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Buratai Pays Tribute to Elder Statesman Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji in Sokoto

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Buratai Pays Tribute to Elder Statesman Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji in Sokoto

Buratai Pays Tribute to Elder Statesman Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji in Sokoto

 

Sokoto — Former Chief of Army Staff and Nigerian Ambassador to the Republic of Benin, Lt. Gen. Tukur Yusufu Buratai (Rtd), paid a courtesy visit to elder statesman Alhaji Abubakar during his trip to Sokoto on Saturday, September 6, 2025.

 

Patriotism Across Generations — Buratai Honors Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji

 

The visit followed Gen. Buratai’s participation at Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto, where he joined dignitaries to celebrate the conferment of an honorary Doctor of Science (Honoris Causa) degree on Lt. Gen. Faruk Yahaya (Rtd), CFR, also a former Chief of Army Staff.

 

 

Speaking on the visit, Buratai described it as both a personal and historic reunion with the respected elder statesman, with whom he has had long-standing ties dating back to his early years as a young officer.

 

Patriotism Across Generations — Buratai Honors Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji

 

“My relationship with Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji goes as far back as 1992, when I was a captain in the Nigerian Army. His wisdom, guidance, and patriotic service to Nigeria remain exemplary,” Buratai said.

 

 

Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji is widely recognized as a distinguished figure in Nigeria’s socio-economic and political development. Over the years, he has served the nation in several capacities, including:

 

Diplomatic Service: As Nigeria’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, he promoted trade, investment, and cultural ties between the two nations.

 

Civil Service Leadership: He held senior positions in the Nigerian civil service, contributing to governance reforms and economic growth.

 

Economic Advisory: As an economic strategist, he offered guidance on policies addressing Nigeria’s socio-economic challenges.

 

Community Development: He spearheaded initiatives in education, healthcare, and empowerment, particularly for marginalized groups.

 

Expatriate Advocacy: In the UK, he championed the rights and welfare of Nigerians abroad, enhancing Nigeria’s global image.

 

Buratai’s visit featured warm exchanges and reflections on national unity, service, and leadership. Observers described the meeting as a symbolic bridging of generations — a retired general who served Nigeria in both uniform and diplomacy reconnecting with a statesman who shaped the nation’s civil, economic, and diplomatic path.

 

 

The Sokoto trip was therefore not only about honoring a fellow general but also about celebrating enduring bonds of mentorship, patriotism, and national service.

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OVER 2,000 BENEFICIARIES RECEIVE FREE MEDICAL CARE AS A TWO‑DAY OUTREACH HONOURS CDS IN KADUNA

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OVER 2,000 BENEFICIARIES RECEIVE FREE MEDICAL CARE AS A TWO‑DAY OUTREACH HONOURS CDS IN KADUNA

