Connect with us

OPINION

Arase: Honouring the Impact of a Police Reformer

Published

on

Share

By Dakuku Peterside

There are moments when a country loses more than a person; it loses a compass. The passing of Dr Solomon E Arase on 31 August felt like that — an abrupt dimming of a steady light that had, for years, shown what policing in Nigeria could be if guided by principle, civility, and courage.

He did not simply occupy offices; he dignified them.
From the Force Criminal Intelligence and Investigations Department to his years as Principal Staff Officer to IGP Sunday Ehindero, to his own tenure as Inspector-General of Police and later as Chairman of the Police Service Commission, the constant was a quiet insistence that policing is a public trust and that trust is earned by fairness practised, not proclaimed.
What distinguished Arase was not the rhetoric of reform but its architecture. He believed the presumption of innocence is not a legal ornament; it is the backbone of public legitimacy. He understood intelligence-led policing as more than a slogan: prevention over spectacle, early warning over belated force, careful listening and documentation so that outcomes can command respect because the process did.Despite our strong friendship, after his appointment in 2015, we engaged on several political issues during the numerous post-2015 by-elections in Rivers State, which tragically saw over 500 lives lost in the 2015 governorship elections. Although we often disagreed on approaches, he remained steadfast in his convictions and principles. He never yielded to my requests, despite the government’s support at the time.He understood that standing by one’s convictions was more critical than seeking convenience. While we held differing viewpoints, we always respected each other’s beliefs. When convinced about a cause, he committed to its execution wholeheartedly. Above all, he was a patriot par excellence — Nigeria was his primary constituency, not just Edo State or the South-South region. His personal integrity and unwavering commitment to justice were the cornerstones of his leadership.His fingerprints are on reforms you can touch. The Police Duty Solicitors Scheme, which began as a 2006 Memorandum of Understanding, matured — through his persistence — into Force Order 20 in 2017. This scheme, which ensures that individuals in police custody have access to legal representation, is a tangible example of his commitment to fairness and justice.Although his successor signed the order, Arase ensured that the ground was prepared, drafts were complete, procedures were scoped, and intentions were clear. If, today, fewer people are held arbitrarily, if interviews are more frequently cautioned, if detention registers can be audited rather than imagined, it is partly because he refused to let fairness depend on personalities.Dr. Arase’s unwavering commitment to transparency and accountability was a cornerstone of his leadership. He understood that these principles are not just ideals, but the very foundation of a just and fair society. His push to digitise critical parts of FCID’s work was a testament to this. He knew that transparency is not a press release; it is a trail.Case-tracking, record integrity, custody logs — the dull, essential infrastructure that makes it harder to disappear a file, to misplace a suspect, to bleach the chain of evidence — were, to him, acts of justice. He cared deeply about reducing rights violations to the barest minimum and was willing to invest his energy in building systems that would check impunity and protect human dignity. It was impossible to miss the fact that his leadership was rooted in principle, and his heart was firmly anchored in justice.As PSC chairman, he carried the same light into a different room. Recruitment and promotion should be based on merit; discipline should mean predictable standards. He narrowed the gap between rule and practice, inviting civil society and the human rights community to be partners rather than adversaries. Reformers who barricade themselves behind rank rarely outlast a news cycle; reformers who build coalitions, however, tend to outlast the news. Dr. Arase’s leadership was not about dictating from the top, but about fostering collaboration and shared responsibility for reform.Dr Arase’s impact was not limited to his professional roles. He was more than his offices; he was a warm and caring individual in a world of cold institutions. He notably established the Police Complaints Response Unit (CRU) to provide citizens with a formal channel for reporting police misconduct and advanced community policing to foster trust between law enforcement and the public. He favoured intelligence-led policing over illegal police roadblocks, which often lead to extortion.He was not one to shy away from the truth, even when it was about the institution he loved. At the Institute of Security Studies seminar in 2017, he lamented the absence of a shared national threat analysis to guide proactive policing, warned that budgets balloon at headquarters