society
A New Year Message from Arems Entertainment
A New Year Message from Arems Entertainment – 1ST ELEVEN9JA TV
As the curtain rises on a new year, all of us at Arems Entertainment take a moment to reflect—on the journey so far, the lessons learned, and the limitless possibilities that lie ahead.
The year behind us tested resolve and rewarded resilience. It challenged creatives to think deeper, work smarter, and stay true to their purpose in a fast-evolving industry. Through it all, music, storytelling, and culture remained powerful tools for connection, healing, and expression. We are grateful to every artist, partner, collaborator, and supporter who trusted the Arems vision and walked this path with us.
At Arems Entertainment, we believe the future of entertainment belongs to those who are bold enough to innovate and disciplined enough to build sustainably. The new year represents more than a fresh calendar—it is a renewed commitment to growth, integrity, and excellence. We remain focused on creating opportunities that empower talent, amplify authentic voices, and deliver value beyond the spotlight.
This year, our mission is clear: to deepen our impact across artist development, creative management, and entertainment solutions, while adapting to the realities of a global digital audience. We will continue to champion originality, professionalism, and strategic thinking—because talent deserves structure, and creativity deserves direction.
To the artists chasing their dreams, the creatives refining their craft, and the partners building with purpose: this is your year to step forward with clarity and confidence. Progress may be quiet, but it is always powerful when it is intentional.
As we move ahead, Arems Entertainment looks forward to new collaborations, stronger relationships, and meaningful projects that shape culture and inspire excellence.
From all of us at Arems Entertainment, we wish you a year filled with growth, breakthroughs, and lasting success.
Happy New Year.
Here’s to building the future—together.
society
Nigeria’s Social Media Crackdown: A Symptom of Deeper Governance Failure
Nigeria’s Social Media Crackdown: A Symptom of Deeper Governance Failure.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyng.com
“Why Banning Platforms for Under-15s Will Not Solve Insecurity, Corruption, Economic Crisis or the Collapse of Public Trust.”
On January 1, 2026, headlines across digital and print media carried a peculiar story: governments abroad, notably in France, are moving to ban social media access for children under 15 in response to growing concerns about online safety.
While this may be well-intentioned in the context of protecting minors from harmful content, the fact that such news raises debate here in Nigeria tells us more about what the Nigerian state is choosing to focus on rather than what it urgently needs to fix.
Across every sector of public life (security, the economy, governance, infrastructure, basic services) Nigeria is unraveling. Yet politicians and policymakers seem fixated on controlling social media instead of addressing the real and worsening crises confronting citizens. This is not just a policy error; it is a governance catastrophe.
The Social Media Narrative: Protecting Youth or Suppressing Dissent?
Proposals to regulate or restrict social media have a long history in Nigeria. As far back as 2019, the National Assembly debated the Protection from Internet Falsehoods and Manipulations Bill (widely dubbed the Anti-Social Media Bill) which sought to criminalise social media posts deemed prejudicial to national security or public confidence. Critics warned it would “unduly restrict the rights to freedom of expression and privacy,” and might contradict constitutional guarantees of free speech.
Nigeria previously banned Twitter (now X) from mid-2021 to early 2022 after the platform deleted a tweet by the president, on grounds that misinformation on the platform could undermine national unity.
That experience, however, devastated the digital economy, reportedly costing billions of naira as businesses lost critical communication and marketing channels, and dampening investor confidence.
Nigeria’s current debate on social media restrictions risks repeating past mistakes: focusing on controlling voices rather than solving problems so profound that people use social media to highlight them.
Insecurity: The Real Crisis
Nigeria is facing its most severe internal security crisis in decades. In northern Nigeria alone, the United Nations World Food Programme projects that 35 million people will face severe food insecurity in 2026 due to militant attacks disrupting agriculture and supply chains.
Saharaweeklyng.com recently reported that Nigeria’s security challenges stem from deep-seated marginalisation of ethnic, religious and regional minorities, compounded by weak policing and proliferation of weapons.
Yet instead of prioritising security reforms and effective territorial control, policymakers spend time debating how to regulate online speech. This divergence exposes a deeper malaise and a government more concerned with controlling narratives than safeguarding citizens.
Insecurity has tangible socio-economic impacts. Studies show that heightened insecurity in agricultural states directly reduces crop yields and livestock output, tightening food supplies and exacerbating hunger.
