Connect with us

NEWS

Navy appoints Capt. Folorunsho as New Spokesman

Published

on

Share

The Nigerian Navy has appointed Capt. Abiodun Folorunsho as its new Director of Naval Information, following the approval of the Chief of the Naval Staff, Vice Adm. Idi Abbas.

The appointment was contained in a statement on Tuesday by the Chief of Policy and Plans (Navy), Rear Adm.

Akinola Olodude, in Abuja.

According to the statement, Capt.

 Folorunsho took over duties from Commodore Aiwuyor Adams-Aliu, who has been redeployed as Commander, Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) BEECROFT, the Navy’s premier base.

Olodude said Folorunsho, a member of the 50 Regular Course of the Nigerian Defence Academy, was commissioned into the Nigerian Navy in September 2003.

He added that the new spokesman holds a Bachelor of Engineering in Mechanical Engineering from the NDA and multiple postgraduate degrees in war studies, defence and international affairs, energy management, and national security from institutions in Pakistan, Sweden and the United States.

According to him, the new spokesman has attended several local and international professional courses, including the Junior and Senior Staff Courses, the Naval Warfare Course, the United Nations Staff Officers Course, and the Higher Defence Management Course at the United States Naval War College.

“He has served in various command, operational and instructional appointments across ships and shore establishments, including deployments aboard NNS ERINOMI, AYAM and BARAMA, participation in Operation SAFE HAVEN.

“He also served with the United Nations Mission in South Sudan, and key postings at the Naval Dockyard Limited, Lagos.

“Until his appointment, Folorunsho was Assistant Director, Plans/CNS Directives at Naval Headquarters, having earlier served as Chief Instructor, Department of Maritime Warfare, Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Jaji,” he said.

Olodude added that Capt. Folorunsho is a recipient of several awards, including the Chief of the Naval Staff Award for best graduating student on the Junior Course and Naval Warfare Course, as well as the UNMISS Force Commander’s Commendation Award.

NEWS

Swem Karagbe Club Marks 30 Years, Urges Action on Benue Insecurity, Economic Reforms

Published

on

Share

By David Torough, Abuja

The Swem Karagbe Club has marked its 30th anniversary alongside its 2025 Annual General Meeting in Abuja with strong calls for unity among Tiv elites, youth inclusion in leadership, and decisive federal intervention to end the protracted insecurity in Benue State.

Founded in August 1996 as the “Committee of Friends” by six associates, the socio-cultural body has grown into a structured organisation of 35 members.

Speaking at the anniversary celebration held on February 14, 2026, the Club’s President, Jacob Kajo, reflected on its evolution into Swem Karagbe Club – a name drawn from Tiv history symbolising truth and objectivity in traditional oath-taking.

From an initial membership of six, the group expanded to 11 within its first month and later reached the constitutional cap of 30 under its pioneer leadership led by Sir Michael Ucha.

Kajo credited the founding Executive Committee with drafting the Club’s maiden constitution, adopting the motto “A Friend in Need is a Friend Indeed,” designing its logo and regalia, constituting a Board of Trustees, registering with the Corporate Affairs Commission, and securing a permanent site in the Federal Capital Territory.

Today, the Club operates through four standing committees — Cultural, Welfare, Investment, and Public Relations — and runs a Bam savings scheme and a Cooperative Society to support members’ financial needs.

It has also constructed a functional hall and temporary rental structures at its Abuja site, with plans underway to sink a borehole, build shops, and establish a modest guest house to generate sustainable revenue.

While celebrating the milestone, Kajo acknowledged the challenge of an ageing membership, noting that several pioneer members had passed on.

He urged members to bring in credible younger individuals to ensure leadership succession and continuity.

Chairman of the occasion, Godwin Tyoachimin, commended what he described as the Club’s visionary leadership over the past three decades and pledged his continued support.

He called on Tiv sons and daughters at home and in the diaspora to unite and form a formidable force capable of articulating and defending the interests of the Tiv nation in Nigeria’s political and economic space.

A major highlight of the event was a paper presentation titled “The Role of the Elite in Addressing Security Challenges in the Middle-Belt-Tiv Nation” delivered by Dr. Cletus Akwaya, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of DAILY ASSET Newspaper.

Akwaya described the 30-year survival of the Club as “epochal,” particularly against the backdrop of the frequent collapse of socio-cultural associations within Tiv society.

However, he noted that discussions about insecurity in Tivland evoke painful memories of lives lost and communities destroyed.

