘Throughout this brilliant career, Ityoacimin efficiently and successfully (without a single case of ill-performance or non-performance) carried out very many responsibilities. He resigned from the civil service only last year.Ityoacimin’s political naivety may be his Achilles heel however.
Hyacinth Alia: A Catholic priest, Alia’s popularity owes mostly to his famous healing masses which were the rave of the Benue society in the early/mid 1990s. Not known for any administrative prowess or competence, Alia is known to have made little impact in parishes where he has previously served.
He is widely believed to have been drafted into the governorship race by Mrs. Regina Akume, wife of former Governor and serving Minister of Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs, an agenda strongly believed to be opposed by her husband, also a former senator. Mrs. Akume is believed to be obsessed by the idea of installing the unmarried Alia so that she can emerge as God mother in the next administration. This is to place herself in a position to benefit economically in an Alia governorship.
It was learnt that she is backed by a tiny but powerful clique of old men who worship at her altar. Strong opposition however, arose to the machinations of this powerful clique from a least expected source – a famous and well respected elder of the self respecting old school generation, who is said to have vowed that the plot would fail!
Last week at the retreat, the priest, who carries himself with an air of majesty – he goes around with a convoy complete with fully armed police escort – was noticeably snobbed by majority of the other APC aspirants. Against the palpable hostility, Alia left the retreat halfway and returned to Makurdi.
Alia’s Archilles heel may be his direct rebellion against the Canon law as warned against by Arch Bishop Onaiyekan in a recent video clip which went viral and Bishop William Avenya, who is also known to have openly voiced opposition to Alia’s political adventures.
Adzegeh is Special Adviser Media to Prof. Terhemba Shija.
Education
Varsity Don Advocates Establishment of National Bureau for Ethnic Relations, Inter-Group Unity

By David Torough, Abuja
A university scholar, Prof. Uji Wilfred of the Department of History and International Studies, Federal University of Lafia, has called on the Federal Government to establish a National Bureau for Ethnic Relations to strengthen inter-group unity and address the deep-seated ethnic tensions in Nigeria, particularly in the North Central region.
Prof.
Wilfred, in a paper drawing from years of research, argued that the six states of the North Central—Kwara, Niger, Kogi, Benue, Plateau, and Nasarawa share long-standing historical, cultural, and economic ties that have been eroded by arbitrary state boundaries and ethnic politics.According to him, pre-colonial North Central Nigeria was home to a rich mix of ethnic groups—including Nupe, Gwari, Gbagi, Eggon, Igala, Idoma, Jukun, Alago, Tiv, Birom, Tarok, Angas, among others, who coexisted through indigenous peace mechanisms.
These communities, he noted, were amalgamated by British colonial authorities under the Northern Region, first headquartered in Lokoja before being moved to Kaduna.
He stressed that state creation, which was intended to promote minority inclusion, has in some cases fueled exclusionary politics and ethnic tensions. “It is historically misleading,” Wilfred stated, “to regard certain ethnic nationalities as mere tenant settlers in states where they have deep indigenous roots.”
The don warned that such narratives have been exploited by political elites for land grabbing, ethnic cleansing, and violent conflicts, undermining security in the sub-region.
He likened Nigeria’s ethnic question to America’s historic “race question” and urged the adoption of structures similar to the Freedmen’s Bureau, which addressed racial inequality in post-emancipation America through affirmative action and equitable representation.
Wilfred acknowledged the recent creation of the North Central Development Commission by President Bola Tinubu as a step in the right direction, but said its mandate may not be sufficient to address ethnic relations.
He urged the federal government to either expand the commission’s role or create a dedicated Bureau for Ethnic Relations in all six geo-political zones to foster reconciliation, equality, and sustainable development.
Quoting African-American scholar W.E.B. Du Bois, Prof. Wilfred concluded that the challenge of Nigeria in the 21st century is fundamentally one of ethnic relations, which must be addressed with deliberate policies for unity and integration.
OPINION
The Pre-2027 Party gold Rush
By Dakuku Peterside
The 2027 general elections are fast approaching, and Nigeria’s political landscape is undergoing a rapid transformation. New acronyms, and freshly minted party logos are emerging, promising a new era of renewal and liberation.To the casual observer, this may seem like democracy in full bloom — citizens exercising their right to association, political diversity flourishing, and the marketplace of ideas expanding.