It is no coincidence that food inflation remains a crushing burden for ordinary Nigerians, even as headline inflation shows technical ease.
A respected Nigerian economist, Edward Effiom, recently observed: “Despite reforms, households live in the present, not future projections and exposure to insecurity only worsens inflation and real incomes.”
In other words: insecurity is not just a tragic headline, but it is an economic shockwave that deepens poverty, limits production and destroys confidence.
Corruption: The Systemic Cancer. At the heart of Nigeria’s systemic failure lies corruption; though widely understood not merely as isolated theft but as a culture of impunity. According to an explanatory report from Saharaweeklyng.com, many Nigerians tolerate corruption as a survival strategy in a dysfunctional system, because “there is little to no consequence for wrongdoing.”
Experts have documented how corruption pervades all tiers of government from tender processes that bypass transparency, to embezzlement of funds intended for public utilities and services.
This pervasive graft turns governance into a predatory exercise, where public money funds private luxury while fundamental services collapse.
What possible logic exists in debating the age limit of Instagram or TikTok access when billions of naira earmarked for roads, electricity and healthcare routinely vanish into private pockets? Addressing corruption (not muzzling public discourse) is the prerequisite for enabling effective social media governance.
As Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, former Central Bank Governor, once observed, corruption harms the economy at macro and micro levels; it cannot be dislodged by censoring words online.
Lawlessness in Power: Senate, House, Judiciary
Nigeria’s legislative and judicial branches have also been unable (or unwilling) to stem the tide of misgovernance. Controversial bills affecting fundamental freedoms have been rushed with minimal public consultation, raising questions about transparency and accountability.
Meanwhile, when the executive faces opposition (as with new tax and regulatory laws in late 2025) critics allege discrepancies between what parliament passed and what was gazetted, sparking claims of overreach.
Such departures from constitutional norms erode trust in the rule of law. A democracy, after all, thrives not because it silences youth on social platforms, but because its institutions are robust, impartial and responsive.
Economic Collapse and Daily Hardship. Nigeria’s economic story over the past two years has been ambivalent: modest growth projections and stabilising inflation offer hope on paper, but reality on the ground tells another tale. World Bank data indicate that although GDP has expanded, the cost of a basic food basket has increased fivefold since 2019, forcing many households to spend upwards of 60–70% of their income on food alone.
For most Nigerians, life remains a painful negotiation between feeding their families or paying rent, buying medicine or affording transport, all while infrastructure, like electricity and roads, continues to underperform. The International Monetary Fund notes that poor infrastructure, especially electricity deficits, stifles productivity and enterprise.
This is a stark reminder: policy must tackle real economic burdens (jobs, power, transport) not just virtual chatter.
The Digital Debate: A Red Herring? Digital platforms have played vital roles in Nigeria’s democracy and civic life, from youth mobilisations during ENDSARS to grassroots economic entrepreneurship. Restricting access under the guise of “protecting minors” risks censoring voices that illuminate systemic failures.
Critics of social media regulation (including civil liberties advocates and legal scholars) argue that such laws gag freedom of expression and stifle public accountability, especially when existing libel, defamation and cybercrime laws already cover harmful conduct.
Instead of reflexive bans, what Nigeria urgently needs is an empowering digital policy framework: one that educates citizens, combats online harms with targeted safety mechanisms and ensures children’s protection without eroding democratic openness.
A Nation at the Crossroads. Nigeria stands today at a defining moment, one that demands honesty, courage and a ruthless reassessment of priorities. The fixation on regulating social media access for minors, while not inherently wrong in safer and more functional societies, exposes a troubling disconnect in a country battling existential crises. Nations do not collapse because teenagers use social platforms; they collapse when governments fail to secure lives, protect livelihoods and uphold justice.
Insecurity continues to bleed communities dry, from farmlands abandoned to highways turned into killing fields. Corruption remains entrenched, not as an anomaly but as a governing culture that rewards impunity and punishes integrity. The legislature and judiciary, institutions meant to be moral anchors of democracy, are increasingly perceived as theatres of lawlessness and elite bargaining. Meanwhile, food prices soar beyond the reach of ordinary citizens, wages stagnate, electricity remains unreliable, roads decay into death traps and public trust evaporates by the day.
