society
HON. PRINCE CHINEDU NSOFOR (KPAKPANDO NDIGBO) PICKS NDC SENATORIAL EXPRESSION OF INTEREST FORM, DECLARES FOR SENATE AFTER SURVIVING ABDUCTION IN HIS FIRST ATTEMPT
HON. PRINCE CHINEDU NSOFOR (KPAKPANDO NDIGBO) PICKS NDC SENATORIAL EXPRESSION OF INTEREST FORM, DECLARES FOR SENATE AFTER SURVIVING ABDUCTION IN HIS FIRST ATTEMPT
– (Anambra South Senatorial District)
A New Dawn for Anambra South and the Igbo Nation
BY JOSEPH MONDAY
On July 10, 2025, while travelling through Kogi State to Abuja to obtain his senatorial nomination form under the platform of PDP where he was to emerge as the consensus candidate of the party in the Anambra South Senatorial bye election, Hon. Prince Chinedu Nsofor (Kpakpando Ndigbo) was abducted by armed men disguised as military officers. According to reports, he was held captive for ransom of over 200 million naira, but later escaped miraculously during a heavy downpour without any ransom payment. Following the incident, he described his survival as an act of “Divine Intervention” and reaffirmed his commitment to public service and the liberation of Anambra South.
In continuation of that renewed commitment, Hon. Prince Chinedu Nsofor has today 18th May 2026 officially picked his Senatorial Expression of Interest Form under the platform of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) ahead of the 2027 general elections, declaring his intention to contest for the Anambra South Senatorial District seat once again with a vision centered on industrialization, youth empowerment, economic transformation, and grassroots development.
“Remember the former things of old; for I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose,’ calling a bird of prey from the east, the man of my counsel from a far country. I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass; I have purposed, and I will do it” Isaiah 46:9-12
INTRODUCTION & CONTEXT
It is with profound humility and unwavering faith in God that I, Hon. Prince Chinedu Nsofor (Kpakpando Ndigbo), rise today to declare my intention to serve as Senator for Anambra South Senatorial District under the platform of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC). Inspired by God’s leading—”Divine Intervention”—I step forward to harness our collective blessings, talents, and resources for the resurgence of our land and people.
Anambra South comprises seven Local Government Areas—Aguata, Ekwusigo, Ihiala, Nnewi North, Nnewi South, Orumba North, and Orumba South—spanning 108 wards and over 1,669 polling units. I am committed to serving each community, from Achina and Ozubulu to Umunze and Ukpor.
WHO I AM & WHY I STAND OUT
I, Hon. Chinedu Nsofor (Kpakpando Ndigbo), a proud son of Ekwusigo Local Government Area in Anambra State, was born on March 24, 1990. I am a committed public servant, a seasoned technocrat, an International development expert, and a grassroots/community development expert. I hold a B.Sc. (Second-Class Upper) and M.Sc. in Social Work.
Over the years, I have served in several strategic national and international roles, including as the National Coordinator of Igbo Heroes Foundation, MD/CEO of the Work While in School Group, Country Director of RapidHeal International (Malaysia HQ), and Programmes Director of Asia Pacific Sports International. My work has centered on youth empowerment, public health, entrepreneurship, and nation-building, and I have championed numerous programs that have positively impacted thousands of lives across the Southeast and beyond.
In the past decade, I have led more than 30 major national programs and initiatives in partnership with institutions such as the Central Bank of Nigeria, Federal Road Safety Corps, National Commission for Colleges of Education, and several state governments. I pioneered the Work While in School initiative, which now enjoys federal recognition and is being implemented across all colleges of education in Nigeria. As Programme Coordinator for the Innoson Kiara Academy auto-training project, I facilitated vocational training for youths in Imo and Ebonyi states. During the COVID-19 pandemic, I also coordinated safety training for ambulance drivers across Southeast Nigeria.
My passion for service has earned me numerous recognitions, including the University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN) Leadership Excellence Award, the title of Most Political Student, and inclusion in the UNN Book of Fame for my contributions to student development and university advancement.