However, beneath this surface, a more urgent reality is unfolding. The current rush to establish new parties is less about ideological conviction or grassroots movements and more about strategic positioning, bargaining leverage, and transactional gain.It is the paradox of Nigerian politics: proliferation as a sign of vitality, and as a symptom of democratic fragility. With 2027 on the horizon, the political air is electric, not with fresh ideas, but with a gold rush to create new political parties.Supporters call it the flowering of democracy. But scratch the surface and you will see something else: opportunism dressed as pluralism. This is not just politics; it is political merchandising. Parties are being set up like small businesses, complete with negotiation value, resale potential, and short-term profit models. Today, Nigeria has 19 registered political parties, one of the highest numbers in the world behind India (2,500), Brazil (35), and Indonesia (18).History serves as a cautionary tale in this context. Whenever Nigeria has embraced multi-party politics, the electoral battlefield has eventually narrowed to a contest between two main poles. In the early 1990s, General Ibrahim Babangida’s political transition programme deliberately engineered a two-party structure by decreeing the creation of the National Republican Convention (NRC) and the Social Democratic Party (SDP).His justification was rooted in the observation — controversial but not entirely unfounded — that Nigeria’s political psychology tends to gravitate toward two dominant camps, thereby simplifying voter choice and fostering more stable governance. Pro-democracy activists condemned the move as state-engineered politics, but over time, the pattern became embedded.When Nigeria returned to civilian rule in 1999, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) emerged as the dominant force, facing off against the All People’s Party (APP) and Alliance for Democracy (AD) coalition. The 2003 and 2007 elections pitted the PDP against the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP); in 2011, the PDP contended with both the ANPP and the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC).By 2015, the formation of the All Progressives Congress (APC) — a coalition of the CPC, ANPP, Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN), and a faction of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) — restored the two-bloc dynamic. This ‘two-bloc dynamic’ refers to the situation where most of the political power is concentrated within two main parties, leading to a less diverse and competitive political landscape. Even when dozens of smaller parties appeared on the ballot, the real contest was still a battle of two heavyweights.And yet, here we are again, with Nigeria’s Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) registering nineteen parties but facing an avalanche of new applications — 110 by late June, swelling to at least 122 by early July. This surge is striking, especially considering that after the 2019 general elections, INEC deregistered seventy-four parties for failing to meet constitutional performance requirements — a decision upheld by the Supreme Court in 2021.That landmark ruling underscored that party registration is not a perpetual license; it is a privilege conditioned on meeting electoral benchmarks, such as a minimum vote share and representation across the federation. The surge in party formation could potentially lead to a more complex and fragmented electoral process, making it harder for voters to make informed decisions and for smaller parties to gain traction.So, what explains the surge in the formation of new parties now? The reasons are not mysterious. Money is the bluntest answer, but it is woven with other motives. For some, creating a party is a strategic move to position themselves for negotiations with larger parties — trading endorsements, securing “alliances,” and even extracting concessions like campaign funding or political appointments.Others set up “friendly” parties designed to dilute opposition votes in targeted constituencies, often indirectly benefiting the ruling party. Some political entrepreneurs build parties as personal vehicles for regional ambitions or as escape routes from established parties, where rival factions have captured the leadership.Some are escape pods for politicians frozen out of the ruling APC’s machinery. There is also a genuine democratic impulse among certain groups to create platforms for neglected ideas or underrepresented constituencies. But the transactional motive often eclipses these idealistic efforts, leaving most new parties as temporary instruments, rather than enduring institutions.The democratic consequences of this kind of proliferation are profound. On one hand, political pluralism is a constitutional right and an essential feature of democracy. On the other hand, too many weak, poorly organised parties can fragment the opposition, confuse voters, and degrade the quality of political competition.Many of these micro-parties lack ward-level presence, a consistent membership drive, and ideological coherence. Their manifestos are often generic, interchangeable documents crafted to meet registration requirements, rather