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TY BURATAI HUMANITY CARE FOUNDATION CONGRATULATES GENERAL MUSA AS NEW MINISTER OF DEFENCE, APPLAUDS PRESIDENT TINUBU ON HIS JUDICIOUS SELECTION

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*TY BURATAI HUMANITY CARE FOUNDATION CONGRATULATES GENERAL MUSA AS NEW MINISTER OF DEFENCE, APPLAUDS PRESIDENT TINUBU ON HIS JUDICIOUS SELECTION*

In a letter of congratulations issued by the TY Buratai Humanity Care Foundation, the recently appointed Honourable Minister of Defence, General Christopher Gwabin Musa, OFR, has received significant recognition and support from the esteemed foundation. Ibrahim Dahiru Danfulani, the Chairman of the foundation, conveyed the organization’s warmest congratulations on General Musa’s appointment, conferred by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and confirmed by the Senate.

Describing the new appointment as a notable affirmation of General Musa’s “distinguished service to the nation,” the letter highlighted his exemplary record of service and leadership in the Nigerian Armed Forces, emphasizing his gallantry, unwavering dedication, and strategic insight. The foundation expressed confidence that General Musa’s vast experience will play a vital role in enhancing Nigeria’s defence architecture amid ongoing security challenges.

Ambassador Lieutenant General Tukur Yusufu Buratai, CFR (Rtd), the Grand Patron of the TY Buratai Humanity Care Foundation and former Chief of Army Staff, also commended President Tinubu for his discerning choice. The letter acknowledged that quick confirmation by the Senate reflects a collective commitment to national security and prosperity.

In his remarks, Ambassador Buratai voiced optimism that under General Musa’s stewardship, the Ministry of Defence will confront existing security threats, thereby fostering renewed hope and stability in the nation.

The TY Buratai Humanity Care Foundation extended prayers for General Musa’s wisdom and strength, wishing him a successful tenure marked by significant achievements that would elevate Nigeria’s security and overall welfare.

As Nigeria faces multifaceted security challenges, the appointment of a seasoned military leader at the helm of the Defence Ministry has raised hope for enhanced security measures and strategic progress in the country.

The foundations of leadership and unity at this critical juncture are essential, as echoed by the collective support for General Musa’s mission by various stakeholders dedicated to Nigeria’s peace and stability.

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UNEQUIVOCAL REJECTION OF FALSE ALLEGATIONS AGAINST HIS EXCELLENCY, LIEUTENANT GENERAL TY BURATAI (RTD) CFR

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Buratai Urges ACF to Lead Bold Northern Agenda, Boost Food Security at 25th Anniversary

UNEQUIVOCAL REJECTION OF FALSE ALLEGATIONS AGAINST HIS EXCELLENCY, LIEUTENANT GENERAL TY BURATAI (RTD) CFR

 

 

Our attention has been drawn to an online publication by the infamous Sahara Reporters linking the precious name of His Excellency, Lieutenant General Tukur Yusufu Buratai (rtd) CFR, Betara of Biu, Garkuwan Keffi, former Chief of Army Staff and Nigeria’s former Ambassador to the Republic of Benin, with individuals alleged to be terrorism financiers. These allegations are false, unfounded, mischievous, and amount to a smear campaign deliberately designed to tarnish his name and reputation.

 

 

The insinuation that His Excellency was connected, directly or indirectly, to terrorism financing is entirely fabricated, inconsistent with facts, and fundamentally at odds with his values and lifelong commitment to defending Nigeria against terrorism. At no point in his distinguished career has he ever been questioned, investigated, indicted, or associated with any such matter by any official body or authority. No security institution, intelligence agency, judicial panel, diplomatic mission, oversight mechanism, or administrative body has ever linked him with terrorism financing in any form. The narrative being circulated by Sahara Reporters, relying solely on the unverified personal claims of Major General Danjuma Ali-Keffi (rtd), is therefore a clear misrepresentation borne out of malice and lacks any factual or legal foundation.

It is regrettable, though unsurprising, that Sahara Reporters has once again attempted to drag the precious name of His Excellency into disrepute, a pattern it has repeatedly pursued over the years, albeit unsuccessfully. Each attempt has failed because his record remains forthright, transparent, and distinguished by honourable service to the nation.