What makes me the most suitable candidate for the Anambra South Senatorial seat is not just my experience, but my proven capacity to deliver results. With a vast network of national and international partners and a practical record of grassroots transformation, I am uniquely positioned to turn Anambra South into the center of innovation, industrialization, and youth empowerment. From education reform to building social enterprises and coordinating global partnerships, I have demonstrated the kind of visionary, competent, and community-rooted leadership that Anambra South deserves.
I represent a new generation of effective, responsive, and transformative representation—one that is youthful, prepared, globally connected, and deeply committed to the prosperity of Igbo land.
100 NATIONAL LEGISLATIVE BILLS I WILL PROPOSE ACROSS ALL SECTORS (Implementation Begins in Anambra South)
I do not just see a seat in the Senate—I see a sacred assignment. I see communities transformed, industries rising, and legacies reborn. My legislative vision is not theory; it is a roadmap rooted in our realities. Here are the transformative bills I will champion having Anambra South and the Igbo Nation as the pilot phase:
1. I Will Sponsor A Bill On the Community Needs Assessment & Development Act
I envision a Nigeria where every community’s voice counts. Through this bill, I will initiate a nationwide grassroots needs assessment, beginning with the 110 communities of Anambra South. We will identify problems from within, craft solutions from the people, and implement them through a National Community Solutions Fund. Our communities will not be forgotten—they will become the model for community-driven development across Nigeria.
2. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Establish the Community Production Venture Commission Act
I believe in turning local potential into national prosperity. This bill will create production companies in every community, starting with Anambra South’s 110 towns. Each venture will tap into local raw materials—cassava, palm oil, rice—and produce value-added exports. These ventures will be jointly owned—60% by the government, 40% by the people—and designed to be listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange within a decade. I see thriving communities, not abandoned farms.
3. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Enforce the Value-Added Raw Materials Optimization Act
No more exporting our wealth in raw form! With this bill, I will put a national ban on the export of unprocessed raw materials. Our palm, rice, cassava—everything—will be transformed into finished goods. This means more jobs, more income, and industrial growth rooted in our land. Anambra South will be the first zone to show Nigeria what’s possible.
4. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Activate the Local Raw Materials Processing Credit Scheme
I want our entrepreneurs to thrive, not struggle. Through this bill, I will empower federal and regional banks to offer low-interest loans, tax holidays, and export grants to grassroots ventures. The first to benefit will be our palm oil cooperatives, cassava processors, and rice growers in Anambra South. When you produce, I will help you profit.
5. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Secure Local Leadership Through the Community-Based CEO Empowerment Act
I trust our people to lead. I will ensure that CEOs of community PPP ventures come from within—local experts who understand our strengths and values. They will be trained, audited, and held to international standards. From Nnewi to Uga, from Ihiala to Oko, our best brains will run our best businesses.
6. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Launch the National State-to-Private Share Transition Act
My Proposed Community PPP ventures should grow into community-owned legacies. My bill will ensure that the government gradually transfers the majority ownership to the private sector—20% every five years—until our people own their economy. I will also establish community stockholding cooperatives to democratize wealth. Anambra South will lead this ownership revolution.
7. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Guarantee Standards Through the Export-Ready Product Certification Bill
Our products deserve global respect. I will create a Federal Export Quality Bureau that certifies and labels all community-made goods, with full traceability—from seed to shipment. Our palm oil, rice, and cassava from Anambra South will bear the stamp of world-class excellence.
8. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Drive Growth with the Community Industrialization Incentives Act
I believe every community can become a factory of innovation. This bill will provide grants, infrastructure, and training to set up industrial clusters and agro-hubs, starting with 110 industrial nodes in Anambra South. We’ll build, produce, and export from the grassroots up.
9. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Establish the Igbo Development Bank
I see finance flowing into the hands of our people. With this bill, I will establish the Igbo Development Bank, headquartered in Nnewi. It will support Igbo businesses, finance exports, and drive diaspora investments. This model will inspire other regional banks like Arewa and Oduduwa, but we will lead first.
10. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Institutionalize Our Heritage Through the Federal Igbo Apprenticeship System Bill
Our apprenticeship model built empires. I will give it the national respect it deserves—with legal protections, standardized curricula, and part-time university access for apprentices. Anambra South will be the cradle of this national model, blending trade and academia for the 21st century.
11. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Establish the Southeast University of Entrepreneurship and Skills Acquisition
I dream of a university built for builders. This will be Nigeria’s first federal institution solely dedicated to entrepreneurship and vocational excellence, with apprenticeship integration, startup incubation, and innovation labs. Its main campus? Anambra South, of course.
12. I Will Sponsor A Bill to Introduce the National Apprenticeship Incentive & Integration Bill
Learning a trade will no longer be underrated. My bill will provide grants, tax credits, and national recognition to all businesses training apprentices. We’ll link technical and vocational education to actual businesses, starting with our hubs in Nnewi and Orumba.
13. I Will Sponsor A Bill To Connect Our People to the World via the National Community Export Development & Innovation Scheme (NCEDIS)
Additional Bills covering national educational reform, healthcare innovation, ICT growth, women’s enterprise development, youth entrepreneurship, constitutional amendments for resource decentralization, and state policing are in the works and will be revealed in subsequent policy papers.
CONSTITUENCY PROJECTS: SECTOR-BY-SECTOR DEVELOPMENT AGENDA
1. Economics & Entrepreneurship
I will facilitate the launch of the Igbo Development Bank, a dynamic financial institution to provide microloans and venture capital for aspiring entrepreneurs in Anambra South and beyond.
As the Senator, I will spearhead the Anambra South Industrial Revolution Project in Nnewi, transforming it into Africa’s premier manufacturing hub through global investment partnerships.
I will initiate a Public-Private-Community Business Facilitation Framework under the Heroes Foundation, connecting local Igbo entrepreneurs to international business ecosystems.
2. Education & Apprenticeship
I will advocate for the establishment of the Southeast University for Entrepreneurship and Skills Acquisition, a federal institution focused entirely on innovation, trades, and startup incubation.
As the Senator, I will institutionalize the Igbo Apprenticeship System by creating a legal framework that allows apprentices to work while studying—graduating with diplomas in entrepreneurship.
I will expand Work-While-In-School Programs by integrating internships and practical entrepreneurial exposure into secondary and tertiary curricula across Anambra South.
3. Youth & Employment
I will facilitate the legislation that protects apprentices and their masters under a unified national legal framework to safeguard the integrity of the apprenticeship tradition.
As the Senator, I will establish Igbo Social Enterprises within SMEs to generate thousands of sustainable youth jobs across sectors.
I will facilitate the development and execution of a Youth Entrepreneurship Blueprint tailored to combat unemployment and inspire innovation across Anambra South communities.
4. Infrastructure & Industrialization
I will mobilize leading industrialists from Anambra South to co-invest in the region’s largest international mall, The Anambra International Shopping Mall (AISM), serving as a trade gateway and job engine.
As the Senator, I will champion the upgrade of road networks, power supply, and water infrastructure through public-private partnerships to support commerce and comfort.
5. Security & Governance
I will lead and champion the Anambra South Community Security Program, enhancing local security architecture in collaboration with federal and grassroots agencies.
As the Senator, I will launch Constituency Security Councils in each community of Anambra South to aid in policy implementation, intelligence sharing, and early warning systems.
6. Agriculture & Agro-Processing
I will facilitate the establishment of the Palm Oil Venture Hubs in palm-producing communities for industrial-scale processing and exports.
I will facilitate the creation of Cassava Flour Mills in cassava-rich villages, where local harvests are turned into export-ready flour products.
I will initiate Rice Processing Plants in riverine areas to ensure that Anambra-grown rice meets the food needs of the Southeast and global export standards.
7. Community Needs & Project Implementation
As the Senator, I will oversee a comprehensive Needs Assessment Program across all ~110 communities in Anambra South to identify and prioritize local challenges and solutions.
I will supervise targeted interventions—clean water systems, rural health clinics, and feeder roads—based on data-driven, community-validated priorities.