than to present a distinct policy vision. On election-day, their presence on the ballot can be more of a distraction than a contribution, and after the polls close, many vanish from public life until the next cycle of political registration. This is not democracy — it is ballot clutter.This is not uniquely Nigerian. In India, a few thousands registered parties exist, yet only a fraction of them is active or competitive at the state or national level. Brazil, notorious for its highly fragmented legislature, has struggled with unstable coalitions and governance deadlock; even now, it is reducing the number of effective parties.Indonesia allows many parties to register but imposes a parliamentary threshold — currently four per cent of the national vote — to limit legislative fragmentation. These examples, along with others from around the world, suggest that plurality can work, but only when paired with guardrails: stringent conditions for registration, clear criteria for participation, performance-based retention, and an electoral culture that rewards sustained engagement over fleeting visibility.Nigeria already has a version of this in place, courtesy of INEC’s power to deregister. We deregistered seventy-four parties in 2020 for failing to meet performance standards, and five years later, we are sprinting back to the same cliff.Yet, loopholes remain especially, and the process is reactive rather than proactive. Registration conditionalities are lax. This is where both INEC and the ruling APC must shoulder greater responsibility. The need for electoral reform is urgent, and it is time for all stakeholders to act.For INEC, the task is to strengthen its oversight by tightening membership verification, enhancing financial transparency, and expanding its geographic spread requirements, as well as introducing periodic revalidation between election cycles.For the ruling party, the challenge lies in upholding political ethics: resisting the temptation to exploit party proliferation to splinter the opposition for short-term gain. A strong ruling party in a democracy wins competitive elections, not one that manipulates the field to run unopposed. Strong democracy requires a credible opposition, not a scattering of paper platforms that cannot even win a ward councillor seat.Here is the truth: this system needs reform. Reform doesn’t mean closing the democratic space, but making it meaningful and orderly. Democracy must balance full freedom of association with the need for order. While freedom encourages many parties, order requires limiting their number to a manageable level.For example, Nigeria could require parties to have active structures in two-thirds of states, a verifiable membership, and annual audited financials. Parties failing to win National Assembly seats in two consecutive elections could lose registration.The message to new parties is clear: prove you’re more than just a logo and acronym. Build lasting movements — organise locally, offer real policies alternatives, and stay engaged between elections.Democracy is a contest of ideas, discipline, and trust. If the 2027 rush is allowed to run unchecked, we will end up with the worst of both worlds — a crowded ballot and an empty choice. Mergers should be incentivised through streamlined legal processes and possibly electoral benefits, such as ballot priority or increased public funding. At the same time, independent candidates should be allowed more room to compete, ensuring that reform does not entrench an exclusive two-party cartel.Ultimately, the deeper issue here is the erosion of public trust. Nigerians have no inherent hostility to new political formations; what they distrust are political outfits that emerge in the months leading up to an election, strike opaque deals, and disappear without a trace. Politicians must resist the temptation to treat politics as a seasonal business opportunity and instead invest in it as a long-term public service.As 2027 approaches, Nigeria stands at a familiar but critical juncture. The country can indulge the frenzy — rolling out yet another logo, staging yet another press conference, promising yet another “structure” that exists mainly on paper. Or it can seize this moment to rethink how political competition is structured: open but disciplined, plural but purposeful, competitive but coherent.Fewer parties will not automatically make Nigeria’s democracy healthier. But better parties — rooted in communities, committed to clear policies, and resilient beyond election season — just might. And that is a choice within reach, if those who hold the levers of power are willing to leave the system stronger than they found it.Dakuku Peterside, a public sector turnaround expert, public policy analyst and leadership coach, is the author of the forthcoming book, “Leading in a Storm”, a book on crisis leadership.OPINION
Call for National Youth Career Development Initiative
By Blessing Adeoti
Nigerian youths are intelligent and hardworking, but very few have a solid career development plan. It doesn’t matter whether a student graduates with first-class honours or shows great potential; most focus on just one goal: earning a degree or certificate from a higher institution and then seeking job opportunities.
