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DON’T VILIFY OUR SOLDIERS, BURATAI CALLS FOR MORAL, POLITICAL, MATERIAL SUPPORT TO WIN THE WAR ON INSECURITY

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DON’T VILIFY OUR SOLDIERS, BURATAI CALLS FOR MORAL, POLITICAL, MATERIAL SUPPORT TO WIN THE WAR ON INSECURITY

DON’T VILIFY OUR SOLDIERS, BURATAI CALLS FOR MORAL, POLITICAL, MATERIAL SUPPORT TO WIN THE WAR ON INSECURITY

Former Chief of Army Staff and immediate past Nigerian Ambassador to the Republic of Benin, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai (Rtd.), has called for a whole of society mobilisation to end insecurity, stressing that the challenge cannot be left for the military alone.

Buratai made the call on Friday while speaking as a guest on Sunrise Daily, a Channels Television breakfast programme, where he reflected on the state of Nigeria’s security and the need for stronger political, social and economic interventions.

He explained that while the military continued to make sacrifices in defending the nation, the root causes of insecurity many of which were political and social needed to be addressed through a long-term national plan.

“Just before I left office, and immediately when I was appointed ambassador to Benin, I warned that this insurgency may last longer. It is not something you just wish away. It requires a deliberate, long-term plan,” he said.

The former army chief stressed that the military was only one aspect of the solution, but political leaders, institutions, and society at large must play their part in confronting terrorism, banditry and kidnapping.

He drew parallels with the COVID-19 response, where the entire nation was mobilised through massive investments in information campaigns, palliatives, preventive measures and even a nationwide lockdown.

“During COVID-19, the whole country concentrated its energy and resources. We can do the same against terrorists, bandits and kidnappers. This fight requires the same urgency and national unity,” he said.

Buratai also recalled how Nigerians rallied to support Borno State during last year’s devastating flood, providing relief and rehabilitation to victims. He said such spirit of solidarity could equally be deployed to communities affected by insurgency and banditry in the North-East and North-West.

The retired general emphasised that insecurity was not just a security matter but fundamentally political, social and economic.

“Apart from the military, there is the economic line, the social line, and the political line. All must work together. This insecurity is essentially political in nature. It started within the society, through political actors, but has now been left to the military to handle while the political actors stay behind. That cannot continue,” he said.

According to him, successive governments, both past and present, had shown the political will to end insecurity by committing resources, but what was needed was a better structured approach that integrates social solutions and community resilience.

Buratai cautioned against blaming the military for every setback, stressing that soldiers in the field deserved national support, not demoralisation.

“Any soldier in the field, holding a weapon and standing between Nigerians and the adversary, is very important. There is no way you should demoralise him. If you despise him or make things difficult for him, you are endangering his life, that of his family, and the lives of all Nigerians,” he said.

He reiterated that the armed forces would continue to play their role effectively if given the right backing.

“The military is not the problem. They are part of the solution one aspect of the solution. If the entire system supports them, they will deliver,” he said.

Buratai, therefore, urged the Nigerian public, political leaders, and institutions to rally behind the armed forces through moral, political and material support, warning that national unity and citizen mobilisation remained the decisive factors in winning the war against insecurity.

DON’T VILIFY OUR SOLDIERS, BURATAI CALLS FOR MORAL, POLITICAL, MATERIAL SUPPORT TO WIN THE WAR ON INSECURITY

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Esun-Ekiti Welcomes New Era As Oba Ilugbusi’s Coronation Ends Over 200-Year Kingship Agitation

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Esun-Ekiti Welcomes New Era As Oba Ilugbusi’s Coronation Ends Over 200-Year Kingship Agitation

 

By Israel Bolaji

 

Esun-Ekiti town in Ekiti State erupted in celebration as Oba Olasehinde Bankole Adesesan (O.B.A) Ilugbusi was officially crowned the 13th Elesun of Esun-Ekiti, the Arohunmokinise II, on 2 August 2025.

 

Esun-Ekiti Welcomes New Era As Oba Ilugbusi's Coronation Ends Over 200-Year Kingship Agitation

 

The coronation ended more than 200 years of agitation over kingship rotation, a dispute that had divided the ancient town for generations.

