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Buratai Reappears with Research Centre
Buratai Reappears with Research Centre
Against the background of increasing loss of faith in the Nigerian project, former Chief of Army Staff and Nigeria’s current Ambassador to the Republic of Benin, General Tukur Buratai, initiated the Tukur Buratai Research Centre, a cutting-edge leadership think-tank to aid the troubled national development journey. Louis Achi examines the underlying vision
This is a good time to recall former French president, Giscard D’Estaing’s counsel to statesmen and world leaders: “There can be no response to history without effort.” D’Estaing’s sage warning was clearly inspired by the environment of the human crisis that defined his era. He was born during the First World War and fought in the second bloody global conflagration.
Today, the stakes are extremely high, and Nigerians are mindful that failure to achieve democratic stability, through a fair, transparent, inclusive governance process and very importantly, an untainted leadership transition process may imperil the country’s future as a coherent state.
Moreover, being Africa’s demographic and natural resources centre of gravity, Nigeria ought to lead the journey of transformative change on the continent. She ought to provide the leadership to raise Africa to her next level. But then charity must begin at home because at this period in human history, it surely would be sheer folly to tread a different path.
And that is the challenge before both the current Muhammadu Buhari presidency and successive administrations. This is also at the core of the leadership think-tank project initiated by the former Chief of Army Staff (COAS) and Nigeria’s current Ambassador to the Republic of Benin.
Conceivably, in order to respond to the tumultuous history he has found himself in and had actually played a crucial role in as counselled by the ex-French President D’Estaing, the former COAS recently initiated the establishment of a cutting-edge leadership research centre at Gora in Nasarawa State, North Central Nigeria.
He stated that the Centre would collaborate with the Nasarawa State University, Keffi, in the fields of strategic studies, peace and conflict studies, environment and leadership for development. Not one to beat about the bush, the ground breaking and fundraiser for Tukur Buratai Research Centre (TBRC) held at Gora in Nasarawa State in late December last year.
When THISDAY directly asked the brawny ex-General, now an Ambassador, why he opted for this path, he provided an insight that showed his lesser known side and spoke to a hidden passion about the progressive transformation of the Nigerian state.
Ambassador Buratai said: “My simple philosophy about life is to continue to live a life of value by improving on the system that we have. As someone from the military, I reckoned the best way for me and my associates to add value to our society and make our country better and stronger is through a think-tank like the Tukur Buratai Research Center (TBRC).’’
In addition, the soldier-statesman said that Nigeria has the potential for greatness but there were insufficient capabilities to transfer those potential into socio-economic benefits for the people. According to him, inadequate research and development implementation in Nigeria create a massive void in the nation’s progress.
His words: “When properly focused research and training institutes are established, innovation and development become a natural progressive activity that benefits the nation’s life. In other words, Nigeria gains the ability to develop positively as a result of enhanced study and training.
“Corruption, insecurity due to terrorism and banditry, inadequate infrastructure, issues in governance and an inept educational system are all systemic flaws. With every amount of commitment made to research and training, as well as a strong national orientation one may be confident that we, as a people and a nation, are on the right track.
“I would like to utilize this TBRC platform to emphasize that now is the moment for us to turn within and devise home-grown solutions to our unique difficulties.”
Further, according to him, the “TBRC was his way of contributing to national development and giving back to society through a well thought-out approach that would have a long lasting impact on the country. As a result of the myriad of socio-economic and political challenges, it may be reasonable to argue that Nigeria can, to a large degree, resolve her development issues through research.”
Perhaps not surprisingly, the unique initiative drew support from several stakeholders who are also concerned about the worrisome drift of the national journey. According to the Vice Chancellor, Nasarawa State University, Keffi, Prof. Suleiman Mohammed, the institute and TBRC had identified their research and development partnership based primarily on security and strategic studies.
In his words: “The vision and mission of the Buratai Centre aligns with the university’s policy and strategy for impacting the society. The centre’s motto which is to promote research for leadership and development is a strong statement about the ultimate value of research to impact humanity positively. We envisage that the centre will be a hub for cross fertilization of ideas on security, peace, conflict, leadership and development issues.”
Soft-spoken Governor Abdullahi Sule of Nasarawa State who performed the ground breaking donated N50 million to the Centre. Over N160 million was realised at the occasion with the highest donation of N100 million coming from the BUA Group of companies.
The emerging consensus is that Ambassador Buratai’s well-considered leadership project is certainly not coming too soon. Today, ethnic nationalism, a crucial component of the myriad challenges, has reared its head in the country with different political nuances – from the overt to the subtle. This has a history. But perhaps most importantly and to the credit of Nigerians, the country remains one entity despite powerful forces that have challenged its growth and severely tested its resilience.
