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Rising Music Sensation Kevin David Kaydee Drops Uplifting Gospel Anthem, “I Get Jesus, No Wahala”

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Rising Music Sensation Kevin David Kaydee Drops Uplifting Gospel Anthem, “I Get Jesus, No Wahala”

Rising Music Sensation Kevin David Kaydee Drops Uplifting Gospel Anthem, “I Get Jesus, No Wahala”

 

Music lovers are celebrating a refreshing new sound as fast-rising artiste Kevin David Kaydee unveils his latest single, “I Get Jesus, No Wahala.” The vibrant track—now streaming on all major music platforms—is already resonating with audiences for its message of faith, hope, and unshakeable confidence in God.

Released at a time when many people are searching for reassurance, the song carries an upbeat rhythm and a catchy, unforgettable chorus. Its central message is simple yet powerful: Anyone who has Jesus has peace, courage, and nothing to worry about.

The single is accompanied by striking cover art featuring Kaydee against a radiant blue backdrop, capturing his identity as a joyful messenger of gospel inspiration. With its blend of contemporary Afro-gospel sounds and heartfelt lyrical depth, the song appeals to both young listeners and long-time gospel enthusiasts.

According to those close to the project, the track is more than just another release—it is a testimony. Kaydee pours his personal experiences into the music, affirming that faith in Christ remains the greatest foundation for stability, even in difficult times.

“I Get Jesus, No Wahala” is available on Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music, and other streaming platforms, giving fans worldwide easy access to its uplifting message.

With this release, Kevin David Kaydee cements his place as one of the bold, inspiring new voices shaping the future of gospel music—confident, spirit-filled, and undeniably refreshing.

Rising Music Sensation Kevin David Kaydee Drops Uplifting Gospel Anthem, “I Get Jesus, No Wahala”
Follow and subscribe to Kevin David Kaydee across all platforms for the hottest gospel jams and the freshest new sounds!

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Sahara weekly online is published by First Sahara weekly international. contact [email protected]

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Five Minutes — Or I’ll Switch It Off”: When Pageantry Collides with Power

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Five Minutes — Or I’ll Switch It Off”: When Pageantry Collides with Power.

By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyng.com

 

“How Senator Oluremi Tinubu’s interruption of Gov. Ademola Adeleke at Ile-Ife exposes constitutional ambiguities, protocol failures and a dangerous precedent for Nigerian public life.”

The grainy clip that has riveted Nigerians this week is short, sharp and unnerving. At a glittering cultural occasion in Ile-Ife, where royalty, ex-presidents and senior public figures had come together to honour the First Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu is seen approaching the podium, leaning over the microphone and saying, in words that thundered across social media: “I give you five minutes to conclude your speech. Enough with the music or I’ll switch off the microphone.” The target of that rebuke was Governor Ademola Adeleke of Osun State, who had taken the stage for a welcome address and lapsed into one of his characteristic, jubilant moments of song and dance. The exchange was captured on multiple phones and has since been replayed, remixed and debated across the country.

On its face the scene is a minor, theatre-of-politics moment; a First Lady chiding a governor for extending a speech beyond what she considered decorous. This clip is not merely entertainment: it crystallises a set of deeper issues that go to the heart of democratic practice in Nigeria and the rule of law; the separation between ceremonial presence and authority; protocol and respect for elected office; and the creeping normalization of raw personal power in public spaces.

First, the facts. The incident occurred during Senator Tinubu’s investiture with a high-profile chieftaincy title in Ile-Ife at an event attended by former President Olusegun Obasanjo, several governors and senior traditional rulers. Videos from the ceremony show Governor Adeleke moving from the scripted welcome into spontaneous singing; Senator Tinubu then interrupted him twice, each time warning she would cut the microphone if he did not stop. The confrontation lasted less than a minute, but the fallout has been disproportionate.

Second, the constitutional reality. Nigeria’s Constitution does not create an “office of the First Lady,” nor does it vest the president’s spouse with any formal powers or authority over other elected officials. This is not a modern controversy: constitutional scholars and commentators have repeatedly observed that the First Lady’s role is informal, customary and without statutory backing. The absence of a constitutional or legal remit does not, of course, prevent a president’s spouse from being influential in politics or public life; but it does make any exercise of coercive or corrective authority by the First Lady a matter of norms and courtesy rather than law.

Five Minutes — Or I’ll Switch It Off”: When Pageantry Collides with Power.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyng.com

Third, protocol and power. Even if one accepts that the First Lady is a high-ranking dignitary at ceremonial events, precedent and common sense suggest limits. Protocol in formal gatherings (especially those involving state hosts such as a governor) ordinarily recognises the primacy of the convenor. The judge of whether a speech has exceeded its welcome is usually the event chair or organiser, not a visiting dignitary. When a non-elected figure publicly threatens to silence an elected governor, the action is less a correction of decorum and more an assertion of personal muscle in a public setting. That is politically corrosive: it tells citizens that proximity to the presidency can substitute for protocol, and that democratic furniture can be rearranged on the spot by social clout.