 

 

The historic ceremony, attended by Ekiti State Deputy Governor, Mrs Monisade Afuye, and many royal fathers from Ekiti State, marked the community’s embrace of unity, balance, and restored cultural legacy.

 

Esun-Ekiti Welcomes New Era As Oba Ilugbusi's Coronation Ends Over 200-Year Kingship Agitation

 

Breaking a Cycle of Agitation

 

For centuries, the Iloda royal family had held dominance over the throne, sidelining the Atiba and Ijisun families. Historical accounts show that while the first two Elesuns came from the Ijisun family and the third from Atiba, subsequent rulers were exclusively from Iloda.

 

This imbalance was compounded by the wrongful documentation of the town’s chieftaincy tradition during the reign of Oba John Osanyingbemi in 1959, sparking decades of protests, litigations, and failed reconciliations.

 

However, under the administration of Governor Biodun Abayomi Oyebanji (BAO), efforts were made to resolve the stalemate. The government reaffirmed the Esun Chieftaincy Declarations, which recognise Atiba, Iloda, and Ijisun as legitimate ruling houses.

 

On 14 April 2025, the Court of Appeal also upheld this recognition, supporting the inclusion of all three royal families.

 

Government Endorsement

 

Speaking at the coronation, Deputy Governor Afuye stressed that Oba Ilugbusi’s selection followed due legal process.

 

“The appointment of Prince Bankole Olasehinde Ilugbusi as Elesun of Esun-Ekiti was carried out in strict compliance with the Ekiti State Chiefs Law of 2012. The government duly approved the process and published the official declaration in the State Gazette,” Afuye said.

 

The decision was further strengthened by the consent of the last two monarchs, Oba Samuel Omojola and Oba Babatunde Ogunsakin, who had endorsed the inclusion of the sidelined royal houses.

 

Oba Ilugbusi’s Vision

In his acceptance speech, Oba Ilugbusi declared: “My ascension is a new chapter and a vibrant new dawn for beloved Esun-Ekiti. It always seems impossible until it’s done.”

 

He pledged to prioritise the welfare of residents, promote unity across all lineages, and advance sustainable development in the town.

 

The youthful monarch joined the ranks of other Yoruba monarchs like the current Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi who ascended their thrones in their 40s.

 

Oba O.B.A. Ilugbusi holds a degree in Business Administration from Ekiti State University and was preparing for postgraduate studies at Wayne State University, Michigan, USA, before his selection.

 

With a background in business, agriculture, and construction, he brings a modern perspective to traditional leadership.

 

Celebration of Culture

The coronation capped a week of colourful festivities that began with the official installation on 25 July 2025.

 

Cultural displays, traditional drumming, and vibrant dance performances lit up the town square as dignitaries, family members, and well-wishers from across Nigeria gathered.

 

For many, the moment symbolized the restoration of the legacy of Oba Arohunmokinise I, the town’s third monarch, whose principles of order, friendship, and peace are now being rekindled by his descendant, Arohunmokinise II.

 

Unity and Hope

 

Community leaders, cultural custodians, and residents say the new monarch’s reign signals a chance to heal old wounds and unite indigenes at home and abroad.

  1. The coronation, they believe, represents not just the end of a kingship tussle but also the dawn of renewed hope, peace, and development for Esun-Ekiti.
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River Park Estate: Court Freezes Activities as Police Letter Sparks Interference Row By Ifeoma Ikem

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River Park Estate: Court Freezes Activities as Police Letter Sparks Interference Row By Ifeoma Ikem

River Park Estate: Court Freezes Activities as Police Letter Sparks Interference Row