These have undeniably sown the seeds of loss of faith in the Nigerian state. Former US President Bill Clinton captured something of this troubling truth at the Leon H. Sullivan Summit, held in Abuja in July 2006. His words: “There is no single tragedy in Africa more than robbing people of their dreams. The new challenge in Africa today is building a systematic capacity which will enable the people to live to make their own progress and save their own future. If you look at the miracle economies of Asia, it’s not only hard work but the opportunity to be part of a system that will reward your intelligence and hard work.”
Further prodded by THISDAY, the Ambassador made it clear that a strong and innovative think-tank would go a long way to boosting a nation’s institutional development and democracy, noting the Centre will fill the vacuum in the area of research and policy development. He then revealed the hidden historian and philosopher in him by enlisting specific examples of the place of innovative think-tanks in human development history.
Hear him: “Let me make it categorically clear to us that one of the factors that helped the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries is strong and innovative think-tanks. As far back as 1831, the Duke of Wellington set up the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies with the aim of helping policymakers navigate through complex policy problems. Then the London Fabian Society which was established in 1884, home to Sydney and Beatrice Webbs, who later founded the London School of Economics.”
He accurately recalled that Lionel Curtis of Oxford University spearheaded the establishment of a think-tank to explore international problems and advocate policy solutions.
According to the ambassador, “In 1919, scholars like Lionel Curtis of the Oxford University spearheaded the establishment of a think-tank to explore international problems and advocate policy solutions. After that, we saw the emergence of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in 1916, which in 1927, merged with two other institutions to form the widely acclaimed Brookings Institution. I believe that there exists a gap in our polity that TBRC as a think-tank can fill through research and policy development especially in the areas of security and defence, peace, conflict management, climate change, leadership and development.
“We need development in every sector of our national life, and this is something that should not be left for the government alone to do. As I have said in so many fora, there can be no real development without security and peace, and in the same vein, there must be economic opportunities, equity and justice for security and peace to exist which in turn serves as the foundation or pillars of development.”
Ambassador Buratai’s intervention through his think-tank must, of course, bear a human face – a scenario he has left pretty few in doubt about. It is only through this pathway that Nigeria’s current and subsequent leadership can give meaning to the four essential human freedoms espoused by that great American President – Franklin Roosevelt – whose country has supplied Nigeria with the democratic model she is operating currently.
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How Policy Flip-Flops Are Making Nigerians Poorer
How Policy Flip-Flops Are Making Nigerians Poorer
By Blaise Udunze
Nigeria’s deepening poverty crisis is no longer speculative; it is now statistically inevitable. Although the latest Consumer Price Index figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) suggest that headline inflation is cooling and growth indicators show tentative improvement, regrettably, more Nigerians are slipping below the poverty line. Reviewing the recent projections from PwC’s Nigeria Economic Outlook 2026, it is alarming, which reveals that no fewer than two million additional Nigerians are expected to fall into poverty next year. This is expected to push the total number of poor people to about 141 million, roughly 62 percent of the population and the highest level ever recorded in the country’s history.
This grim outlook persists despite eight consecutive months of easing inflation and modest economic recovery, and as one can perceive, the contradiction is telling. The fact remains that macroeconomic signals are improving on paper, yet lived reality continues to deteriorate. It is glaring that the widening gap between policy metrics and human outcomes exposes a deeper truth in the sense that Nigeria’s poverty crisis is not simply the product of external shocks or temporary adjustment pains. It is the cumulative result of fragile policymaking, inconsistent reforms, weak institutional coordination, and a failure to sequence economic changes with adequate social protection. With these, it becomes clearer that poverty in Nigeria is no longer an unintended side effect of reform; it is increasingly its most visible outcome as identified today.
It would be recalled that the current administration in 2023, when it assumed office, promised a bold economic reset. At this point, the nation witnessed the fuel subsidy removal, exchange-rate liberalisation, and tighter fiscal discipline being introduced swiftly and applauded internationally for their courage and long-term logic. Notably, these reforms unleashed an economic storm whose aftershocks continue to batter households and currently resulting to the cost of a bag of rice that sold for about N35,000 two years ago now costs between N65,000 and N80,000, while a crate of eggs has risen from N1,200 to over N6,000 and basic staples like garri, tomatoes, and pepper have drifted beyond the reach of ordinary Nigerians. For millions, the economy did not reset; it snapped.
Inflation, often described by economists as a “silent tax,” has punished productivity, mocked thrift, and rewarded speculation.