The main issues are the lack of available jobs, and nowhere in the world is it necessary for the government to guarantee employment for everyone. Moreover, not every student who attends a higher institution needs to follow such a path.Most people may be better suited to alternative routes, such as technical or vocational training, to develop competent professionals in industries that lack sufficient specialised expertise, including electricians, carpentry, plumbing, welding, mechanics, computer skills, and others. These are skills in high demand that will enable the youth to contribute meaningfully to the economy, even as entrepreneurs.Although President Bola Tinubu’s administration is trying to revive the technical colleges, what orientation do the students have to embrace the unique opportunities? Should we blame the youths for lacking this foresight? No! The root of the problem lies in the absence of structured career counselling in Nigeria’s educational system.Nigerian youths face the challenges of navigating the uncertainty in career pursuits. This is not because they lacked aspirations, but rather due to the near-total absence of a functional career counselling system within the Nigerian education sector. Nigeria’s career counselling vacuum dates to the colonial education system, which was mainly designed to produce clerks, administrators, and workers for the service sector. The focus was never on helping students discover their strengths or guiding them toward career paths that could help them achieve their full potential.After independence, the National Policy on Education of 1977, revised in 2013, mandated the introduction of guidance and counselling services in schools, but implementation has been significantly inadequate. Globally, the economic and job realities have changed. As a university lecturer, I have seen firsthand the struggles many students face, yet not one has ever had experience with a career guide or counsellor.In 2020, the Institute of Counselling in Nigeria revealed that only 15 per cent of secondary schools have functional counselling units, and many of these are staffed by untrained personnel. This neglect has produced a generation of aimless graduates, unemployment, underemployment, and skills mismatches. It signals a disconnect between the education system and the labour market, as graduates are often unprepared for the skills required in today’s economy.Economically, the World Bank estimates that youth unemployment costs Nigeria billions in lost GDP annually. The psychological effects are equally devastating. Career indecision is linked to anxiety, low self-esteem, and depression among young Nigerians, according to a 2021 study from the University of Ibadan, which found that many students trapped in unsuitable career paths experienced significant psychological distress.Socially, this has contributed to increased crime, cultism, extremism and terrorism across the country. Nigeria’s crime rate, ranked 7.28 out of 10 globally, is partly fuelled by jobless youth seeking alternative livelihoods.There is hope for change as President Bola Tinubu’s administration has shown a genuine commitment to supporting Nigerian youth. The President’s Renewed Hope agenda for education, including the Nigeria Education Loan Fund and the revitalisation of Nigeria’s technical and vocational colleges, is commendable.However, these efforts risk falling short without the addition of a well-structured national youth career development programme. There are proven models from around the world that Nigeria can adapt to address this challenge. For example, Finland, renowned for its world-class education system, places a strong emphasis on career guidance.From an early age, Finnish students receive career counselling as part of their school curriculum. Trained career counsellors work closely with students to identify their strengths, interests, and goals. Similarly, Singapore implemented the education and career guidance programme, which aligns student aspirations with workforce needs, helping the country maintain youth unemployment below 5 per cent (Singapore Ministry of Education, 2024).In Australia, the National Career Education Strategy prepares young people for the future of work by integrating career education into the school curriculum, emphasising transferable skills such as critical thinking, problem-solving, and adaptability.President Tinubu’s administration can rebuild Nigeria’s system by launching an aggressive youth career development initiative that ensures the President’s educational reforms translate into tangible outcomes.Such an initiative would equip students with the clarity and direction needed to fulfil both their personal aspirations and national economic needs. This is about giving young Nigerians the tools, confidence, and clarity to chart their career developmental paths.With renewed focus and investment, the government now has a real chance to correct past mistakes and help young Nigerians build brighter, more diverse career futures. There are many ideas for structures that could produce excellent results within a year, but Nigeria needs someone, or a team of passionate individuals, to turn them into reality.I recommend that President Tinubu appoint a special adviser for the National Youth Career Development Initiative to avoid the unnecessary bureaucracy that slows down many good initiatives. The special adviser must be an innovative thinker, a visionary leader with empathy and a deep understanding of Nigeria’s youth and job market dynamics, and a passion for empowering the next generation.The candidate would advise the President on a viable initiative for a national youth career development programme and work with other stakeholders. The government must take the lead by prioritising career counselling in its education policies and enforcing the establishment of functional guidance units in all schools.Dr Adeoti writes from Hong Kong via badeoti3@gmail.com