8. Financing & Ownership Structures
I will create mechanisms for community members and the diaspora to own equity in community ventures and participate in their governance and profits.
I will support the formation of local cooperative stockholding schemes to ensure inclusive financial participation and wealth retention in each community.
9. Governance & Local Industry Leadership
I will appoint qualified CEOs from each host community to manage PPP ventures—professionals with global business exposure—to lead their local ventures to profitability and innovation.
As the Senator, I will initiate executive training programs and industrial collaboration platforms to strengthen leadership capacity across the state.
10. Export Orientation & Foreign Exchange Growth
I will integrate each community venture into export markets, equipping them with packaging, branding, and international trade compliance support.
I will facilitate foreign partnerships and buyers’ networks, enabling Anambra South to earn substantial foreign exchange and grow the state’s GDP.
11. Sustainable Raw-Material Management
I will ensure that no raw material leaves Anambra South in unprocessed form. Our goal will be total value addition for local and international markets.
As the Senator, I will promote sustainable farming and extraction techniques, protecting both natural resources and community livelihoods.
12. Youth & Community Development Linkages
I will provide vocational training in palm oil processing, cassava, and rice production to prepare our youth for modern industry.
I will incorporate community-based skill centers into each production venture to ensure a steady pipeline of skilled and employable young people.
13. Private-Sector Transition Strategy
I will facilitate the implementation of a planned divestment schedule where the state gradually sells off its majority shares, enabling the private sector and local investors to take control.
I will ensure transparency and accountability through strong legal frameworks, third-party audits, and public access to performance reports.
14. Value-Chain Cluster Development
I will facilitate the development of agro-industrial clusters where farmers, processors, packagers, and logistics companies operate in a shared ecosystem.
As the Senator, I will promote shared utilities and support services such as transport, finance, and technology to reduce cost and boost efficiency.
15. Community-Based Export Certification
I will facilitate the establishment of local Quality Assurance (QA) and Certification Centers to enable our products meet global safety and packaging standards.
I will ensure that all exports bear the “Made in Anambra South” label—recognized and respected worldwide.
16. Infrastructure Integration
I will coordinate directly with relevant state and federal ministries to align infrastructure investments—roads, electricity, and water—with each community’s industrial project.
As the Senator, I will prioritize projects backed by local need assessments, community feedback, and economic returns.
17. Anambra South Academic Excellence Fund (ASAEF)
I will facilitate the establishment of the Anambra South Academic Excellence Fund to provide full scholarships for top-performing students in science, law, agriculture, ICT, and engineering from each of the seven LGAs.
I will sponsor over 100 students annually to attend top Nigerian and international universities.
I will create a robust mentorship network linking these students with accomplished diaspora scholars to build long-term intellectual capital and leadership pipelines for the Igbo nation.
18. TVET Reform & Dual Training Education System
I will upgrade the technical colleges in Orumba, Nnewi, and Ihiala to world-class standard through a comprehensive technical and infrastructural overhaul.
I will initiate strategic partnerships with firms in Germany and China to adopt a dual-mode learning system, combining academic training with real-time industrial attachment.
I will support and legislate the Igbo Apprenticeship–University Integration Scheme, allowing young artisans to gain formal diplomas in entrepreneurship while continuing their hands-on training.
19. Agro-Industrial Mega Zones (AIMZs)
I will facilitate the establishment of Agro-Industrial Mega Zones across Anambra South to process local crops into high-value exports:
Cassava → Flour and ethanol
Palm Fruits → Oil, soap, cosmetics
Rice → Polished rice and bran
Each AIMZ will act as an anchor employer in every LGA, creating 2,500–3,000 permanent jobs per zone, while strengthening food security and export revenue.
20. “Farm Smart, Earn Big” Agri-Tech Pilot
I will facilitate the launch of high-tech agri-clusters in Ihiala, Aguata, and Orumba for rice, cassava, and palm oil production.
These clusters will be equipped with drones, solar-powered irrigation systems, and real-time digital monitoring tools.