Reports from the NBS’s December 2025 disclosed that headline inflation eased to 15.15 percent and according to it, this is due to a rebasing of the Consumer Price Index, down sharply from 34.8 percent a year earlier, this statistical moderation has brought little relief to households. Food inflation, at 10.84 percent year-on-year, and a marginal month-on-month decline may look reassuring on spreadsheets, but for families spending 70 to 80 percent of their income on food, such figures feel detached from reality. These figures are not only implausible but also insulting to those whose lives have been torn apart by the skyrocketing prices. With the realities facing the larger populace, Nigeria must be using another mathematics.
Nigeria may have changed its base year, but it has not changed the harsh arithmetic of survival.
PwC’s data underscores this disconnect, as nominal household spending rose by nearly 20 percent in 2025, real household spending contracted by 2.5 percent, reflecting the erosive impact of rising food, transport, and energy costs. The painful part of it, is that Nigerians are spending more money to consume less, and this is to say that growth, hovering around 4 percent, is not strong enough to absorb shocks or lift households meaningfully. As analysts note, Nigeria would require sustained growth of 7 to 9 percent to make a significant dent in poverty. That is to say that anything less merely slows the descent.
The structural weakness of the economy is compounded by policy inconsistency. Nigeria’s economic landscape is littered with abrupt shifts, subsidy removals without buffers, currency reforms without stabilisation mechanisms and trade policies that oscillate between restriction and openness. For households and small businesses, which employ most Nigerians, this unpredictability makes planning impossible. The economy has constantly being faced with price volatility, income shocks, and lost jobs because these are the ripple effects of every policy reversal. Uncertainty itself has become a poverty multiplier.
Nowhere is this fragility more evident than in food systems and rural livelihoods, and this has been where insecurity has merged with policy failure to create a new poverty spiral. Across farmlands in the North and Middle Belt, crops rot unharvested as banditry and insurgency force farmers off their land. Nigeria’s largely agrarian economy has been crippled by violence that disrupts planting cycles, destroys infrastructure, and displaces communities. The result is both income poverty for farmers denied access to their livelihoods and food inflation that erodes purchasing power nationwide.
For record purposes, earlier last year, the NBS Multidimensional Poverty Index showed that 63 percent of Nigerians, about 133 million people, are multidimensionally poor, with poverty heavily concentrated in insecure regions. Findings showed that about 86 million of the poor live in the North, and this is where insecurity is most severe. This record showed that rural poverty stands at 72 percent,c compared to 42 percent in urban areas, and while the states most affected by banditry and insurgency record poverty rates as high as 91 percent. Insecurity is no longer just a security problem; it is one of Nigeria’s most powerful poverty drivers.
The economic cost of insecurity in Nigeria today is staggering. This is because the conservative estimates suggest Nigeria loses about $15 billion annually, which is roughly equivalent to N20 trillion, due to insecurity-induced disruptions across agriculture, trade, manufacturing, and transportation. At the same time, security spending now consumes up to a quarter of the federal budget. In just three years, over N4 trillion has been spent on security, which crowded out investment in health, education, power, and infrastructure. Every naira spent managing perpetual violence is a naira not invested in preventing poverty, even as poverty deepens, the state’s fiscal response reveals a troubling misalignment of priorities. The 2026 federal budget, estimated at N58.47 trillion, ironically allocates just N206.5 billion to projects directly tagged as poverty alleviation and this only amounts to about 0.35 percent of total spending and less than one percent of the capital budget. In a country where over 60 percent of citizens live below the poverty line, this allocation borders on policy negligence.
Worse still, over 96 percent of this already meagre poverty envelope sits under the Service Wide Vote through the National Poverty Reduction with Growth Strategy, largely as recurrent provisions. All ministries, departments, and agencies combined account for barely N6.5 billion in poverty-related projects. This fragmentation reflects a deeper institutional failure, that is to say, poverty reduction exists more as a line item than as a coherent national mission.
Where MDA-level interventions exist, they are largely palliative and scattered, grain distribution in select communities, tricycles and motorcycles for empowerment, and small scale skills acquisition for women and youths. The largest such project, a N2.87 billion tricycle and motorcycle scheme under a federal cooperative college, accounts for nearly half of all MDA-based poverty spending. The fact remains that the various interventions may offer temporary relief, and they do little to address structural drivers of poverty such as job creation, productivity, market access and human capital development.
Even the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation illustrates the problem just as its budget jumped sharply in 2026, much of the increase went into administrative and capital items, office furniture, equipment, international travel, retreats, and systems automation rather than direct poverty-fighting programmes. This reflects a familiar Nigerian paradox: institutions grow, but impact shrinks.