OVER 2,000 BENEFICIARIES RECEIVE FREE MEDICAL CARE AS A TWO‑DAY OUTREACH HONOURS CDS IN KADUNA

The TY Buratai Humanity Care Foundation, in partnership with the Tukur & Tukur Foundation and the Southern Kaduna Aids Foundation (SKAID), yesterday concluded a two‑day free medical outreach at the Primary Health Care Centre, Mabuhu Zonzon, Zangon Kataf Local Government Area, Kaduna State, in honour of the Chief of Defence Staff, General Christopher Gwabin Musa, OFR.
OVER 2,000 BENEFICIARIES RECEIVE FREE MEDICAL CARE AS A TWO‑DAY OUTREACH HONOURS CDS IN KADUNA
According to a press statement signed by the Chairman of the TY Buratai Humanity Care Foundation, Ibrahim Dahiru Danfulani (Sadaukin Garkuwan Keffi/Betara Biu), the programme, held on Thursday, September 4 and Friday, September 5, provided a wide range of services to community members. Organisers’ tallies put the total number of beneficiaries at 2,062.
Services rendered included free medical consultations, provision of treatment and drugs, eye screening and care, ENT (ear, nose, and throat) treatment, distribution of reading glasses, and the deployment of mobile clinics and specialist teams throughout the two days.
The outreach was declared open by a representative of His Highness Sir Dominic Yahaya, Agwam Atyap, Eliasha Angani Sarkin Shanu Atyab, who commended the organisers for bringing essential services to Mabuhu Zonzon and its environs.
Speaking on behalf of the beneficiaries, Jummai Digga thanked Amb. Lt.-Gen. Tukur Yusufu Buratai, CFR (rtd.), and the partners for the intervention. “We thank His Excellency Amb. Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai for recognising the good people of Southern Kaduna and for honouring the Chief of Defence Staff’s grassroots policies. This outreach has brought relief to many families,” she said.
OVER 2,000 BENEFICIARIES RECEIVE FREE MEDICAL CARE AS A TWO‑DAY OUTREACH HONOURS CDS IN KADUNA
Dr. Yakubu Titus John, Medical Director of General Hospital Zangon Kataf, also lauded the initiative: “Bringing quality healthcare services to the people makes a real impact. I commend the standard of the outreach and the medications provided.”
Organisers named the leadership and representatives of the collaborating groups: the TY Buratai Humanity Care Foundation is headed by Ibrahim Dahiru Danfulani; the Tukur & Tukur Foundation is led by Col. Haruna Idris Zaria (rtd.); and SKAID, led by R/Adm. Ferguson Bobai (rtd.). They described the initiative as part of an ongoing commitment to improving access to healthcare and enhancing community well-being, reflecting people-centric leadership attributed to the Chief of Defence Staff.
OVER 2,000 BENEFICIARIES RECEIVE FREE MEDICAL CARE AS A TWO‑DAY OUTREACH HONOURS CDS IN KADUNA
Daily tallies released by organisers recorded attendance and service breakdowns as follows:
Day 1 — 04/09/2025 (Mabuhu Zonzon)
•Medical outreach: Female 302; Children 167; Male 125 — Total recorded 594
•Eye clinic: Female 107; Children 59; Male 79 — Total recorded 245
•ENT: Female 57; Children 39; Male 27 — Total recorded 123
•Reading glasses distributed: Female 56; Male 170 — Total recorded 226
Day 2 — 05/09/2025
•Medical outreach: Female 104; Children 76; Male 54 — Total recorded 234
•Eye clinic: Female 83; Children 30; Male 54 — (organisers’ total listed)
•ENT: Female 30; Children 26; Male 21 — (organisers’ total listed)
•Reading glasses distributed: Female 9; Male 27 — Total recorded 48
Organisers also reported a total distribution of 301 reading glasses across the outreach and listed the most common conditions encountered as Hepatitis B, dermatitis (body rashes), eye cataract, and sickle cell disease.
The statement reiterated the foundations’ resolve to continue collaborative interventions across the country and other underserved communities to expand access to basic and specialist healthcare services.
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Dara” Storms Nigerian Cinemas Today — A Must-Watch Tale of Love, Greed, and Tragedy

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The wait is over — “Dara” officially hits cinemas across Nigeria today, September 5, 2025. The highly anticipated thriller promises audiences a gripping cinematic ride, powered by a stellar cast featuring Tomi Ojo, Kage The Actor, Bless Smile, Prince Ren aka Jagaban, Tina Mba, Abobi Eddieroll, and Divine Okechukwu.

Set against the vibrant culture and gritty realities of Port Harcourt, “Dara” explores the timeless themes of love, anger, greed, and tragedy, offering a story that will linger long after the credits roll.

Where to Watch:

📍 Abuja — Silverbird Cinemas, Jabi Lake Mall
Showtimes: 12:10pm, 6:55pm, 8:50pm
👉 Tickets Here

📍 Port Harcourt — September 5–11

Box Office Cinema Garden City: 12:35pm & 6:25pm

Box Office Cinema, Pleasure Park: 4:50pm & 8:00pm

Downtown Cinema: 3:10pm

📍 Lagos — September 5–11
(Full schedule available at Silverbird & partner cinemas)

🔥 Don’t miss the chance to experience this masterpiece on the big screen. Show love, show support — make this weekend a “Dara” weekend!

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Insecurity: Situating Buratai’s ’COVID-19 Style Lockdown’ Proposal

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Insecurity: Situating Buratai’s ’COVID-19 Style Lockdown’ Proposal

 

By Louis Achi

 

Last week, Nigeria’s former Chief of Army Staff, and ex-Ambassador to the Republic of Benin, Lt. General Tukur Buratai (retd.), proposed the urgent adoption of strategic, intelligence-driven lockdowns as part of a new framework to counter terrorism, banditry, and other forms of violent criminality threatening national stability.