By Ifeoma Ikem

The ownership tussle over the multi-billion-naira River Park Estate along Airport Road, Abuja, has taken a dramatic turn, following a High Court order suspending all activities on the disputed land and the emergence of a controversial police letter now under scrutiny.
On August 21, 2025, Justice C. O. Agashieze of the Abuja High Court, in Suit No. CV/2902/2025 filed by Jonah Capital Nigeria Limited against Paulo Homes Nigeria Limited, ordered both parties to “maintain the status quo” pending determination of the substantive matter. The judge barred either side from interfering with the estate’s contested sections, including Paulo Boulevard and Aazik Homes, and adjourned the case indefinitely.
The ruling effectively halts new construction, property sales, or alterations within the affected portions of River Park Estate until further notice.
More Than a Land Dispute
What looks like a routine property quarrel masks a web of overlapping claims, allegations of forged corporate filings, and conflicting court rulings. The River Park saga has evolved into a litmus test for Nigeria’s judiciary, land governance, and institutional credibility.
The estate, one of Abuja’s flagship residential projects, has long attracted civil servants, politicians, and diaspora investors as a “safe haven” for real estate investment.
The Fakorede Letter
Tensions escalated after Paulo Homes’ lawyers presented a letter written by Police Commissioner Akin Fakorede on August 7, 2025. The letter instructed that all government dealings on River Park Estate be routed exclusively through Paulo Homes and its chief executive, Mr. Paul Odili—effectively sidelining rival claimants.
Addressed to the FCT Director of Land Administration and copied to the Abuja Geographic Information System (AGIS) and Development Control, the letter raised alarm among legal experts.
“It is highly unusual for a police officer to issue such a directive on a matter already before the courts,” one senior lawyer told Daily Trust.
In Defiance of AGF and IGP
Critics note that Fakorede’s letter contradicts earlier directives from the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and the Inspector-General of Police (IGP).
In June 2025, the AGF ordered the police to withdraw criminal proceedings in Charge No. CR/402/25 and forward the case file for review. Similarly, on July 2, the IGP directed Fakorede to broaden investigations into alleged forged CAC documents tied to River Park’s ownership.
Instead, the commissioner reportedly doubled down—issuing letters to land agencies as though Paulo Homes’ ownership claim were already settled.
River Park Estate: Court Freezes Activities as Police Letter Sparks Interference Row
By Ifeoma Ikem
Suspicions of Collusion
Civil society groups and governance watchdogs say the selective circulation of Fakorede’s letter suggests an attempt to sway land records ahead of a ministerial committee’s findings.
“This raises fundamental questions about neutrality of state actors in land disputes,” said Dr. Sarah Mohammed, a land governance expert. “It feeds into a troubling narrative of collusion between security institutions and vested interests.”
Fallout for Abuja’s Real Estate Market
The implications for Abuja’s property market are severe. River Park, once promoted as a secure and well-planned estate, now faces paralysis.
“For international investors, this is exactly the kind of uncertainty they fear,” a property consultant warned. “Billions are tied up in projects that may now be trapped in litigation.”
For residents, however, it is more than an abstract legal battle. Many described it as a lived reality—anxiety over stalled projects and uncertain title deeds.
Rule of Law on Trial
Analysts say the dispute transcends land ownership.
“If a police commissioner can disregard orders from the AGF and IGP, then the bigger danger is institutional breakdown,” argued Dr. Hamza Ibrahim, a public policy scholar.
Civil society organisations are now demanding a forensic audit of AGIS and Development Control’s records on River Park, alongside an inquiry into police correspondence with Paulo Homes. Some have gone further, calling for Fakorede’s suspension.
Unanswered Questions
Why did Commissioner Fakorede act against explicit instructions from higher authorities?
Who within the FCT administration may be enabling these moves?
And why is Paulo Homes seeking recognition outside due legal process?
Until such questions are addressed, observers warn, investor confidence in Abuja’s property market will remain fragile.
The Road Ahead
For now, River Park Estate lies in uneasy silence—its half-finished structures and anxious residents caught in a legal freeze. The court has halted activity, but not the uncertainty.
As Abuja awaits the ministerial committee’s findings and the resumption of court proceedings, the River Park case has become far more than a land dispute. It is now a test of Nigeria’s rule of law—and of whether institutions can resist capture by private interests.
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ASSAULT TODAY, AMBASSADOR TOMORROW; WHAT NATION DOES THIS? (Rewarding misconduct: What are we teaching future generations?