I will facilitate the enrollment of 2,000 youths annually under the Anambra South Agri-Tech Corps, providing them with land access, startup capital, and equipment to become agri-entrepreneurs.
21. Africa International Shopping and Mall (AISM)
I will facilitate the construction of the Africa International Shopping and Mall (AISM) in Nnewi, which will be Southeast Nigeria’s largest export-oriented trade center.
The complex will feature:
1,000+ shops and stalls
A modern packaging center and logistics depots
Duty-free zones for efficient import/export operations
Built under a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) framework, AISM will create over 7,000 jobs and host 500+ indigenous brands.
I will ensure strategic expansion to Ekwusigo and Ihiala for broader market access.
22. Diaspora Investment Accelerator (DIA)
I will facilitate the launch of the Anambra South Diaspora Investment Portal, directly linking Igbo professionals and investors in the diaspora with homegrown startups and scalable businesses.
I will convene the Annual Anambra South Diaspora Investment Summit to attract billions in diaspora remittances into manufacturing, technology, education, agriculture, and infrastructure development across the Senatorial District.
23. Digital Innovation & Technology Development
I will facilitate the establishment of Innovation and Technology Hubs across Nnewi, Ihiala, and Aguata to empower young people with digital skills in software development, artificial intelligence, robotics, cybersecurity, and e-commerce.
As the Senator, I will attract partnerships with global technology firms to provide remote job opportunities and startup funding for our youths.
I will support policies that promote digital literacy in secondary schools and expand internet access across rural communities in Anambra South.
24. Healthcare Expansion & Medical Access
I will facilitate the upgrading of general hospitals and primary healthcare centers across the seven LGAs to ensure accessible and affordable healthcare services.
I will sponsor health outreach programs focused on maternal care, child immunization, cancer screening, and chronic disease prevention.
As the Senator, I will attract medical partnerships and interventions that will support telemedicine, rural ambulance services, and community health insurance programs.
25. Women Empowerment & Inclusive Development
I will facilitate special entrepreneurship funds and cooperative grants for women-led businesses and traders across Anambra South.
I will support vocational and digital training programs targeted at widows, single mothers, and young women to improve economic independence and family welfare.
As the Senator, I will champion policies that increase women’s participation in leadership, governance, and community development initiatives.
26. Sports, Entertainment & Creative Economy
I will facilitate the construction and rehabilitation of sporting facilities and youth recreation centers across the Senatorial District.
I will create sports and talent discovery programs that identify and support young talents in football, athletics, music, film, and creative arts.
As the Senator, I will connect local talents with national and international platforms to promote the creative economy and create employment opportunities.
27. Road Infrastructure & Rural Connectivity
I will advocate for the rehabilitation of critical federal roads linking communities in Anambra South, especially roads affecting commerce, agriculture, and transportation.
I will facilitate the construction of rural access roads, drainage systems, and bridges to connect underserved communities to economic opportunities.
As the Senator, I will work with relevant agencies to ensure timely completion and quality delivery of all infrastructure projects.
28. Water Supply & Environmental Sustainability
I will facilitate the provision of clean and portable water systems across rural and urban communities in Anambra South.
I will support environmental protection initiatives including erosion control, flood management, afforestation, and waste recycling programs.
As the Senator, I will promote sustainable environmental policies that protect our communities and future generations.
29. Energy & Rural Electrification
I will facilitate renewable energy projects including solar mini-grids and rural electrification programs to power homes, schools, hospitals, and businesses.
I will attract independent power projects and energy investors to support industrialization and economic expansion across the district.
As the Senator, I will advocate for stable electricity policies that encourage local production and reduce energy costs for businesses.
30. Youth Leadership & Civic Participation
I will establish leadership academies and mentorship programs to prepare the next generation of visionary leaders across Anambra South.
I will support civic education initiatives that encourage political participation, community service, and democratic responsibility among young people.
As the Senator, I will create platforms for regular engagement between elected representatives and the youth population to ensure inclusive governance.
A CALL TO ACTION
My dear people of Anambra South, this movement is not about politics alone—it is about rebuilding our future together. It is about transforming our communities into centers of productivity, innovation, security, and prosperity.