while stations starve, and argued that the IGP should set standards and ensure quality control, while operations devolve and are resourced at the level where crimes occur.He named the cannibalisation of investigative capacity for what it was and refused to accept the drift from prevention to post-mortem. He spoke about the distortions of VIP guard duties and the corrosive arithmetic by which money buys safety for a few while subtracting it from everyone else. His frankness about these challenges underscored the urgency of his reform efforts.What he left us is not a cult of memory but a blueprint. We know its contours because he drew them patiently. Codify what works and measure it openly — PDSS compliance, custody dashboards, complaint resolution times that citizens can see and compare.Clarify the clear lines of demarcation between the Police Service Commission and the Nigeria Police Force so that recruitment, promotion, and discipline are transparent rather than transactional. Rebuild the investigative spine of the CID — ring-fence station budgets so that the basic work of policing is not a monthly improvisation.Reduce VIP deployments and redeploy talent to community policing and investigations. Complete the digitisation he began: real-time detention registers, case management with enforced timelines, chain-of-evidence systems that make good practice the path of least resistance. And above all, reshape culture through scenario-based training that centres civility and procedural justice, matched with leadership pipelines that reward restraint as much as arrests.Dr. Arase’s efforts have already brought about significant changes. PDSS is not merely a programme; it is a rule with metrics. Digitisation pilots mean some files now carry the scars of scrutiny — harder to vanish, easier to audit. The habit of inviting civil society into the room has more defenders than detractors.These are foundations, not finishes, but foundations are not failures because rooftops are missing. They are invitations — and warnings. If we build on them, we save time, treasure, and lives. If we ignore them, we will start again, poorer and more cynical. Dr Arase’s reforms have set a promising path for the future of Nigerian policing, offering hope and optimism for a more just and fair society.Legacy is often mistaken for headlines. Arase measured his by standards adopted, procedures normalised, and people he pushed gently but firmly toward better practice. When praise did not come, he kept working; when it finally did, he shared it.Perhaps this is why his death feels larger than the page can hold: the work was never about him, which means the story is now about us. Will we institutionalise what he began or return to the wasteful habit of treating reform as a personality project? Honouring him demands choices, not eulogies.The Presidency and National Assembly must provide the statutes and appropriations that enable station-level excellence. The PSC and NPF must live under the bright lines he advocated. Governors must move from ad-hoc patronage to compacts that fund prevention, not merely response.The Bar and civil society must keep the doors open and the data honest. Officers — from recruits to commissioners — must rediscover the quiet pride of doing things by the book because the book protects both the public and the police.This is our farewell, and it is also a charge. A good man has gone, but the good he outlined is not beyond us. He listened more than he spoke; when he said, it was to clarify. He preferred practice to performance and asked difficult, practical questions that stripped policies of their vanity.If leadership is the lives we touch and the legacies we leave, then Dr Solomon Arase led well. And may we find, in the steadiness of his example, the courage to finish the work — to build a police service that treats Nigerians not as subjects to be managed but as citizens to be protected, and to keep lit, in our own time and place, the small lamps he set along the way.Solomon Arase’s contributions to police reform are immeasurable, yet he rarely receives the credit he deserves for laying the foundation for the change the country urgently needs but often lacks the courage and leadership to implement.Unfortunately, the country lost one of its finest police officers and a former Inspector General in August of this year. IGP Arase’s most significant contribution was his unwavering focus on crafting a fresh vision for the Nigerian Police — one centred on restoring public trust and ensuring law enforcement conducted its duties with the highest standards of civility.I am profoundly grateful for the opportunity to have met, worked with, and learned from him. His life and service remain an inspiration, a reminder that leadership is not about position, but about the lives we touch and the legacies we leave behind. My heartfelt condolences go to his family. May God grant them the comfort and strength they need at this time and grant the soul of Dr Arase eternal rest.”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.