Fourth, the politics of perception. The incident has divided public opinion along familiar lines. Critics see an overreach and quite a disrespectful interruption of a governor who, by virtue of election, answers to the people of his state. Defenders argue that the host or the event had reasons to control time and maintain decorum and that the First Lady merely spoke up because the programme demanded it. This is disingenuous: style and substance matter in politics. An elected governor, even when exuberant, embodies a democratic mandate. A president’s spouse, however prominent, does not. Blurring these distinctions feeds cynicism about who actually governs and who merely commands attention.

Fifth, what the law and scholarship tell us. Authors who have studied the First Lady’s place in Nigerian governance highlight a paradox: enormous informal influence, and almost no formal accountability. Legal scholars have proposed formalising the role or else strictly policing the boundaries between ceremonial visibility and executive power but not to diminish the social contributions of presidential spouses but to ensure that democratic roles are transparent and accountable. As one academic review of the subject notes, the position is “not elective, carries no statutory duties and no salary,” yet across successive administrations it has acquired de-facto powers and institutional trappings that raise questions of legitimacy and oversight.

Where does this leave us? There are three practical takeaways:

Reinforce protocol and organisers’ authority. High-profile events must have clear, enforced lines of protocol. If time-keeping is essential, the MC, the event chair or the hosting governor should be empowered to enforce it — not a visiting dignitary who, however well-intentioned, is not the arbiter of the agenda.

Clarify norms surrounding the “First Lady” role. Nigerians should decide whether they want the First Lady to remain a moral and charitable presence without public-office prerogatives, or to formalise her responsibilities — with the attendant duties and accountabilities. Scholars have long argued for one of these two approaches: either integrate the role into constitutional and administrative frameworks, or deliberately strip it of state-like powers. Ambiguity is the enemy of good governance.
scirp.org

Respect electoral mandates. The republican idea is that voters elect officeholders who then exercise authority in accordance with law and procedure. Allowing personality, proximity or social clout to displace that principle will hollow out democratic norms over time. Public actors, whether elected or ceremonial, must model deference to institutional roles if they expect citizens to take democracy seriously.

Finally, this episode is less about one hot-headed minute and more about the set of habits and assumptions that minute reveals. The optics of democracy depend on limits: limits on the use of force, limits on the exercise of personal will, and limits on who may displace elected authority. When those limits are eroded — when a microphone becomes a tool of command rather than a tool of speech — the damage is done gradually, in increments that many will shrug off until it is too late to reclaim them.

Senator Oluremi Tinubu’s intervention at Ile-Ife will be remembered as a moment — a small drama in the theatre of Nigerian public life. But drama, in a country still consolidating democratic norms, has outsized consequences. We can treat the incident as an amusing viral clip, or we can treat it as a teachable moment: one that calls for clearer protocols, firmer respect for institutional roles, and a public conversation about what power (visible and invisible) should be allowed to do on our stages. If the latter is chosen, Nigeria’s public life will be the better for it.

George Omagbemi Sylvester is a political commentator and columnist. This piece is published by saharaweeklyng.com

Five Minutes — Or I’ll Switch It Off”: When Pageantry Collides with Power.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyng.com

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Aare Adetola Emmanuelking Hails Ooni of Ife at 10, Praises Reign of Unity

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Aare Adetola Emmanuelking Hails Ooni of Ife at 10, Praises Reign of Unity

The Chief Executive Officer of Adron Group, Sir Aare Adetola Emmanuelking, KOF, has congratulated His Imperial Majesty, Oba Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, CFR, Ojaja II, the Ooni of Ife, on the occasion of his 10th coronation anniversary.

In a goodwill message, Aare Emmanuelking described the monarch’s decade-long reign on the revered throne of Oduduwa as divinely inspired, visionary, and transformational, noting that it has ushered in a new era of cultural renaissance and national unity.

He stated that since his ascension, the Ooni has redefined traditional leadership by modernising kingship, reviving Yoruba cultural identity, and strengthening Ile-Ife’s position as the spiritual and cultural epicentre of the Yoruba people.

According to him, the monarch’s leadership has significantly advanced youth empowerment, cultural diplomacy, innovation, and community development, while also strengthening ties between Africa and the global African diaspora.

Aare Emmanuelking commended the Ooni for successfully combining the preservation of ancient traditions with progressive governance, peacebuilding, and sustainable development initiatives, describing him as a beacon of cultural pride and purposeful leadership.

Speaking on behalf of his family, the Board, and Management of Adron Group, he expressed gratitude to God for the monarch’s impactful reign. He prayed for renewed strength, wisdom, and long life as he continues to serve the Yoruba nation and Nigeria at large.