Tracing the roots of the crisis, he observed that although farmer-herder conflicts predate Nigeria’s civil war, the violence escalated significantly around 2011, becoming more coordinated and deadly. By 2019, attacks had spread to 14 of Benue’s 23 local government areas, including Guma, Makurdi, Gwer West, Kwande, Logo, Katsina-Ala, Agatu, and others.

He cited mass killings, destruction of homes and farms, and widespread displacement, noting that by 2022, internally displaced persons (IDPs) had risen to about 1.6 million, though recent efforts reportedly reduced the figure to approximately 600,000 as some families gradually returned home.

Dr. Akwaya criticised what he termed the politicisation of insecurity by some Tiv elites, accusing certain political actors of exploiting the crisis for electoral advantage rather than forging a united front to demand decisive federal action.

He, however, acknowledged interventions by groups such as the Mutual Union of Tiv in America (MUTA), Mutual Union of Tiv in the United Kingdom (MUTUK), the Christians Association of Nigeria (CAN), and Catholic bishops in affected dioceses, as well as traditional rulers who supported community vigilante initiatives.

The paper also reviewed state-level responses from successive administrations, including those of Gabriel Suswam, Samuel Ortom, and Hyacinth Alia.

It referenced the enactment of the Anti-Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranching Development Act in 2017 under Ortom and the establishment of security outfits such as the Livestock Guards and, more recently, the Benue Volunteer Civil Protection Guards (Anyam Nyor) under Governor Alia.

Despite these measures, Dr. Akwaya lamented that the crisis has persisted for nearly two decades, with devastating humanitarian and economic consequences, including the destruction of markets, schools, clinics, and churches.

To address the challenge, Dr. Akwaya proposed renewed coordination among Tiv elites through a depoliticised and unified strategy, suggesting that the umbrella body, Mdzough U Tiv (MUT), establish or strengthen the office of a Tiv National Security Secretary to coordinate responses.

He also recommended harmonising security strategies across successive state administrations, reviewing the Anti-Open Grazing Law for greater effectiveness, forming village-level vigilante groups, establishing state police, and creating military formations along boundary areas with neighbouring Nasarawa and Taraba states.

Other proposals included youth economic empowerment through cooperative societies, revival of Tiv cultural consciousness to strengthen solidarity, strategic deployment of media for advocacy, and support for emerging platforms such as Tiv TV established by the Tor Tiv, Professor James Ortese Iorzua Ayatse.

In his address, Kajo also touched on national economic developments, particularly the Tax Reform Acts of 2025, which took effect on January 1, 2026.

He noted that while the reforms aim to broaden the tax base, improve government revenue, and support small businesses, concerns remain over potential increases in tax burdens and rising consumer costs.

He urged the Federal Government to ensure effective implementation to stimulate economic recovery and improve living standards, stressing that economic stability would enhance members’ capacity to save and invest through the Club’s financial platforms.

As the Swem Karagbe Club enters its fourth decade, its leadership reaffirmed its commitment to cultural preservation, mutual support, economic empowerment, and sustained advocacy for peace and security in Benue State and the broader Tiv nation.

Continue Reading

NEWS

Adebayo Links Corruption to Poverty, Demands Leadership Change in 2027

Published

on

Share

By Mike Odiakose, Abuja

The leader and presidential candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in the 2023 general election, Prince Adewole Adebayo, has called for a decisive political change ahead of 2027 following Nigeria’s latest ranking on the global corruption index.

His reaction comes after Transparency International released the 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI), ranking Nigeria 142nd out of 182 countries and territories.

The country retained a score of 26 out of 100 but slipped two places from its 2024 ranking of 140th, extending what observers describe as a decade-long stagnation in anti-corruption performance.

In a tweet responding to the report, Adebayo lamented that Nigeria remains one of the most corrupt countries in the world, noting that the nation’s score has shown no improvement in more than ten years.

“Nigeria has ranked once more as one of the most corrupt countries in the world with no improvement on last year’s rankings per anti-corruption findings. In fact, as a nation our score has not improved in more than a decade,” he said.

The SDP leader argued that corruption lies at the root of the country’s socio-economic challenges, linking it directly to poverty and insecurity.

“The fact remains that if we eliminate corruption, we eliminate poverty and insecurity,” Adebayo stated, stressing that systemic graft has held the nation back for too long.

He urged Nigerians to rally behind the SDP ahead of the 2027 general election, saying the country needs a government that is genuinely committed to tackling corruption at all levels.