International partners have been blunt in their assessments. The World Bank estimates that Nigeria spends just 0.14 percent of GDP on social protection, which is far below the global and regional averages. Only 44 percent of safety-net benefits actually reach the poor, rendering the system inefficient and largely ineffective. PwC similarly warns that without targeted job creation, productivity-focused reforms, and effective social protection, poverty will continue to rise, undermining domestic consumption and straining public finances further.
Fiscal fragility compounds the crisis. The N58.18 trillion 2026 budget carries a deficit of N23.85 trillion, with debt servicing projected at N15.52 trillion, nearly half of expected revenue. The public debt has ballooned to over N152 trillion. The contradiction here is that Nigeria is borrowing not to expand productive capacity but to keep the machinery of government running. The truth is not far-fetched because, as debt crowds out development spending, households are forced to pay privately for public goods, education, healthcare, water, deepening inequality and entrenching poverty across generations.
To be clear, not all signals are negative. This is because opportunities exist if reforms are sustained and properly sequenced. Regional trade under the African Continental Free Trade Area could diversify exports and create jobs. But reform momentum without inclusion and institutional capacity risks becoming another missed opportunity.
This is the central tragedy of Nigeria’s moment. The country is attempting necessary reforms in an environment of weak buffers, fragile institutions, and low trust. Poverty is therefore not accidental. It is the predictable outcome of inconsistency, reforms without protection, stabilisation without security, and budgets without people.
Nigeria faces an undeniable choice. It can continue down a path where fragile policies deepen deprivation and erode trust, or it can build a disciplined, coordinated framework that aligns reforms with social protection, security, and inclusive growth. Poverty is not destiny. But escaping it requires more than courage in reform announcements; it demands consistency, compassion, and the political will to place human welfare at the centre of economic strategy.
Blaise, a journalist and PR professional, writes from Lagos and can be reached via: [email protected]
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Dr. Chris Okafor: A Philanthropist Par Excellence and a Man of Prayer
Dr. Chris Okafor: A Philanthropist Par Excellence and a Man of Prayer
By Sunday Adeyemi, Society Herald
One constant in human life is change. However, when it comes to the daily life and ministry of renowned Nigerian clergyman and Senior Pastor of Grace Nation International, also known as Liberation City, Dr. Chris Okafor, one attribute remains unwavering—his deep and uncompromising devotion to prayer.
Dr. Okafor is a man whose life revolves entirely around prayer. He prays while living, eating, traveling, and ministering. Remarkably, except during church services or official engagements, he devotes an average of eight to ten hours daily to prayer. This disciplined prayer life forms the bedrock of his ministry and has been the guiding principle through which he overcomes challenges and continues to thrive. Indeed, he prays as though there is no tomorrow.
Those who associate closely with him understand that prayer is non-negotiable in his life. For members of Grace Nation worldwide, prayer is not merely encouraged—it is a way of life. Grace Nation citizens are known for their strong prayer culture, as prayer remains their primary spiritual weapon. As scripture affirms, prayer has the power to turn unexpected challenges into testimonies and breakthroughs.
Returning to the Set Man of Grace Nation Worldwide, Dr. Chris Okafor is widely acknowledged as a dedicated prayer warrior. His lifestyle of prayer has been affirmed repeatedly by fellow men of God who have encountered him personally.
One of his closest covenant brothers recently shared a testimony during a flagship Grace Nation conference in Lagos.
He recounted traveling with Dr. Okafor to the United States for a major conference. On the morning of the event, after preparing to depart early, he knocked on Dr. Okafor’s door—only to discover that the Generational Prophet was still deeply engaged in prayer. When the door was eventually opened, Dr. Okafor explained that he was preparing spiritually ahead of the conference. The covenant brother described the experience as a clear demonstration of an uncommon prayer life.
Another testimony came from Pastor Wilfred, the South Africa branch pastor of Grace Nation. He described Dr. Okafor as a man who never compromises prayer regardless of circumstances. According to him, even while traveling, Dr. Okafor prioritizes prayer over rest. He narrated a particular experience in South Africa where Dr. Okafor was scheduled to minister at 9:00 a.m. The previous night, Pastor Wilfred left him early to allow him to rest. However, repeated calls went unanswered as Dr. Okafor had already commenced prayer.
The following morning, upon arriving to pick him up, Pastor Wilfred heard prayers from behind the door. After waiting for over an hour, he joined in the prayers. It was only after several more hours that Dr. Okafor opened the door—having not slept throughout the night. Such accounts underscore his unwavering commitment to prayer, earning him the reputation among his peers as a true prayer warrior.