This is the time for visionary leadership, practical solutions, and courageous action. We cannot continue to depend on outdated systems while our youths remain unemployed, our industries underdeveloped, and our communities neglected.
I offer myself for service with sincerity, competence, courage, and a proven track record of results. I believe in the limitless potential of our people, and I believe Anambra South can become the economic and industrial heartbeat of not just the Southeast, but Nigeria and Africa at large.
Together, we will build a new Anambra South driven by enterprise, education, security, infrastructure, and opportunity for all.
Together, we will restore the pride of the Igbo nation.
Together, we will rise.
CONCLUSION
I, Hon. Prince Chinedu Nsofor (Kpakpando Ndigbo), humbly seek your support, prayers, and partnership as I embark on this journey to represent Anambra South Senatorial District under the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC).
This is more than a campaign—it is a mission for transformation, empowerment, and generational progress.
May God bless Anambra South Senatorial District.
May God bless Anambra State.
May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Signed:
Hon. Prince Chinedu Nsofor (Kpakpando Ndigbo)
Senatorial Aspirant, Anambra South Senatorial District
Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC)
society
WAZOBIA: Nigeria’s Hardly Separable Tripod Stand Since 1914; It’s Time To Rotate Presidency Among 6 Geo-Political Zones In 2027
WAZOBIA: Nigeria’s Hardly Separable Tripod Stand Since 1914; It’s Time To Rotate Presidency Among 6 Geo-Political Zones In 2027
Dear High Chief Jibrin Okutepa (SAN), I bring you calvary greetings from the land of Lincoln. I want to first of all commend your continued sincerity of purpose for a united, peaceful, and prosperous Nigeria.
But with all due respect sir, let me reaffirm that since 1914, when the British colonialists led by Lord Frederick Lugard, amalgamated the Northern and Southern Protectorates, Nigeria has always stood on a Tripod called WAZOBIA (Yoruba, Hausa/Fulani, and Igbo). In fact, it is the alleged domination of these three major ethnic nationalities that brought about the doctrine of necessity called the Six Geo-political Zones proposed by Chief Alex Ekwueme, et al., at the 1994/1995 Constitutional Conference chaired by the late Justice Adolphus Karibi-Whyte and empaneled by General Sanni Abacha.
Prior to, and during this period under review, there were legitimate claims and concerns from ethnic minorities across the old Eastern region, the old Northern region, as well as the old Western region that they were being dominated, marginalized, oppressed, and strangulated by the abovementioned three major ethnic nationalities in Nigeria.
So, to solve this hydra-headed problem capable of imploding Nigeria, via a doctrine of necessity, General Sanni Abacha in 1996, partitioned Nigeria into six geo-political zones, namely: North Central, North East, North West, South East, South South, and South West.
The minorities in the old Northern region were majorly zoned into the North Central. This is even as the minorities in the old Eastern region and old Western region were respectively zoned into the South South (a cardinal point unknown to history).
As one of the ardent students of contemporary Nigerian history and politics, permit me to affirm that pertitioning Nigeria into six geo-political zones is the best bet at guaranteeing justice, equity, fairness, national unity, national cohesion, national peace, and commandeering national loyalty in a country like Nigeria with over 385 ethnic nationalities and over 500 languages.
Going forward into 2027, to make Nigeria work, all that is needed has been proferred by Chief Alex Ekwueme during the 1994/1995 Constitutional Conference. Let’s rotate the presidency among the six geo-political zones for a single term of five or six years. This is in line with the spirit and letters of Section 14(3) of Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution (as amended).
Of all the frontline Presidential candidates for the 2027 all-important elections, only His Excellency Atiku Abubakar- @atiku espouses and religiously supports this equitable zoning arrangement. The North/South zoning arrangement has been a scam all along. It has not been able to restore national unity, national peace, and commandeer national loyalty among Nigerians from across the six geo-political zones for their beloved country.
