Connect with us

society

313 Network for Asiwaju 2027 Hails President Tinubu Over Rescue of Abducted Girls*

Published

on

*313 Network for Asiwaju 2027 Hails President Tinubu Over Rescue of Abducted Girls*

 

The 313 Network for Asiwaju 2027, a grassroots support group championing President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, has commended the President and Nigeria’s security forces for the successful rescue of all abducted students and teachers from St. Mary’s Catholic Primary and Secondary School in Papiri, Niger State.

In a statement at the conclusion of its end-of-year congress held in Lafia, the group described the release of the final batch of 130 students on Sunday as a “monumental victory” that underscores President Tinubu’s commitment to the safety and security of Nigerian citizens, particularly vulnerable children.

The congress, which featured exhaustive deliberations among members from across the country, highlighted the President’s decisive actions following the November 21 abduction of 303 students and 12 teachers by armed gunmen.

The statement noted that initial efforts saw about 50 students escape on their own, followed by the rescue of 100 more on December 8 through sustained security operations.

The final release of the remaining 130 students, as confirmed by Special Adviser to the President on Media and Communication, Sunday Dare, has now accounted for all victims.

The group praised President Tinubu’s leadership in deploying security agencies and coordinating operations that led to the safe return of the children to Minna, where they were received by Niger State Governor Mohammed Umaru Bago and reunited with their families after medical examinations.

“The President’s prompt and strategic response to this crisis demonstrates his Renewed Hope vision in action—protecting lives, restoring hope, and ensuring that no Nigerian child is left behind,” the statement signed by Ambassador Toby Prince Udo, its national coordinator added.

“This achievement attests to the effectiveness of his administration’s security architecture and a clear signal that Nigeria is safer under his leadership.

“We are deeply grateful to Mr. President for his decisive leadership that brought every single child and teacher home safely. This is Renewed Hope in tangible form.”

The 313 Network for Asiwaju 2027 also expressed profound gratitude and admiration for its Grand Patron and Financier, Senator Mohammed Sani Musa, representing Niger East Senatorial District and widely celebrated as 313.

“As the visionary founder, Grand Patron, and Financier of this movement, Senator 313 has tirelessly mobilized millions in support of President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda,” the statement declared.

“His strategic leadership, patriotic zeal, and selfless dedication have transformed the Network into a powerful force for positive change.

“As his devoted followers and disciples, we salute Senator 313 for his exemplary service, loyalty, and remarkable ability to bridge divides while amplifying the voice of the people,” the group said.

The Network particularly thanked Senator Musa for his immense support to Mr. President, especially in the area of economic development, where his contributions have helped drive key reforms and initiatives yielding tangible benefits for Nigerians.

The 313 Network for Asiwaju 2027 reiterated its full endorsement of President Tinubu for a second term in 2027, citing his successes in security, economic reforms, and infrastructure development as reasons to rally nationwide support.

“With leaders like President Tinubu and Senator 313 at the helm, Nigeria’s future is brighter than ever,” the statement concluded.

society

Take Back FESTAC Honours Community Builders, Urges Sustained Grassroots Participation By Ifeoma Ikem 

Published

on

Take Back FESTAC Honours Community Builders, Urges Sustained Grassroots Participation

By Ifeoma Ikem 

 

The Take Back FESTAC Initiative has recognised residents and community leaders for their contributions to the development of FESTAC Town and Amuwo-Odofin, calling for sustained community participation to drive lasting progress.

 

The recognition was held during the maiden End-of-Year Dinner and Community Builder Awards Ceremony organised by the initiative at the weekend.

 

The event brought together residents, stakeholders and community leaders to celebrate individuals whose private efforts have positively impacted the socio-economic growth of the area.

 

Mrs. Stella Osafile, member representing Amuwo-Odofin Constituency I in the Lagos State House of Assembly, attended the ceremony as the Special Guest of Honour.

 

Osafile assured residents of her continued commitment to strategic lobbying and advocacy to address key developmental needs of the constituency.

 

Addressing the gathering, she likened governance to a cooking process, stressing that collaboration between the legislature and the executive would soon yield visible results for the people.

 

She explained that lawmakers do not execute projects directly but influence development through advocacy, budgetary oversight and monitoring to ensure that community priorities are captured in government programmes.

 

President of the Take Back FESTAC Initiative, Mr Valentine Ayodele Uduebo, described the movement as a gradual but intentional process, estimating its current progress at 25 per cent.

 

Uduebo emphasised that the initiative is apolitical and entirely community-driven, noting that all award recipients were private citizens rather than political office holders.

 

According to him, the awardees were selected through an extensive census and questionnaire survey that identified individuals who have invested in the community by establishing businesses, industries and employment opportunities.