FEATURES

Victor Okoli: The Young Nigerian Tech Founder Building Digital Bridge Between Africa and America

Published

on

Share

Victor Chukwunonso Okoli, founder of Vnox Technology Inc. (USA) and Vnox Limited (Nigeria), is steadily emerging as one of the most promising new voices in global travel-tech. His mission is clear: bridge the technological gap between Africa and the United States, redefine global travel systems, and empower a new generation of skilled youths through innovation-driven opportunities.

In a statement issued in Onitsha, Anambra State, by Vnox Limited (Nigeria), the company emphasized Okoli’s growing influence as a Nigerian international graduate student contributing meaningfully to U.

S. innovation. His rising travel-technology platform, FlyVnox, currently valued at an estimated $1.
7 million, is positioning itself as a competitive player in the global travel ecosystem.

Okoli explained that Vnox Technology was founded to “train, empower more youths, create global employment opportunities, and drive business growth through our coming B2B portal inside the FlyVnox app.” The platform’s new B2B system aims to support travel agencies, entrepreneurs, and businesses across Africa and the diaspora—giving them access to modern tools, previously inaccessible technologies, and global opportunities.

Several young men and women are already employed under the expanding Vnox group, with more expected to join as the brand grows internationally.

Born and raised in Eastern Nigeria, Okoli’s early life exposed him to the realities and frustrations faced by international travelers and diaspora communities. After moving to the United States for graduate studies, he transformed those experiences into a bold technological vision—building systems that connect continents and create seamless mobility for users worldwide.

At the center of that vision is the FlyVnox app, a modern airline-ticketing platform built with global users in mind. Combining American engineering precision with African mobility realities, FlyVnox offers international flight search, multi-currency support, secure payments, transparent pricing, and a clean, intuitive interface.

Beyond FlyVnox, Okoli has built a growing tech ecosystem under Vnox Technology Inc., which oversees several innovative ventures, including: Vnox TravelTech Solutions LLC (FlyVnox App), VnoxPay (fintech), VnoxShop / Zyrlia (e-commerce)

VnoxID / Nexora (digital identity and smart business card solutions)

Vnox Limited (Nigeria) anchors African operations, media services, and talent development—ensuring the brand remains rooted in its home continent even as it grows globally.

Okoli’s work has broad significance for both Africa and the United States. He represents the powerful impact of immigrant entrepreneurship on global competitiveness—creating new jobs, driving innovation, strengthening U.S.–Africa commercial ties, and contributing to the development of practical, scalable technologies.

The statement concludes that Vnox Technology is a brand to watch. As FlyVnox gains international traction and the Vnox group expands its footprint, Victor Okoli stands as a symbol of a rising generation: African-born, globally minded, and building technologies that connect and serve the world.

Continue Reading

OPINION

Insecurity in Nigeria: Any Remedy?

Published

on

Share

By Sunday Ayami

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and largest economy, in Africa continues to face complex security challenges. These issues threaten national stability, economic growth, and the wellbeing of its citizens. The security landscape is shaped by a combination of terrorism, banditry, separatist agitations, communal conflicts, and organized crime.

The Boko Haram insurgency, active since 2009, remains a significant threat, mainly in Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa states.

Although the group has suffered territorial losses, its splinter faction, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), remains potent. Frequent attacks target both civilians and security personnel.
The humanitarian crisis continues, with millions displaced and persistent food insecurity.

 Armed bandit groups operate extensively in Zamfara, Kaduna, Katsina, Niger, and Sokoto states. These groups engage in mass abductions, cattle rustling, and extortion. Kidnappings for ransom have become commonplace, affecting schoolchildren, commuters, and even local officials. The government has launched multiple military operations, but violence persists.

Competition over land and water resources between sedentary farmers and nomadic herders has intensified, especially in Benue, Plateau, and Nasarawa states. These clashes often escalate along ethnic and religious lines, resulting in hundreds of deaths and displacement.