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FALSE ALARMS & FAILED NARRATIVES: Why Allegations Linking Lt. Gen. T.Y. Buratai to Terror Financing Don’t Add Up By FEMI OYEWALE

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TY BURATAI HUMANITY CARE FOUNDATION FELICITATES WITH PRESIDENT BOLA AHMED TINUBU GCFR ON HIS 72ND BIRTHDAY

FALSE ALARMS & FAILED NARRATIVES: Why Allegations Linking Lt. Gen. T.Y. Buratai to Terror Financing Don’t Add Up

By FEMI OYEWALE

 

For the past few weeks, an online storm has been stirred by a sensational report alleging financial links between former Chief of Army Staff and former Ambassador, Lieutenant General Tukur Yusufu Buratai (Rtd.), and certain terror suspects. But as more security analysts, military insiders, and policy observers examine the claims, one conclusion continues to stand out:

The allegations simply do not align with Buratai’s track record, the facts on the ground, or the history behind the source making the accusations.

 

FALSE ALARMS & FAILED NARRATIVES: Why Allegations Linking Lt. Gen. T.Y. Buratai to Terror Financing Don’t Add Up
By FEMI OYEWALE
1. A General Defined by Results, Not Rumours

When Buratai took over as Chief of Army Staff in 2015, Nigeria was grappling with one of the most dangerous phases of the Boko Haram insurgency. Within months, the narrative began to shift:

Boko Haram—which once hoisted its flags across several local governments—lost territorial control.

The Nigerian Army under his command recaptured over 20 communities previously overrun by terrorists.

Supply routes were restored, internally displaced persons began returning home, and key towns like Bama, Gwoza, Monguno, and Dikwa came back under government authority.

The dreaded Sambisa Forest saw unprecedented military pressure, culminating in operations that broke the insurgents’ logistical backbone.

These achievements were not theoretical; they were verifiable, observable, and globally acknowledged.

So, the idea that the same military leader who dedicated his tenure to dismantling terror structures would simultaneously be “financing” the very networks he risked his life to defeat—defies logic, military culture, and national security realities.

 

2. Timing, Tone, and Tactics: Why the Claims Raise Eyebrows

The controversial report came from Sahara Reporters, a platform whose style of journalism has long been criticised for sensationalism, politically-motivated framing, and frequent inaccuracies in high-profile cases.

Over the years, several of its most explosive headlines have later collapsed under scrutiny:

Stories based on anonymous sources that were later discredited

Allegations that never aligned with official investigations

Publications later withdrawn or contradicted by law enforcement findings

The recurring pattern has sparked public debates about the outlet’s editorial motives and the possibility of politically-driven storylines aimed at specific individuals.

Some analysts argue that Buratai’s name offers guaranteed traffic—a factor that thrives in the era of click-economy journalism.

 

3. No National Security Agency Has Confirmed the Claims

Despite the noise across social media, no credible security institution in Nigeria—not the DSS, not the NPF, not the NSA’s office—has validated the allegations.

In fact, security officials have repeatedly emphasised that:

Terror financing accusations undergo long, forensic, multinational investigations, not gossip.

Such operations require solid financial trails—bank logs, transactional evidence, international cooperation.

None of these have been presented publicly or verified.

Instead, what exists is a media article built on unnamed sources, without any government confirmation, court filings, or legal indictments.

In an era where national security issues are sensitive and deeply complex, such unverified allegations carry consequences and should not be taken at face value.

 

4. A Target of Repeated Campaigns

Buratai has been a consistent subject of targeted reports by Sahara Reporters—many of which have previously been challenged or debunked.

Observers note several possibilities:

Political grudges arising from the military’s past anti-corruption stance

Factions unhappy with his reforms in the Army

Attempts to smear former service chiefs for ideological or partisan reasons

Power bloc battles ahead of future political alignments

Whatever the motive, the pattern is unmistakable:
when it comes to Buratai, sensational claims seem to surface without credible substantiation.

 

5. Service, Sacrifice, and a Record That Speaks Louder Than Rumours

Throughout his career, Buratai has been known for:

His frontline presence during operations

His push for enhanced military welfare

Strengthening civil-military cooperation

Modernizing combat equipment

Increasing international partnership on counterterrorism

His post-service appointment as Nigeria’s Ambassador further signals the confidence successive governments placed in his loyalty and competence.

For a man who spent decades risking his life to combat insurgency, the narrative that he would undermine national security is inconsistent with documented history.

 

Rumours Are Loud—but Facts Are Louder

The allegations may generate online buzz, but when weighed against:

Buratai’s proven leadership in the war against insurgency

The lack of verified evidence

The source’s reputation for sensationalism

His longstanding commitment to national security

…it becomes increasingly clear why experts dismiss the claims as unfounded, illogical, and inconsistent with Nigeria’s counterterrorism realities.

Until credible evidence emerges—if ever—it remains what many analysts call it:

A political smear attempt packaged as journalism.

FEMI OYEWALE is the publisher of Sahara weekly magazine and sahara online. He is also the president of NASRE

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