Dr. Okafor’s prayer life has also resulted in numerous testimonies. Many attest that while praying, God speaks to him directly, providing divine direction and intervention. There have been accounts of miraculous breakthroughs through prayers conducted over the phone and even across distances.
In one instance, a woman who had been in labor for over three hours contacted Dr. Okafor, who prayed for her, and she delivered immediately.
In another testimony, a man who had been kidnapped for 80 days was released without ransom after Dr. Okafor prayed. Similarly, a young man who had been wrongly detained for nearly four years was freed the same day Dr. Okafor prayed concerning his case. The matter was reviewed, leading to his release and compensation for wrongful detention.
Beyond prayer, Dr. Chris Okafor’s life of philanthropy continues to leave an indelible mark on society. In Part One of this series, attention was drawn to his immense humanitarian efforts through the Chris Okafor Humanity Foundation, particularly in supporting widows, providing scholarships for the less privileged, and transforming the host community of Grace Nation International Headquarters in Lagos.
In Part Two, focus will be placed on his contributions to youth talent discovery—especially in sports—artisan empowerment, support for victims of xenophobic attacks in South Africa, and sustained monthly outreach to homes of the less privileged in Lagos.
Dr. Okafor’s philanthropic vision transcends human imagination. One of his core missions is to deliver people from the grip of darkness and empower them to become productive individuals within society. This vision is actively pursued through the Chris Okafor Humanity Foundation, which operates both locally and internationally.
During the xenophobic crisis in South Africa, Dr. Okafor personally traveled to Johannesburg to console and encourage Nigerian victims. Through his foundation, millions of naira were donated to support medical treatment and rehabilitation—an act of compassion worthy of emulation.
The foundation has also invested significantly in youth development through Liberation City FC, discovering and nurturing football talents. To date, more than five players trained by the foundation are currently plying their trade with major football clubs abroad.
Artisan empowerment remains another major achievement. Over 2,000 artisans have been trained in various skills, including bead-making, barbing, hairdressing, tailoring, and beverage production. After training, beneficiaries are provided with start-up capital to establish their businesses.
Additionally, the foundation conducts monthly outreach to communities of physically challenged individuals in the Yaba area of Lagos State, providing food supplies and educational scholarships for their children, alongside spiritual support through prayer.
The list of impactful interventions by the Chris Okafor Humanity Foundation is extensive and continually growing.
In Part Three of this series, we will examine the factors behind the sustained growth and resilience of Grace Nation and the Chris Okafor Humanity Foundation in the face of diverse challenges.
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FAREWELL TO A MULTI-TALENTED SOUL, A BELOVED FRIEND Princess Allwell Ademola “Eniobanke” – Ayo Mojoyin
As the remains of my bosom friend, Princess Allwell Ademola, fondly known as Eniobanke, are laid to rest today at Atan Cemetery, Yaba, words remain painfully inadequate to capture the depth of this loss. Her passing has left a void that is both personal and profound.
I have known Allwell since 2008, and long before the cameras found her, I first knew her as a musician a gifted singer whose voice carried emotion, hope, and sincerity. Music was her first language. Through her songs, she expressed her soul, her struggles, her faith, and her dreams. Acting came later, and even then, she approached it with the same passion and authenticity that defined her music.
As an actress, Eniobanke blossomed into a compelling performer, effortlessly bringing characters to life and earning admiration within the creative industry. Yet, beyond her artistic talents, what truly defined Allwell was her heart kind, loyal, gentle, and deeply human. She was a friend who stood firm in times of joy and hardship, someone whose presence alone brought comfort and reassurance.
Our friendship, built over years of shared experiences, conversations, laughter, and silent understanding, is one I will forever cherish. She believed deeply in people, supported dreams without hesitation, and loved without conditions.
Her humility remained intact despite the recognition she earned, and her sincerity never faded.
Her departure is a painful reminder of life’s fragility. Today, we mourn not only a talented musician and actress, but a daughter, a sister, a colleague, and a true friend whose life, though short, was rich with impact.
The creative space she occupied will feel her absence, but her works both in music and film will continue to speak for her.
As we say our final goodbye, we find comfort in knowing that she lived authentically, loved genuinely, and gave her best to her craft and to those around her.
Though she has taken her final bow, her voice will continue to echo in our memories, her performances will remain timeless, and her spirit will live on in the hearts she touched.
Rest in perfect peace, my dear friend.
Your song has not ended it has simply changed form.
*Ayo Mojoyin Principal Partner at The City Pulse, Former National President, NGIJ*
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