 

 

For over four decades, His Excellency, Lieutenant General TY Buratai (rtd) CFR, served this nation with honour, courage, and steadfast commitment to defeating terrorism. Under his leadership, the Nigerian Army significantly degraded Boko Haram and ISWAP, recovered previously occupied territories, restored civil administration, and returned displaced Nigerians to their homes. It defies logic and conscience to suggest that the same person who led decisive actions against terrorism would in any way be associated with the very elements he spent his career confronting.

 

 

In view of this, we call on Sahara Reporters and Major General Ali-Keffi (rtd) to immediately retract their publication and tender an unreserved public apology to His Excellency. Failure to do so will leave us with no option but to initiate appropriate legal proceedings to protect his reputation and seek redress for this malicious attack.

 

 

His Excellency remains focused on academic engagements, policy contributions, peace advocacy, and philanthropic initiatives aimed at reinforcing national development. His legacy is well documented and will not be diminished by unfounded narratives or deliberate misinformation.

 

Brigadier General Sani Kukasheka Usman (rtd) mni fnipr

For and On Behalf of:

His Excellency, Lieutenant General Tukur Yusufu Buratai (rtd), CFR, Betara of Biu, Garkuwan Keffi

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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A Tentative Recovery — OR WINDOW DRESSING? Nigeria’s GDP Grows 3.98% in Q3 2025: What the Number Hides and What Must Be Done

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A Tentative Recovery — OR WINDOW DRESSING?
Nigeria’s GDP Grows 3.98% in Q3 2025: What the Number Hides and What Must Be Done.

By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyng.com

“Separating Statistical Progress from Everyday Reality in Africa’s Most Complex Economy.”

Nigeria’s economy grew by 3.98% year-on-year in real terms in the third quarter of 2025, according to the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). At first glance the figure looks like PROGRESS and it is PROGRESS of a kind. But beneath the tidy percentage lie a tangle of uneven sectoral performance, fragile price stability, fiscal strain and a persistent failure to translate macroeconomic numbers into better daily lives for ordinary Nigerians. This piece pulls apart the headline, explains what drove the expansion, flags the risks and offers an unvarnished judgment about what policymakers must do next.

What drove the 3.98% growth? The NBS report shows that the expansion in Q3 was BROAD-BASED but led by the non-oil economy (notably services and agriculture) even as the oil sector staged a modest recovery. Services accounted for the largest share of output and recorded one of the stronger growth rates, while agriculture returned to positive territory after weaker stretches in 2024. In aggregate, the non-oil sector contributed roughly 96% of GDP, underscoring how far Nigeria’s output composition has shifted away from hydrocarbons. Those structural shifts matter because they change the policy levers that actually move the economy.

The oil sector did record positive growth (helped by higher crude production) but its share of aggregate GDP remains small, a signal that oil is less of a direct growth engine than it used to be. In other words: while higher production matters for foreign exchange and government revenues, the day-to-day purchasing power and job creation that lift millions of households are overwhelmingly determined by non-oil activity.

Why the number is both WELCOME and WORRYING.
A WELCOME sign: sustained quarterly growth after a weak patch signals momentum. The World Bank has itself noted “POSITIVE ECONOMIC MOMENTUM” in 2025 and cautioned that reforms are beginning to yield results, while urging that gains be translated into tangible welfare improvements for the poor. As Mathew Verghis, World Bank Country Director for Nigeria, put it: “The Nigerian government has taken bold steps to stabilize the economy, and these efforts are beginning to yield results.” But the World Bank’s central caveat is crucial: macro stabilization is necessary but not sufficient; the poor still face high food inflation and widespread vulnerability.

The WORRYING side is immediate and stark. Inflation remains painfully high (double-digit and food inflation especially elevated) and borrowing costs are still punitive despite modest easing from earlier peaks to conditions that throttle business expansion and household welfare. Financial market and monetary policy improvements will not help families who spend the bulk of their income on food if the price of the basic food basket keeps rising. In short: GROWTH WITHOUT DISINFLATION AND REDISTRIBUTION IS A HOLLOW VICTORY. Sahara and other analysts reported inflation pressures and pointed to a still-high policy rate as part of the context for Q3 figures.

Central Bank Governor Olayemi Cardoso has repeatedly insisted that credible, predictable policy will attract investment: “Stability is at the core of advancing Nigeria’s policy framework through inflation targeting. You do not need to beg anyone to invest.” That prescription is true, but only if the rest of the policy apparatus (fiscal discipline, supply-side fixes for food and energy, social protection) follows through. Stability without structural reform will not deliver jobs or lower the cost of living.