 

Insecurity: Situating Buratai’s ’COVID-19 Style Lockdown’ Proposal

 

The former Army boss urged the federal government to consider a nationwide mobilisation similar to the COVID-19 lockdown to defeat terrorism, banditry, and kidnapping feeding the bloody infamy ravaging the nation.

 

 

Buratai who spoke in a candid interview with Channels Television last Friday, argued that insecurity should not be left to the military alone but treated as a national crisis requiring collective sacrifice. His words: “When there are national crises, we need to mobilise everybody, not just the military alone. Look at COVID-19 – how much was spent, how much was invested into information, communication, advertisement, palliatives, and preventive measures.

 

Insecurity: Situating Buratai’s ’COVID-19 Style Lockdown’ Proposal

 

“The whole nation was locked down because of COVID-19. We can do the same thing. We can lock down this country to make sure that everybody concentrates and deals with this cankerworm of so-called terrorists and bandits.”

 

 

General Buratai further noted that before leaving office as Chief of Army Staff, he had warned that the insurgency could last longer than expected if a long-term strategy was not adopted. “Just before I left office, and immediately after I was appointed ambassador to the Republic of Benin, I sent a note of warning that this insurgency may last longer. It is not something that you just wish away. We really need to have a long-term plan.”

 

Insecurity: Situating Buratai’s ’COVID-19 Style Lockdown’ Proposal

 

In summation, Buratai maintained that beyond military campaigns, citizens must be mobilised “psychologically, through social media, press, and community support” to overcome what he described as the “so-called terrorists and bandits.” Understandably, Buratai’s position has provoked considerable debate among various stakeholders.

 

 

The battle-scarred General’s novel proposition provides a new discursive lens to stimulate new modes of analysis on effective strategies to cage violent extremism. His unconventional position fundamentally represents a concept note that should transition to a detailed, actionable engagement strategy for the federal government to fast-track a valid response leading to the erasure of the reign of bloody infamy and destructive erosion of Nigeria’s sovereignty.

 

Insecurity: Situating Buratai’s ’COVID-19 Style Lockdown’ Proposal

 

This quirky scenario has perhaps understandably eroded public trust in state authority and demands an urgent, coordinated, effective, disruptive strategy that can destroy criminal networks – simultaneously safeguarding civilian lives. There is more.

 

 

It is beyond dispute that Nigeria currently faces an overlapping mosaic of extreme, regressive violence. These include Boko Haram and ISWAP insurgency in the Northeast; banditry, mass kidnappings, and illegal mining in the Northwest; farmer–herder clashes and communal violence in the North Central; separatist-linked attacks in the Southeast; oil theft, pipeline vandalism, and cult-related violence in the South-South; and rising cases of kidnappings and armed robbery in the Southwest.

 

 

But first, to highlight the urgency of Buratai’s proposal, it would be germane to provide some context in terms of very recent informed positions on caging insecurity in Nigeria and Africa at large. Just this week, United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, called on African defence leaders to take decisive ownership of the continent’s security challenges during her address at the inaugural African Chiefs of Defence Forum in Abuja on Monday.

 

 

Mohammed, a former Nigerian Minister of Environment, accurately painted a stark picture of Africa’s security landscape, stating, “The continent accounts for the majority of global terrorism deaths, with attacks in West Africa’s coastal states surging by 250% in just two years. In the Sahel, 14,000 schools were shuttered by conflict last year, threatening an entire generation’s future.”

 

 

Lansana Kouyaté, former Prime Minister of Guinea, who proposed innovative security financing through public-private partnerships during the forum, echoed Mohammed’s call for collective action, stating, “This historic gathering of defence chiefs from all 54 African nations underscores that without peace, there is no development.”

 

 

While speaking at the 50th anniversary dinner of the Nigerian Defence Academy’s 18th Regular Course in Abuja last month, the National Security Adviser, NSA, Nuhu Ribadu, revealed that over 47,000 lives were lost to insecurity in northern Nigeria before President Bola Tinubu took office in May 2023. He stated that the country was on the brink of collapse at the time, grappling with multiple crises that threatened its cohesion and survival.