 

He noted that many of such contributors often go unrecognised despite their role in local development, adding that the initiative considered it important to appreciate their efforts.

 

A member of the executive committee, Dr Mrs Dumebi Owa, said the initiative goes beyond physical development, describing it as a moral and cultural movement aimed at restoring values such as integrity, humility and competence in leadership.

 

She stressed that sustainable development must be anchored on strong ethical foundations and active citizen participation.

 

Some of the award recipients, including Engr. Folorunsho Ola-Western and Dr Jude Ukusare, described the recognition as a motivation to intensify their commitment to community service.

Other awardees included Chief Anderson Uhuegbu, Prince Obape, Chief Okoye and Chief Nwosu.

 

The event highlighted the growing role of community-led initiatives in promoting accountability, strengthening civic engagement and supporting sustainable development in FESTAC Town and its environs.

Continue Reading

society

TM Foundation Completes Massive Food Distribution Across Ogun State, Reaching Hundreds of Households

Published

on

TM Foundation Completes Massive Food Distribution Across Ogun State, Reaching Hundreds of Households

 

Ogun State — In a decisive effort to ease food insecurity during the festive season, the TM Foundation, also known as the Olatunde Milky Foundation, has successfully concluded its December Food Distribution Drive, impacting hundreds of vulnerable households across Ogun State.

 

The two-day humanitarian outreach, held on December 20 and 21, 2025, saw volunteers and coordinators move across multiple urban and rural communities, distributing essential food items to families grappling with rising living costs.

Restoring Hope During the Holidays

 

The initiative was specifically designed to cushion the economic strain many households experience during the Christmas period. Distribution points recorded a large turnout, with elderly citizens, widows, and low-income earners among the major beneficiaries.

Food packs contained key household staples aimed at sustaining families through the festive season.

 

Speaking during the final phase of the exercise, a representative of the Foundation said:

“Our goal was simple: to ensure the joy of the season reaches every dining table. We understand the economic realities many families are facing, and we believe no one should celebrate on an empty stomach.”
Wide Reach and Strong Community Response

The outreach covered remote settlements and densely populated urban areas, ensuring inclusivity and fairness in distribution. Beneficiaries expressed heartfelt appreciation, noting that the intervention came at a critical time when food prices traditionally spike.

 

One beneficiary remarked:
“This is more than food. It shows that the TM Foundation has not forgotten us. It gives us hope and dignity.”


Transparency, Teamwork, and a Call for Support

 

Organizers attributed the success of the programme to effective logistics, dedicated volunteers, and the Foundation’s commitment to transparency in managing donor contributions.

 

Following the successful conclusion of the drive, the Olatunde Milky Foundation has appealed to corporate organizations, partners, and compassionate individuals to sustain support for similar initiatives, stressing that food insecurity remains a year-round challenge.

 

About TM Foundation

The TM Foundation is a non-profit humanitarian organization committed to community development, grassroots empowerment, and food security initiatives across Nigeria. Through strategic partnerships and direct interventions, the Foundation continues to improve the lives of underserved populations.

 

TM Foundation Completes Massive Food Distribution Across Ogun State, Reaching Hundreds of Households

Continue Reading

society

When God and Politics Become Weapons: How Religion and Partisanship Are Tearing Nigeria Apart

Published

on

When God and Politics Become Weapons: How Religion and Partisanship Are Tearing Nigeria Apart

By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com

 

“Instead of joining hands against poverty, insecurity and corruption, we sharpen knives on each other and the country pays the price.”

Nigeria is a nation of staggering possibilities and stubborn contradictions. We boast a youthful population, vast natural resources and a diaspora that outshines our reputation abroad. Yet at home we fritter away those assets on what should be the least important of all contests, who prays where and who sits on which party stool. Religion and partisan politics (two forces that could bind a plural society) have instead been weaponised, turning colleagues into enemies, constituencies into battlefields and public life into a theatre of suspicion. The result is predictable: a state weaker, a society poorer and citizens dead or displaced in numbers that shame our claim to civilisation.

When God and Politics Become Weapons: How Religion and Partisanship Are Tearing Nigeria Apart
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com

Religion in Nigeria is not a neutral private comfort; it is a civic force with mass reach. Roughly half the population identifies as Muslim and half as Christian, a demography that should encourage humility, compromise and inclusive institutions. Instead, the balance has been treated as a truncheon to be wielded in elections, appointments and policy fights. When political actors make faith a litmus test for office or weaponise clergy prophecies to mobilise followers, they tear at the fragile fabric of citizenship and convert theological difference into permanent political danger. Pew’s recent work shows how religion remains central to identity in Nigeria and that fact matters for how power is contested.