“In 2027 we need a government capable of actually committing to eliminating corruption at all levels which has held us back as a nation for too long. I urge everyone to join the SDP movement so that we can finally say #farewelltopoverty once and for all,” he added.

Under Transparency International’s methodology, CPI scores range from 0, indicating a highly corrupt public sector, to 100, representing very clean governance. Nigeria’s persistent score of 26 underscores continued concerns about transparency, accountability, and public sector integrity.
Adebayo’s remarks are expected to intensify political debate as parties begin early positioning ahead of the 2027 elections, with corruption and economic hardship likely to remain central campaign issues.

Continue Reading

NEWS

From National Cake to National Duty: A Hard Call to Nigeria’s Political Class

Published

on

Share

By Isaac Asabor

Nigeria does not suffer from a shortage of talent. It suffers from a shortage of conscience in power. Across the nation’s political landscape, one finds individuals who once trained as lawyers, engineers, doctors, administrators, and soldiers; men and women whose education was funded directly or indirectly by the Nigerian people.

Yet too many of these individuals have treated public office not as a trust to be honored, but as a vault to be opened.
The result is a widening gulf between the governed and those who govern, between national promise and national reality.

This is not a new observation, but it remains painfully relevant. The pattern is familiar: citizens invest in education, institutions invest in training, and the country invests hope in leadership.

Then, somewhere between qualification and public office, service gives way to self-interest. Nigeria becomes less a nation to be built and more a resource to be consumed. The political class rises; the public good falls.

The uncomfortable truth is that many who occupy positions of authority today have little record of professional contribution before entering politics. A number of those who studied law never built legal reputations in the courtroom. Some who trained in engineering never engineered anything of national value. Others who studied medicine abandoned healing long before they sought public office, not to talk of being a professor in the field. Still others moved into politics without ever demonstrating competence in public or private service. Yet they command enormous wealth. Citizens are left asking the obvious question: what exactly produced such prosperity?

The same concern extends into the military establishment. Nigeria has funded the education and training of officers in prestigious institutions across the world. Many rose from modest backgrounds, supported by national resources, entrusted with national security. But for some, the privilege of service became a pathway to personal accumulation rather than disciplined stewardship. When those trained at public expense return to preside over corruption, the betrayal is not merely institutional, it is moral.

This is where John F. Kennedy’s enduring challenge rings with uncomfortable clarity: “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” That statement was not a poetic flourish; it was a definition of citizenship and leadership. Its relevance to Nigeria is stark. Too often, the question guiding political ambition has been reversed: what can I extract, not what can I contribute?

The consequences are visible everywhere. Infrastructure decays while budgets expand. Public institutions weaken while private fortunes grow. The wealth of a few becomes inversely proportional to the welfare of the many. This is not governance; it is extraction. It produces a parasitic relationship in which the state sustains its leaders rather than leaders sustaining the state.

To be clear, politics is not inherently corrupt. It is a noble enterprise when rooted in service. A functioning democracy requires people who are willing to sacrifice time, expertise, and comfort for collective progress. Nigeria’s tragedy is not that professionals enter politics, it is that too many enter without the intention of service. They abandon their fields without building credibility and enter public office without building accountability.

A political system dominated by personal gain inevitably breeds policy failure. When leadership is motivated by accumulation rather than transformation, development becomes incidental. Roads are built where contracts are profitable, not where mobility is essential. Projects are initiated for visibility, not sustainability. Institutions are weakened because strong institutions limit personal control. The long-term interest of the nation is consistently traded for short-term advantage.

This mindset has been sustained by a dangerous metaphor: Nigeria as a “national cake.” The phrase is revealing. A cake is meant to be cut and shared until nothing remains. A nation, by contrast, is meant to be cultivated, strengthened, and expanded for future generations. When leaders approach governance with the psychology of consumption rather than construction, national decline becomes inevitable.

Yet, the story need not remain this way. The shift required is not abstract; it is practical and measurable. It begins with a redefinition of public office as a responsibility, not a reward. Political power must be understood as borrowed authority, granted temporarily by citizens for the purpose of service. Wealth accumulated from public office should never exceed the value created for the public. That simple moral equation, if sincerely applied, would transform governance overnight.

Patriotism must also be reintroduced into leadership, not the ceremonial patriotism of speeches and slogans, but the operational patriotism of decisions and policies. Real patriotism is visible in transparent procurement, in infrastructure that endures beyond tenure, in education systems that equip future generations, and in economic policies that create opportunity rather than dependency. It is demonstrated when leaders leave office with less personal wealth but more national progress.