 Although major militant activities in the Niger Delta have subsided since the 2016/17 resurgence, oil theft, pipeline vandalism, and environmental degradation continue to undermine the economy and fuel local grievances.

The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) continue to agitate for independence, often clashing with security forces. Their armed wing, the Eastern Security Network (ESN), has been implicated in attacks on government facilities and security checkpoints. The region continues to experience periodic unrest and enforced sit-at-home orders.

Urban centers grapple with armed robbery, cult violence, and organized crimes, while piracy and maritime crime remain concerns in the Gulf of Guinea, threatening maritime trade.

The Nigerian government has adopted a multi-pronged approach to tackle security issues, including: Multiple campaigns such as “Operation Hadin Kai” in the Northeast and “Operation Whirl Punch” in the North-central target insurgent and criminal groups. Attempts at police reform and increased funding for security agencies have been implemented with mixed results.Efforts to negotiate with some groups or offer amnesty, particularly in the Niger Delta. Partner within ECOWAS and with Western countries enhance intelligence sharing and maritime security operations.

Despite these efforts, challenges remain: underfunding, corruption, interagency rivalry, inadequate equipment, and low public trust hamper effectiveness.

Over 3 million internally displaced persons (IDP).

Continue Reading

OPINION

When Does a Nation Die?

Published

on

Share

By Chidi Amuta

Recent trends in our national life have forced Nigerians to abandon the virtue of incurable optimism and unconditional hope in the nation as a perpetual reality. It used to be that in all circumstances, Nigerians would never believe that the nation is under any terminal threat.

But in recent times, the percentage of Nigerians awaiting the imminent collapse of the nation has now far outnumbered the minority still hoping that the country will survive its present travails.
It seems that we are fast approaching that slippery joint where it is hard to find any believers in the survival and meaning of Nigeria. Instead, throughout the length and breadth of this vast land, a new and unhappy consensus has emerged: Nigeria is dying!

The usual refrain of “God is in control” or “This, too, shall pass” in difficult times has given way to a silent indignation and resignation.

A silent poor woman who used to be a trader in trivia at the roadside has nothing left to sell and no money to buy what she needs. She raises her open palms skywards in speechless supplication as tears stream down her cheeks. She has become for me an embodiment of the tragedy of the times in which we now live. 

By a curious irony with a tinge of tragicomedy, the Tinubu government is trumpeting ‘hope’ as its most important offering. The regime has adopted what it calls “the Renewed Hope Agenda” as its mantra and unique caption of the -mandate of this presidency. In a note of tragic irony bordering on self -deprecation and mockery, each appearance of the President at a public forum (including gatherings of judges!), a new regime anthem titled “On Your Mandate, We shall stand” has become informally mandatory. It sometimes precedes the old resurrected National Anthem. It sounds more like a comic choir rented to laugh at a nation in the throes of death.

Suddenly, we seem to have arrived at this unhappy consensus: Nigeria is dying! This existential admission of the imminent death of our nation is the unfolding legacy of our endangered democracy. Our elections lack credibility or popular following. In recent elections in Ondo, Edo and Anambra states, the consistent average voter turnout has been below 35%. People register to vote but find nothing worth voting for. They are taking stock of previous years of this ritual of voting and find nothing cheery. They just stay home instead of being counted as part of the statistics of deceit and betrayal.

As it turns out, the greater percentage of this miserable recent turnout are even transactional votes. On the election days, partisan buyers and sellers of votes mount point of sale checkpoints at most polling booths. Your voters’ card entitles you to a miserable cash handout: N2000-N5000. T could be higher depending on the cash power of the contestants. The votes that show up at INEC’s voter machines represent the balance sheet of total sales and purchases made at all the polling stations at the election.