It is therefore, self-evident and conspicuous like the North Star that when power goes North, the more populated North West hijacks it and runs away with it. And when power comes South, the more populated South West using its mainstream media and propaganda prowess, hijacks it and runs away with it. This malady has continued unabated since 1999 to the chagrin of the marginalized North East, South East, and North Central.
As an emerging political scientist and investigative journalist, I affirm that at this auspicious moment in Nigeria’s chequered history, the country now urgently needs an experienced reformer with the political will and balls of steel like Waziri Adamawa; the Zege Mule u Tiv; and the Ogo wu chi onye 1 of Igboland, to get the failing country out of the woods.
Your (Okutepa’s) proposition to downplay the fact that Nigeria is standing on a Tripod called WAZOBIA can be described as an academic exercise tantamount to futility. Nigeria will always stand on a Tripod. All that is needed is for the 1999 Constitution to be amended to make it an impeachable offence for the Nigerian President to abuse his powers and going contrary against the spirit and letters of Section 14(3) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (as amended).
Muhammadu Buhari did it and was not punished with impeachment proceedings from the rubber-stamp Senate Presidency of Ahmed Lawan. Bola Tinubu continued from where Buhari stopped and has not been punished with impeachment proceedings from the rubber-stamp Senate Presidency of Godswill Akpabio.
By and large, I reckon with you in toto, that Nigeria’s problem is not in the 1999 Constitution nor in the law, but in the blatant disregard and disrespect for law and order. Gift the American Constitution to these current crop of rogue politicians in Nigeria, they will still plunge Nigeria into the unfathomable chaos like they have done today.
Going into 2027 all-important presidential election billed for Saturday, January 16, 2027, let me conclude by saying that since 2015, having tried and tested two successive regimes of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC, it’s time to try and test the main opposition African Democratic Congress, ADC, whose charge is led by His Excellency Atiku Abubakar.
May the Nigerian State and the Nigerian people succeed in 2027!
Ikenna Asomba is a political scientist and journalist. He writes from the State of Illinois, United States.
society
The Abyss of Silence: Why We All Failed the Oyo Abductees
The Abyss of Silence: Why We All Failed the Oyo Abductees
By Femi Oyewale
The haunting cadence of W.B. Yeats’ The Second Coming, quoted so often by the late Chinua Achebe, has ceased to be mere poetry. It has become a grim, real-time mirror reflecting our national existence: “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold; / Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.”
In a nation that boasts some of the brightest minds globally, a land steeped in the communal sanctity of “it takes a village to raise a child,” we have descended into an unthinkable abyss. Daredevil criminals have reached into the heart of Oyo State, snatched our children—the very architects of our future—and vanished. Yet, as the sun rises and sets, from the gilded halls of the Presidency to the dusty corners of the local street, we remain paralyzed, tethered to a collective ignorance that is as chilling as it is shameful.
The Theatre of Performative Outrage
We have become a nation of “noises.” We trade blame with surgical precision—the Presidency points to the state, the state points to the security architecture, and the populace directs its vitriol toward the political elite. We have seen the press releases, the hashtags, the fleeting television appearances, and the hollow promises of “concerted efforts.”
But let us be painfully honest: these are not efforts; they are performances. There is not even a whisper of a “near-success syndrome.” While we debate and defend our preferred political affiliations, our children are sleeping under the cold, unforgiving stars of a forest floor. They are subjected to the kind of trauma that shatters souls long before it breaks bodies. They are waiting for a rescue that we are too divided to coordinate.
The Mirror of Empathy
Let us strip away the facade of civic detachment. I challenge every father in this country: if that abducted child were your only son, would you be content with a tweet? To every mother: if that child were the fruit of your old age, would you accept a press statement as enough?
To our governors, our senators, and our political titans: if these children were the heirs to your empires, would the current pace of “investigation” satisfy you? To our billionaires, our security chiefs, and our local traditional warriors, those who claim the mantle of protectors, what if these children were born of your own loins?
The silence that would follow that personal connection is the same silence currently haunting the homes of these victims. We have allowed the abstraction of “national crisis” to desensitize us to the visceral reality of a child’s terror.