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ASSAULT TODAY, AMBASSADOR TOMORROW; WHAT NATION DOES THIS? (Rewarding misconduct: What are we teaching future generations?)

By George Omagbemi Sylvester | SaharaWeeklyNG

On August 5, 2025, a ValueJet aircraft preparing to taxi at Abuja’s Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport was brought to a needless standstill. Viral clips showed Fuji icon Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (KWAM 1) on the tarmac amid a confrontation that aviation authorities later described as an egregious breach of airport protocol. Within days, the Federal Government (through the Aviation Minister, Festus Keyamo) announced that KWAM 1’s penalty would be reduced and that he would be engaged as an “AVIATION SECURITY/PROTOCOL AMBASSADOR.”

In the same news cycle, Comfort Emmanson, a passenger on an Ibom Air flight who allegedly assaulted airline staff after refusing to switch off her phone, was banned by airline operators and faced swift legal consequences, only for public statements to float the idea that she, too, could be tapped in some “GOOD CONDUCT” ambassadorial role. The mere suggestion made a mockery of deterrence and sent a gale-force signal of mixed values.

This is not a trivial spat. It is about whether Nigeria still believes in consequences that fit the offense; especially in aviation, where one person’s unruly behavior can ripple into safety risks for all. International and Nigerian rules are unambiguous: DISRUPTIVE CONDUCT THAT THREATENS SAFETY OR ORDER (on the ground or in the cabin) is an offense with legal and administrative penalties. ICAO’s regime (Tokyo Convention 1963, strengthened by the Montreal Protocol 2014) and Nigeria’s Civil Aviation Regulations outline clear enforcement powers for pilots, security agencies and regulators.

The facts we cannot spin
Abuja/ValueJet incident (Aug 5, 2025): The Minister confirmed the episode and initially announced sanctions before reducing KWAM 1’s ban to one month and positioning him for an awareness role. The NCAA complaint to the police was also withdrawn. Critics (including industry voices and public commentators) condemned the optics.

Ibom Air confrontation(Aug 10, 2025): Emmanson allegedly struck crew and resisted removal; she was banned by airlines and faced arraignment. International outlets highlighted the severity of the assault claims and the safety implications of defying crew instructions.

The law is clear: Nigeria’s Civil Aviation Regulations list “UNRULY PASSENGER BEHAVIOR” as an offense, with penalties ranging from fines to imprisonment; ICAO’s framework empowers the pilot-in-command to restrain and disembark disruptive passengers and encourages states to prosecute. These are not suggestions; they are safety architecture.
Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority.

ASSAULT TODAY, AMBASSADOR TOMORROW; WHAT NATION DOES THIS? (Rewarding misconduct: What are we teaching future generations?)
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | SaharaWeeklyNG

Why the “AMBASSADOR” gambit is dangerous?
1) IT DILUTES DETERRENCE. Aviation safety depends on predictability: follow crew instructions, respect sterile areas and never interfere with aircraft operations. When high-profile violators are swiftly recast as “AMBASSADORS,” we create a perverse incentive structure. The public perceives misbehavior as a shortcut to attention or soft landings. As IATA warns, unruly and disruptive behavior threatens safety, diverts flights and endangers crew and passengers; awareness campaigns are useful, but they must sit on a firm base of credible enforcement.

2) IT UNDERMINES RULE-OF-LAW SYMMETRY. The uneven treatment between an influential celebrity and an ordinary passenger corrodes trust. When the powerful appear to skate past consequences, citizens infer that the law is not a shield for all but a ladder for the few. Former Aviation Minister Osita Chidoka captured the zeitgeist: episodes of celebrities blocking aircraft or passengers assaulting crew are symptoms of a deeper state dysfunction when public order is not impartially upheld.

3) IT CONTRADICTS THE GLOBAL SAFETY TREND. The Montreal Protocol 2014 exists precisely because states needed stronger jurisdiction to prosecute unruly passengers landing in their territory. Many jurisdictions are tightening penalties, not lightening them; because one incident can cascade into injuries, diversions and millions in losses. Nigeria should align with this arc of seriousness.