The violence that follows is not theoretical. Over the past decade the country has witnessed waves of communal and sectarian brutality whose proximate causes range from climate-driven land pressures to criminal banditry, yet their lines are often drawn in religious or ethnic ink. Farmer–herder clashes, concentrated in the Middle Belt, have killed thousands and spread fear across farming communities. By 2021, more than 15,000 deaths had been linked to these clashes; local outbreaks since then, including mass attacks in Benue and other states, have shown the crisis is escalating. When disputes over grazing corridors and farmland are narrated as religious persecution, innocent farmers and herders alike are pushed into cycles of revenge.

Terrorist insurgency adds a gnawing dimension. Boko Haram and ISWAP not only killed tens of thousands and displaced millions in the northeast – they also turned religion into a cover for brutal politics. The consequences are not confined to the northeast; they ripple into national politics, inform security policy and feed identity-based suspicion across the federation. Civilians pay the heaviest price: thousands dead, millions uprooted and whole local economies hollowed out. The humanitarian cost is matched by an economic toll: insecurity destroys farms, distracts investment and raises the fiscal burden for a government already addicted to borrowing.

Politics has itself become a theatre of religious signalling. The 2023 presidential campaign, for example, exposed how fragile the country’s equilibrium is when parties abandon long-standing practices of balance for short-term electoral gain. The Muslim–Muslim ticket controversy (whether you call it tactical realpolitik or cynical disregard for plural representation) sharpened sectarian anxieties and showed how quickly trust can dissipate if inclusiveness is not defended as a principle. When political entrepreneurs calculate that religion will win them votes, they sell the nation out for partisan advantage.

This is not mere moralising: it is practical. When citizens see appointments, licences, policing, or access to relief routed through faith-based networks, trust in state institutions collapses. Governance then survives on patronage, not performance. Public resources are diverted to cronies and co-religionists; laws meant to protect the vulnerable are mangled by selective enforcement; and civic identity (the idea that every Nigerian is first a citizen) is subordinated to narrower loyalties. The consequence is political fragmentation at a time the state most requires unity to confront existential threats: poverty, inflation, climate shocks and violent non-state actors.

We can (and must) do better. The remedy begins with a hard embrace of secular citizenship: not anti-religion, but neutral public institutions that treat faith as a private domain while guaranteeing equal protection for all. This means transparent appointments, rigorous anti-corruption enforcement and the depoliticisation of security agencies. It means enforcing anti-violence laws impartially and prosecuting those who inflame religious passions for personal gain. It also means strengthening local conflict-resolution mechanisms: where grazing corridors or land rights cause friction, the state must mediate fairly and invest in alternatives (ranching, irrigation and effective land registration) instead of amplifying blame. Research from scholars like Jibrin Ibrahim has repeatedly shown that high religiosity in Nigeria coexists with weak civic practices and that addressing the structural drivers of conflict is essential for reconciliation.

Religious leaders, too, have a duty. This is not a call to silencing the pulpit; it is an appeal for courage. Wole Soyinka’s insistence that human liberty must come before sectarian barricades (and his famous rebuke that religion must not be allowed to prevent rational national thinking) is not literary flourish; it is ethical strategy. Clerics and imams must preach restraint and publicly rebuke those who weaponise faith. Where religious leaders use congregations to amplify division, they forfeit moral authority and become accomplices to national decay.

Finally, ordinary citizens must reclaim civic courage. Unity is not uniformity. It is the will to disagree without dehumanising. It is the daily practice of treating a neighbour who prays differently as deserving of decency, equal opportunity and security. Civil society, universities, the media and the private sector must amplify narratives of shared destiny over slogans of exclusion. International partners can help, but the solution must be homegrown: layered, patient and relentless.

Nigeria’s enemies are not each other; they are hunger, poor governance, climate shocks and violent actors who exploit our divisions. To fight them effectively we must stop seeing religion and party membership as identity armour and start seeing them as private commitments that do not disqualify one from the public good. If we do not, the nation will continue to fracture, not along neat ideological lines, but in human terms: widows, orphans, ruined farms and shuttered schools. That is an indictment we cannot afford.

We owe future generations a country where difference does not mean danger. The work is ugly and difficult (reforming institutions, enforcing law and recalibrating moral leadership) but it is the only honest path forward. As Soyinka warned, the moral imagination of a people determines the life they will lead. Let us choose a Nigeria that puts humanity first, and religion and politics in their proper, constructive place.

 

When God and Politics Become Weapons: How Religion and Partisanship Are Tearing Nigeria Apart
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com

Continue Reading

Cover Of The Week

Trending