Beyond the “One-Man” Savior Complex
We have developed a dangerous habit of outsourcing our conscience. We wait for the radical activist, the viral influencer, or the singular loud voice to carry the burden of the nation. We expect a solitary figure like VDM or a lone firebrand like Sowore to move mountains that require the combined weight of a movement.
But no singular individual can replace the collective pulse of a people. Their rescue is not a one-man job; it is a fundamental test of our humanity.
The Path to Reclamation
We are currently a house divided by party lines, religious silos, and ethnic prejudices. Yet, we have seen that we possess a dormant capacity for unity. When the Super Eagles take to the pitch, our differences vanish. We become one heartbeat, one voice, one nation. Why is it that a game can unify us, but the abduction of our children leaves us fractured?
We do not need more talk. We do not need more inquiries that lead to no arrests. We need to acknowledge a hard truth: we have failed. We have failed the children, we have failed their teachers, and we have failed ourselves.
No stranger knows our terrain better than we do. No satellite imagery can replace the intelligence of a community that refuses to be silent. It is our land. These are our children.
The systemic rot has metastasized to the point where “efforts” no longer count. Only results matter. The time for performative sorrow is over; the time for a unified, uncompromising demand for their return is now. If we do not rise, if we do not act with the singular intensity of a people reclaiming their future, then let the history books record that when our children were taken, Nigeria chose its politics over its people.
We must rescue them. Not tomorrow. Not after the next meeting. Now.
Femi Oyewale is the publisher of Sahara Online and President of NASRE who
writes on national affairs, security, and social development.
society
Police Officers Detained as Family Property Dispute Sparks Demolition Controversy in Lagos
Police Officers Detained as Family Property Dispute Sparks Demolition Controversy in Lagos
By Ifeoma Ikem
A property dispute within the Omotayo-Ojo family has taken a dramatic turn following a controversial demolition exercise at a residential building in Ikosi-Ketu, Lagos State, which reportedly left tenants displaced and led to the detention of some police officers allegedly involved in the operation.
The property, located at 23B Loveall Street, Ikosi-Ketu, has been the subject of a prolonged ownership tussle since the death of its owner, Chief Oludola Omotayo Ojo, the Babaalaje of Imesi-Ile, Osun State, in 2019.
Residents said tension erupted when a group of individuals, accompanied by security operatives, stormed the premises and commenced demolition activities.
According to eyewitnesses, portions of the building were pulled down while tenants rushed to salvage their belongings from affected apartments.
The residents alleged that windows, doors and roofing sheets were damaged during the exercise, exposing parts of the building to the elements and causing significant losses to occupants.
At the centre of the dispute is Mrs Mojisola Omotayo Ojo Alolagbe, who claimed that the property was allocated to her by her late father during his lifetime as a source of financial support.
She alleged that some family members had persistently challenged her ownership claim despite ongoing legal proceedings relating to the administration of the deceased’s estate.
Alolagbe further claimed that the latest incident was part of a series of attempts to wrest control of the property, citing previous cases of alleged vandalism and partial demolition in November 2025, January 2026 and February 2026.
The situation escalated further when reports emerged that police officers allegedly involved in the demolition were later apprehended and conveyed in a Black Maria vehicle over questions surrounding the legality of their participation in the operation.
Sources familiar with the matter said those behind the demolition had initially claimed to be acting on approval from the Lagos State Ministry of Lands. However, the authenticity and extent of such approval could not be independently verified as of the time of filing this report.
The development has generated concern among residents and community members, who questioned the involvement of security personnel in what they described as a civil matter.
Some tenants, who said they had recently renewed their tenancy agreements, lamented the destruction of their property and appealed to the authorities for protection and possible compensation.
They also called for a thorough investigation into the circumstances surrounding the demolition, insisting that the rights of all parties involved should be protected.
Stakeholders have urged the Lagos State Government, security agencies and the judiciary to intervene and ensure that the dispute is resolved through lawful means to prevent further escalation.
The controversy has continued to draw public attention, raising concerns over property rights, estate administration and the role of law enforcement agencies in civil disputes.
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