Against this backdrop, social media has become less a menace than a mirror reflecting the failures, frustrations and fury of a neglected populace. Attempting to dim that mirror does not repair the cracks in the national foundation; it merely deepens suspicion and widens the gulf between rulers and the ruled. History is unforgiving to governments that choose censorship over competence, distraction over delivery and control over compassion.
The path forward is neither obscure nor complicated. Nigeria does not need symbolic bans or performative regulations; it needs courageous leadership, institutional reform and an unrelenting war against corruption and insecurity. It needs policies that put food on tables, light in homes, safety on roads and dignity back into citizenship. Until these fundamentals are addressed, debates about social media restrictions will remain what they are, a tragic misplacement of national priorities in a nation crying out for rescue.
At this crossroads, Nigeria must decide: confront the real crises head-on, or continue to chase shadows while the house burns.
History and the Nigerian people, are watching.
society
Ajadi Felicitates Nigerians, Oyo Residents on New Year, Preaches Unity, Renewal
Ajadi Felicitates Nigerians, Oyo Residents on New Year, Preaches Unity, Renewal
Ibadan — A leading governorship aspirant on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Oyo State, Ambassador Olufemi Ajadi Oguntoyinbo, has extended warm New Year greetings to Nigerians across the country and residents of Oyo State, calling for unity, peace, compassion and a renewed commitment to people-oriented leadership as the nation enters 2026.
In his New Year message made available to journalists, Ajadi described the beginning of a new year as a moment for reflection, gratitude and collective resolve to build a better society.
“I felicitate with all Nigerians and the good people of Oyo State on the occasion of the New Year,” Ajadi said. “This is a time to thank God for life, reflect on our journey as a people, and renew our hope for a more peaceful, prosperous and inclusive society.”
He urged citizens to approach 2026 with optimism, tolerance and mutual respect, stressing that unity remains Nigeria’s greatest strength despite prevailing economic and social challenges.
“As a people, we must continue to embrace peace, understanding and compassion for one another. Our diversity should be a source of strength, not division. Together, we can overcome challenges and build a future that works for everyone,” he said.
Ajadi emphasised that leadership at all levels should prioritise the welfare of the people, noting that governance must be anchored on empathy, accountability and service.
“Leadership is about service to humanity. It is about listening to the people, addressing their needs and creating policies that improve lives, reduce hardship and expand opportunities, especially for the youth and the vulnerable,” he added.
He also called on party members, community leaders and stakeholders across Oyo State to remain united and peaceful in their engagements, urging that political participation should be issue-driven and guided by dialogue, respect and the collective interest of the people.
Looking ahead to the year, Ajadi urged Nigerians and residents of Oyo State to remain hopeful, law-abiding and committed to peace.
“I wish all Nigerians and the people of Oyo State a peaceful, prosperous and fulfilling New Year,” he said. “With unity, compassion and a shared sense of responsibility, 2026 can be a year of progress, stability and renewed hope for our nation.”
society
America-Based Actress Tonia Okoro Ferrari Welcomes 2026 With Prayers of Hope
America-Based Actress Tonia Okoro Ferrari Welcomes 2026 With Prayers of Hope
By: Gbolahan Adetayo
America-based Nigerian actress, Tonia Okoro Ferrari, has extended warm New Year greetings to Nigerians, her friends, and colleagues both at home and in the diaspora, as the world ushers in 2026.
In her New Year message, the actress expressed heartfelt goodwill and appreciation to everyone who has supported her journey over the years, describing the New Year as a season of renewed hope, gratitude, and positive expectations.
Tonia Okoro Ferrari wished Nigerians a happy and fulfilling New Year, calling on people to embrace love, unity, and resilience despite global and personal challenges. She noted that the New Year offers another opportunity for growth, healing, and fresh beginnings.
According to the actress, her prayers for 2026 are that it will be a blessed year for all, filled with good health, success, and divine favour. She encouraged Nigerians everywhere to remain optimistic and steadfast in pursuing their dreams.
The U.S.-based actress also acknowledged her friends and colleagues in the entertainment industry, appreciating their support, collaboration, and shared passion for creativity, while wishing them greater achievements in the New Year.
She further extended her goodwill to Nigerians in the diaspora, urging them to continue representing the country positively and contributing meaningfully to national development in their various capacities.
Tonia Okoro Ferrari concluded her message by praying for peace, progress, and collective prosperity, expressing confidence that 2026 will bring greater opportunities and blessings for individuals, families, and the nation at large.
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