 

 

He said, “The security landscape we inherited as a government in 2023 was a sobering reality. It was threatening the very cohesion, stability, and integrity of our Nigerian state. We inherited five intractable security challenges that had brought our nation to the brink.” These include Boko Haram insurgency in the North-East, banditry in the North-West and North-Central, separatist agitations in the South-East, economic sabotage in the Niger Delta, and communal conflicts in states like Benue and Plateau.

 

 

The NSA went on to paint a positive, if not outright rosy picture of the security situation under his principal, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Although it could not be denied that nine efforts are being made by the current administration to reinstate widespread infamy, Nigeria is far from the safe, progressive haven its citizens are entitled to.

 

 

On his part, former Minister of Aviation Osita Chidoka recently weighed in on the ravaging insecurity, claiming that Nigeria’s situation is even more dire than that of countries embroiled in war. Chidoka expressed deep concern over the rampant insecurity, widespread hunger, and severe economic struggles plaguing the nation, emphasizing that citizens are enduring daily hardships as if the country is under siege. He cautioned that if immediate action isn’t taken, Nigeria could face total collapse.

 

 

General Buratai’s proposal, not surprisingly, spawned several responses from different concerned stakeholders. The most notable and informed reaction perhaps, is that from the Crest Research and Development Institute (CRADI) and authored by conflict and security expert, Isa Mohammed.

CRADI had responded by convening a Policy Lab under its Co-Creation and Innovation Lab (CCIL), bringing together security practitioners, conflict analysts, governance experts, humanitarian actors, and community stakeholders.

 

 

The Lab drew lessons from Nigeria’s COVID-19 lockdown, at the core of Baratai’s proposal which, despite its economic costs, succeeded in reducing certain forms of crime and giving security forces a clearer view of population movements. Participants agreed that lockdowns can be effective, but only if targeted, intelligence-driven, and sensitive to humanitarian needs.

 

 

According to CRADI’s Isa Mohammed, “Conventional military campaigns alone cannot address these overlapping threats. Strategic lockdowns, when carefully designed, can restrict terrorist mobility, cut off supply lines, and create the operational space for intelligence-led security operations.”

 

 

The body strongly cautioned against a nationwide shutdown, arguing it would cripple livelihoods without delivering sustainable security. Instead, CRADI recommended zonal lockdowns tailored to local dynamics:

 

 

Northeast: Seal borders with Niger, Chad, and Cameroon; enforce curfews around the Lake Chad Basin and Mandara Mountains; Northwest: Impose lockdowns in forest belts such as Rugu, Kamuku, and Birnin Gwari; ban illegal mining; restrict rural mobility; North Central: Enforce lockdowns in conflict flashpoints; secure farmlands with patrols; regulate grazing routes to reduce clashes; and Southeast: Introduce night curfews; restrict unauthorized assemblies; secure major highways against attacks.

 

 

For South-South C, RADI recommended the implementation of surveillance lockdowns along pipeline corridors and waterways to combat oil theft and cult-related violence; and Southwest: Apply tactical restrictions in forest reserves, especially the Ondo–Ogun axis, which has become a haven for kidnappers.

Strategy and security are core elements for achieving sustainable peace, especially for a developing country like Nigeria. Cut to the bone, when security is absent, it validly suggests the strategies adopted are faulty and need to be reviewed. As Nigerians seek to achieve sustainable growth and development, the citizens must have the requisite state of freedom and peace, amongst others, to lead meaningful and productive lives.

 

 

CRADI’s Mohammed succinctly cut to the heart of the debate when he asserted that, “General Buratai’s call for a strategic lockdown is an urgent reminder that Nigeria must rethink its approach to insecurity. If implemented with strong oversight, humanitarian sensitivity, and clear timelines, strategic lockdowns can help restore state authority, protect vulnerable communities, and lay the foundation for peacebuilding and long-term stability.”

 

 

The foregoing scenario can fundamentally validate General Buratai’s proposition to the federal government, especially when international partners such as the United Nations, African Union, and ECOWAS play an imperative role as potential providers of technical and logistical support.

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