Other aspects of our democracy are equally in disarray. The party system is shattered. The ruling party has become a power monopoly intent on swallowing other parties. The major opposition party, the PDP, has a resident destabilizer with a single mandate: to kill the party and ensure that it is its carcass that walks into the next general election. The rest of the opposition platform has been frightened into disarray by sundry agents of the state and party in power. The various alliances and rumours of alliances are merely scare crows manipulated by agents of the ruling party.

In itself, the ruling party is saddled with hand -picked officials who make no distinction between the party as an institution of democracy and the government in power or indeed between the political party and the state. A democracy in which there is no distinction between the party in power and the party in government leads to a degrading usurpation of the state by the political elite of the ruling party. A factional elite cannot govern a state without wholly appropriating the machinery of the state to its individual and collective advantage. State capture is complete when the leading lights of the ruling hegemonic party become also the leading lights of the nation. The likes of Wike, Umahi and Akpabio become the faces of the nation. These constantly nattering Nabobs of current power negativity have been elevated to the status of arbiters of values for the nation. They brandish their wealth and false identities to frighten ordinary citizens.

In itself, the business of governance under Mr. Tinubu has become a humdrum ritual of boring reflexes. Great national happenings are marked by high school grade routine statements from the pinnacle of power. No actions are initiated.   Once a presidential pronouncement is signed off, the leadership moves on to await the next tragic checkpoint. The life of the nation progresses from one tragedy as preparation for the next. No action plan follows the train of tragedies and failures. Just move on in the hope that tomorrow will be a better day, without bad news and disheartening occurrences. But bad news has become our new normal.

Whatever happens to the nation, one sector never sleeps. Politics of anyhow and anything remains in business. Politicians keep decamping from other parties or no parties to the ruling party in droves. No need to state why people are decamping.   The parties they are coming from or the one they are migrating to stand for nothing. No ideology. No core beliefs. Nothing. And in any case, there are no consequences for changing parties like filthy underpants. So the beat goes on: breakfast in Labour Party. Lunch in PDP. Dinner in APC. Even those in the ruling party either as cabinet members or legislators do nothing in particular to justify their large charges on the public treasury. In return for doing practically nothing, a bunch of jobless politicians earn an entitlement to costly SUVs, free housing, large entourages of domestic and official minions and vast troves of cash in all currencies as kickbacks and contractors’ gift packs. There is delight in chasing off road users with limitless motorcades of official nonentities escorted by authorized state hooligans in uniform.

While politicians luxuriate in plenty, the daily life of our citizenry is mirred in want and penury. Recent policy measures have further eroded the living standards of the ordinary Nigerian. An endless litany of taxes, levies and tolls has rendered every item of living cost unaffordable. Prices of everything ranging from gasoline to cooking gas, school fees to transport fares, basic medication to hospital bills and building materials have shot through the roof. Even if these were elements of economic management, nothing has been put in place to indicate that the state has a compassionate aspect. Instead, there is an unhidden hand of cruelty in new policies. A few days ago, the government expressed an intention to impose a 15% surcharge on the already astronomical prices of gasoline. Only the fear of mass protests as in Kenya, Tanzania and Algeria frightened the government into pulling back on this tax on an existing tax regime on gasoline! 

While the public keeps expecting the government of the day to alleviate mass suffering, the very essence of our national existence is eroded by the day. The most elementary obligation of the state, the protection of life and property, is everywhere in peril. People are now dying daily on an industrial scale. Terrorists, jihadists, bandits, gangsters, casual criminals compete with each other as to how many they kill, abduct, dispossess or cause to disappear.

Those paid by the state to protect the rest of us look on in indifference or manifest the most embarrassing incompetence in the discharge of the duties. At best, none performing or delinquent security officials are fired in droves with no explanations to the public. The other day, the DSS sacked over 100 officers with no public explanation. These hounds have been unleashed into the amorphous public space to heighten an insecurity that has defied decades of tepid government effort. These are officers who are trained in weapon handling and other skills that they will easily deploy to increase our insecurity.