The better path: CREDIBLE SANCTIONS FIRST, EDUCATION SECOND.
There is nothing wrong with using high-visibility figures for public education; after accountability is done. Indeed, the Minister later clarified that such roles are voluntary awareness efforts, not paid sinecures. But timing is everything. Turning transgressors into teachers within days flirts with impunity’s theater. Education should reinforce deterrence not replace it.

A principled sequence would look like this:

Complete investigations and apply proportionate sanctions under NCAA regulations (fines, bans or prosecution as appropriate) without fear or favor.

Publicly disclose outcomes with timelines, reinforcing that the same rules bind the titled and the unknown.

Then consider restorative roles (e.g., recording PSAs on “what I did wrong”) that underline, not erase, the lesson.

What message are we sending?
In civil aviation, a single slap, shove or “celebrity moment” can disturb cockpit focus, inflame crowds and morph into a safety incident. Cabin crew orders are not suggestions; they are a safety chain. A society that trivializes breaches in this chain is playing dice with lives.

Political philosopher Montesquieu warned that “there is no greater tyranny than that which is perpetrated under the shield of law and in the name of justice.” When symbols of “AMBASSADORSHIP” are bestowed before justice is seen to be done, we twist the shield. Martin Luther King Jr. taught that “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” When the runway becomes a stage for preferential treatment, we rehearse injustice in the most unforgiving theater: a system where physics (not politics) has the last word.

The exasperation from stakeholders is not hysteria. Industry groups have repeatedly flagged the rising tide of disruptive behavior, urging stricter enforcement and public education working in tandem. Nigerian commentators and aviation lawyers have, in recent days, laid out chapter and verse of our laws, ICAO guidance and pilot authority. The theme is unmistakable: consequences must be certain.

Concrete steps Nigeria should take now are:
1) Lock in the legal backbone. Ensure domestic law fully leverages the Montreal Protocol 2014’s expanded jurisdiction so that incidents landing on Nigerian soil meet timely prosecution. Publish (ahead of time) the charge sheets and sentencing guidelines for common unruly offenses to remove guesswork.

2) Standardize penalties and publish them prominently. The NCAA should maintain an always-current, public schedule of penalties for unruly behavior (e.g., obstruction of operations, assault on crew, non-compliance with safety instructions), and stick to it. This clarity deters, guides prosecutors and shields against ad-hoc leniency.

3) Mandate “cooling-off” periods before any advocacy roles. If, for restorative justice, a wrongdoer is later used for public education, a fixed moratorium (say, 12–18 months after sanctions are satisfied) should be required. This preserves the moral sequence: accountability, then advocacy.

4) Crew-first policy. Assault on cabin crew must trigger automatic arrest referrals and minimum penalties. Pilots must be confident that handing over a disruptive passenger will not dissolve into celebrity exceptionalism at the terminal door.

5) A real public awareness blitz (rooted in accountability. Use airports, airlines, radio and social media to run relentless campaigns on “What counts as unruly,” “Crew authority,” and “Penalties you will face.” IATA’s guidance and international best practice support such campaigns) and they work best when anchored in credible enforcement.

To the youth watching.
Every society teaches by what it rewards. If the impressionable see that a tarmac tantrum or a slap in a cabin ends in a photo-op and a title, they will learn the wrong lesson about power, fame and the rule of law. We do not build a safe aviation culture (or a serious country) by turning transgression into a trampoline.

Edmund Burke cautioned that “example is the school of mankind and they will learn at no other.” Let our example be that no one (artist or artisan, VIP or everyman) stands above the safety rules that keep aluminum tubes full of our mothers and children from turning into headlines.

Ambassadors for safety should be those whose conduct embodies it, not those still stepping out of the dock. If Nigeria wants to cultivate a culture of respect for aviation protocols, our sequence must be simple and non-negotiable: law, consequence, then lesson in that order.

ASSAULT TODAY, AMBASSADOR TOMORROW; WHAT NATION DOES THIS? (Rewarding misconduct: What are we teaching future generations?)
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | SaharaWeeklyNG
Editor’s note: All dates are in August 2025.

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