Politicians who have benefited immensely from Nigeria have a special obligation to give back. Many have gained status, security, and prosperity through public resources and public trust. Gratitude for such privilege should not be expressed in rhetoric but in governance. Service should be the repayment of opportunity.

Good governance is not mysterious. It is the consistent application of integrity, competence, and accountability. It requires prioritizing national interest over personal networks. It demands respect for institutions rather than manipulation of them. It insists that public funds be treated as sacred, not accessible. Above all, it requires humility to recognize that leadership is temporary but consequences are permanent.

There is also a matter of legacy. Political power fades quickly; national impact endures. History remembers builders more kindly than beneficiaries. A leader who constructs reliable infrastructure, strengthens education, and protects institutions leaves a footprint that outlives tenure. A leader who merely accumulates wealth leaves a vacuum, and often, a stain.

Nigeria’s citizens are not asking for perfection. They are asking for seriousness. They want leaders who understand that development is deliberate, not accidental. They want leadership that views the nation not as an inheritance to be divided but as a project to be completed. They want governance that reflects sacrifice rather than entitlement.

To those who have gained much from Nigeria, the message is simple and unavoidable: give back through performance. Give back through policy. Give back through integrity. Give back by leaving office with the nation stronger than you found it. Public office should not be the peak of personal achievement; it should be the platform for national advancement.

The transformation of Nigeria will not begin with abstract ideals. It will begin when those in power accept that service is not optional. It is the very justification for their authority. When leaders internalize that truth, governance becomes purposeful, institutions become resilient, and citizens regain trust.

Nigeria does not need more beneficiaries of the system. It needs custodians of the nation. The choice before the political class is therefore stark: continue extracting from the country and deepen its decline, or invest in the country and secure its future. History will record which path they choose. But the country deserves leaders who choose duty.

Continue Reading

Advertisement

Read Our ePaper

Top Stories

NEWS8 hours ago

Swem Karagbe Club Marks 30 Years, Urges Action on Benue Insecurity, Economic Reforms

ShareBy David Torough, Abuja The Swem Karagbe Club has marked its 30th anniversary alongside its 2025 Annual General Meeting in...

NEWS2 days ago

Adebayo Links Corruption to Poverty, Demands Leadership Change in 2027

ShareBy Mike Odiakose, Abuja The leader and presidential candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in the 2023 general election,...

Health2 days ago

World Cancer Day: IMDF Marks Day with Inaugural Awareness Week in Otukpo

ShareBy David Torough, Abuja The Idoma Medical Doctors Foundation (IMDF) has organised its maiden Cancer Awareness Week in commemoration of...

DEFENCE2 days ago

Troops Rescue Eight Abducted Wedding Guests in Kano

ShareTroops of 3 Brigade, Nigerian Army, have rescued eight of the 10 persons abducted by suspected terrorists at a wedding...

security2 days ago

Police Nab Motel Owner, 2 Others, Recover Firearm, in Anambra

ShareThe Police Command in Anambra has nabbed three male suspects in connection with illegal possession of firearms, and involvement in illicit drug activities in the...

security2 days ago

Police Arrest Kidnapping Suspect, Rescue 2 in Adamawa

ShareThe Police Command in Adamawa yesterday, said it has rescued two kidnap victims, and arrested one suspect during a coordinated security operation...

DEFENCE2 days ago

FRSC Disengages 43 Personnel for Desertion, Scandalous Behaviour, Patrol Misconduct

ShareThe Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) has taken decisive and uncompromising disciplinary action by disengaging 43 personnel from its service...

NEWS2 days ago

From National Cake to National Duty: A Hard Call to Nigeria’s Political Class

ShareBy Isaac Asabor Nigeria does not suffer from a shortage of talent. It suffers from a shortage of conscience in...

BUSINESS2 days ago

Valentine: Men Dominate Lagos Gift Market as Perfumes, Wigs Drive Sales Surge

ShareVendors of gift items in Lagos say men have overwhelmingly dominated the purchase of Valentine gifts this season, with an...

Entertainment/Arts/Culture2 days ago

I Was Refused Regular Jobs Because Of my Physique – Nkubi

ShareNigerian actor, Victor Udochukwu Nwaogu, popularly known as Nkubi, has revealed that one of the reasons he became an actor was...