A state that cannot guarantee basic security of life and limbs of citizens has of course failed to protect and guarantee its territorial integrity. Nigerians no longer know where Nigeria stops and bandit territory begins. Every other forest, savannah stretch and unoccupied building in Nigeria is now an ungoverned space literally owned and inhabited by non- state actors. The possession of arms and weapons of war used to be the exclusive preserve of the state. Guns and uniforms used to frighten ordinary people off government. Not anymore. Now, the most sophisticated weapons of war are in the hands of terrorists, bandits and sundry criminals. The most garish uniforms are now worn by non-state organized squads. Jihadists in rags now outgun our best kitted military units. Literally, the Nigerian state has been outgunned by the forces of those that do not wish us well and the government of the day looks on in sheepish incompetence. In some states, elected governors’ stage ‘peace’ meetings with bandit leaders and their armed cohorts while the police and military provide “security” in full view of television cameras. So, whose nation is this anyway?

Only recently, a symbolic drama was staged on the streets of Abuja. In a motor park -like encounter, FCT minister, Nyesom Wike was engaged by a mid -level Naval officer in an encounter over landed property. Instructively, the military high command sided unanimously with the naval officer. In this symbolic scuffle between the military and political wings of the ruling elite, the military asserted itself stiffly as a contender in the game of political supremacy. In an atmosphere where a rumoured coup is being investigated, wise politicians have since sided with the military in this land grab encounter. Wike, a noisy political jackal with scant common sense has been stripped naked and left sulking alone.

The justice system is not left out of the hopelessness. Even in cases where the law is challenged to defend and protect the rights of individuals or track and punish violators of the law, the Nigerian judiciary has been consistently wanting. Judges deliver judgments to fit their bills. Material appeasement of the highest echelons of the judiciary in the form of cash, automobiles, free houses and unaccounted vacations have blurred the boundaries between justice and injustice. The rights of citizens now have a price tag.

The agencies of public accountability only exist to hound those whom the state does not like. The police arrests and detains those it adjudges state adversaries while authorized criminals roam and wax freely. Public protest against misrule and injustice is rewarded with tear gas and bullets and prolonged incarceration without charges or trial. A nation in which the Accountant General can steal most of the funds in the treasury without setting off any audit alarm is at best a rogues’ piggy bank guarded by squads of pick pockets.

Our general perception in the world outside our borders has tumbled to an all-time low. From being the voice of African strength, we have degenerated to a sorry state. Our foreign policy exertions have sunk to a diplomacy of the beggarly. Imagine the recent Threat by Donald Trump in the days of Murtala Mohammed and Obasanjo either as military leader or elected president.

Against the foregoing backdrop, citizen loyalty and confidence in the state has dropped to near zero.  The common man in the streets who used to be proud of his nation in spite of its faults has withdrawn to his or her tent. People are more concerned about surviving to the next day than bother about the niceties of national survival and community. At best, people are now cursing and abusing Nigeria. Many now wish they were never born here. Our passport and identity have become badges of shame abroad. Most significantly, a nation that used to believe that God will ultimately rescue the nation has lost that last anchor of hope in divine provenance and providence. Citizens have begun to doubt the efficacy of divine solution that will save the nation as it is today.

While a general disillusionment has eroded hope and confidence in the nation, the government of the day cannot find the courage to compare itself to any of its predecessors. But governments do not exist in isolation. They derive their credibility from fitting themselves into a historical spectrum provided by their predecessors.

It is not for us to pronounce judgment on the Tinubu government in terms of its record of performance. From the return of democracy in 1999 to the present, citizens can now pick and choose when they last had a good meal, affordable life or peace of mind from insecurity.  We miss Obasanjo’s banking reforms and liberalization of the stock market. We miss his initiative in opening up the telecommunications market. We miss the introduction of debit and credit cards and cashless platforms in the economy. We miss the Jonathan era before he found himself in the midst of Boko Haram. Looking back now, who will not prefer the Naira at 175 to the dollar and multiple access to credit for consumption and business? Or a bag of cement at a little over N2,000? Even Buhari’s N400-N500 to the dollar cannot be compared to today’s hellish N1,500 to the dollar. Or gasoline at N185 a liter compared to today’s N1,000 average for a liter at the pump.