The fiscal and external backdrop. Growth does not occur in isolation. The Federal Government’s fiscal plans for 2026 (including a draft budget and medium-term fiscal framework) point to continued pressure on public finances, a SIZEABLE DEFICIT and RISING DEBT SERVICE OBLIGATIONS. The cabinet’s fiscal framework projects large budgetary needs, indicting the reality that public investment will be constrained unless revenue mobilization improves. In short: the state needs fiscal headroom to invest in the power, transport and logistics that convert growth into livable livelihoods.

On the external side, stronger oil production and higher non-oil exports have improved foreign exchange reserves and the external position compared with the crisis years. Those improvements matter: reserves and a more functional FX market reduce panic, allow imports of critical inputs and lower premium pressures. Yet, the gains remain delicate and reversible if confidence weakens or global commodity prices swing.

Where the gains must land: three urgent priorities
Tame inflation, especially food inflation. The World Bank and Nigerian policymakers agree: the single biggest tax on the poor is food price inflation. Targeted supply-side fixes (agricultural inputs, storage, logistics and trade measures) combined with a credible monetary framework, are indispensable. Without this, headline GDP growth will keep feeling distant from household reality.

Restore fiscal space and spend smarter. The 2026 fiscal framework highlights a difficult trade-off: service large debt obligations or invest in growth-enhancing infrastructure. Nigeria must tighten revenue collection, eliminate leakages, and prioritize public spending that directly boosts productivity (power, roads, ports, irrigation). Otherwise, growth will be cyclical and shallow.

Translate macro stability into real investment and jobs. As CBN Governor Cardoso has argued, predictable, transparent policy attracts investors. But to convert investment into jobs, governments must fix regulatory uncertainty, unblock transport bottlenecks, and support SMEs with affordable credit and market access. A solid monetary stance alone will not produce mass employment.

A candid verdict. A 3.98% growth rate is not a tragedy, it is evidence the economy is moving in the right direction after years of dislocations. But it is also a warning: growth that does not reduce costs for ordinary citizens, create stable jobs, and expand social protection is a fragile and politically toxic victory. The leadership in Abuja must stop treating statistics as an end in themselves and embrace a people-centered economic strategy that combines stabilization with direct interventions for food security, job creation and fiscal transparency.

If policymakers act with urgency (tightening the link between macro stability and social outcomes, spending smartly, and fixing supply bottlenecks) Nigeria can convert this modest momentum into sustained, inclusive growth. If they do not, the headline percentages will become yet another number that comforts elites while ordinary Nigerians continue to pay the price.

My Final note. Numbers matter and the NBS’s Q3 figure is worth acknowledging. But the measure of success is whether mothers can afford food, whether small businesses can borrow without choking on interest, and whether young people can find dignified work. Until those metrics improve, a 3.98% GDP print remains a TENTATIVE step and NOT a TRIUMPH.

 

A Tentative Recovery — OR WINDOW DRESSING?
Nigeria’s GDP Grows 3.98% in Q3 2025: What the Number Hides and What Must Be Done.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyng.com

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Leading Islamic hip-hop and Afro Pop singer, Hyb Addis drops new single ‘MA-LO-BE’

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Leading Islamic hip-hop and Afro Pop singer, Hyb Addis drops new single ‘MA-LO-BE’

Leading Islamic hip-hop and rap artist
Hyb Addis, popularly known as Omo Ilorin Original, is back with a brand-new visual titled MALOBE — a powerful blend of culture, spirituality, and street inspiration.

Signed under Jummiey Entertainment International, Hyb Addis continues to stand out with his exceptional musical style, mixing Arabic, English, and Yoruba lyrics to deliver thought-provoking messages and energetic rhythms.

With years of consistency in the music industry, Addis has earned multiple local and international awards and continues to push boundaries. His latest album features three international artists from the USA, India, and Indonesia, expanding his global footprint.

MALOBE is another masterpiece that showcases Hyb Addis’s talent, originality, and connection to his roots — infused with Quranic references, street wisdom, and Afro-pop vibes.

Enjoy the new single via this linkhttps://youtu.be/IXg0p3tvMOs?feature=shared

Don’t forget to LIKE, COMMENT & SUBSCRIBE for more amazing music from Hyb Addis. Turn on notifications so you don’t miss upcoming releases — more hits are on the way!

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Leading Islamic hip-hop and Afro Pop singer, Hyb Addis drops new single 'MA-LO-BE'

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