Obasanjo was feared as a strong willed warrior, respected as a nationalist elder statesman and accepted by all as a detribalized national leader. Yar’dua was admired as a man of Spartan discipline and honest patriotism. Jonathan never pretended to be what he is not. He said he would not make too many promises for fear of failing to deliver on any. Buhari was a patent ethnicist, religious fanatic and unrepentant autocrat but he would rather borrow to keep his rusty government going than impose further suffering on the ordinary people.

Against the record of his predecessors since 1999, Tinubu will bear the burden of self -assessment at the end of his remaining two years. Put simply, Tinubu will judge Tinubu. Whether his eventual assessment will be confirmed or repudiated by the electoral outcome of the 2027 election is a puzzle that Nigerian democracy will have to unravel in the years ahead.

The questions are simple: Will Nigerians renew the mandate of a leader who is subjecting them to such harrowing hardship? Will the majority of Nigerians vote again for a party that has been responsible for such ruinous misrule of the nation for over a decade? 

Continue Reading

Advertisement

Read Our ePaper

Top Stories

Metro38 minutes ago

Appeal Court Upholds Judgment Stopping VIOs from Impounding Vehicles, Imposing Fines

ShareThe Court of Appeal in Abuja, on Thursday, affirmed a judgment barring the Directorate of Road Traffic Services and Vehicle...

NEWS47 minutes ago

Club De Pals Abuja celebrates 30th Anniversary with recognitions and Awards for excellence

ShareTOM CHIAHEMEN All is now set for the grand celebration of the 30th Anniversary of Club De Pals Abuja, the...

NEWS14 hours ago

Military Neutralises Scores, Rescues 318 Victims as Armed Forces Intensify Nationwide Operations

ShareBy David Torough, Abuja The Armed Forces of Nigeria (AFN) says its troops recorded major breakthroughs across all theatres of...

NEWS15 hours ago

Security Expert, Jackson Ojo, Calls for Resignation of Matawalle

Share…Says He Can’t Work as Team Member with Chris Musa By Mike Odiakose, Abuja Following the resignation of Minister of...

NEWS16 hours ago

SON, MSN Partner to Ensure Mycotoxin-free Agriculture

ShareThe Mycotoxicology Society of Nigeria (MSN) in collaboration with the Standards Organization of Nigeria (SON) has moved for the detection...

NEWS18 hours ago

ShareABUMET Brings Joy to JKS Orphanage Through Annual CSR Outreach By Mike Odiakose, Abuja In line with its long-standing commitment...

NEWS18 hours ago

Senate Seeks Death Penalty for  Terrorism Convicts,  Informants, Financiers

ShareBy Eze Okechukwu, Abuja In a major legislative push to curb the worsening state of insecurity, the Senate unanimously approved...

Agriculture21 hours ago

FG Empowers 9,870 Farmers with Inputs, Modern Rice Technologies in Kano

ShareThe Federal Government, through the Kano State Special Agro-Processing Zone (SAPZ) Programme in partnership with IFAD, has empowered 9,870 rice...

Agriculture21 hours ago

FG Unveils National Agricultural Sample Survey, 2023 Report for Food Security

ShareThe Federal Government has launched the National Agricultural Sample Survey (NASS) 2023 report, towards developing data-driven policies to achieve food...

NEWS22 hours ago

Senate Proposes 2-Year Pupillage for Lawyers Newly Called to Bar

ShareBy Eze Okechukwu, Abuja The Senate has passed a bill to amend the Legal Practitioner Act, 2004 into second reading,...