society
LAGOS CITY MEGA CRUSADE 2025; “HELP FROM ABOVE”- A DIVINE GATHERING OF HOPE AND IMPACT
LAGOS CITY MEGA CRUSADE 2025; “HELP FROM ABOVE”- A DIVINE GATHERING OF HOPE AND IMPACT.
Lagos, Nigeria, in Ipaja axis and it’s environ is yet to experience the raw power of God in action in a remarkable display of divine insight as Dr Andy Ikekhide the host of TGC Network is set for 3days Mega Crusade in Lagos.
Dr Andy Ikekhide , a respected man of God with an extraordinary Apostolic Grace for acceleration emphasizes the theme of the program which is HELP FROM ABOVE
This spiritual gathering is set to take place from Thursday, December 4th to Saturday, December 6th, 2025, at the Abesan Mini-Stadium, Ipaja, Lagos, from 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM daily.
Hosted by Dr. Andy and Pastor Mrs. Faith Ikekhide, the Lagos City Mega Crusade promises to be a powerful convergence of faith, worship, and miracles. It is designed to inspire hope, ignite revival, and bring divine intervention to individuals and families across Lagos and beyond.
The event will feature inspiring ministrations by some of Nigeria’s most anointed gospel music ministers, including Minister Lillian Nneji, Evangelist Tope Alabi, and Minister Chioma Jesus. These renowned ministers will lead the congregation in soul-lifting praise and worship sessions, ushering participants into God’s presence. The TGC Network House of Praise and The World Changers will also minister powerfully throughout the event, ensuring an atmosphere filled with spiritual depth and divine encounter.
In addition to the spiritual sessions, the TGC Network has made provisions for free distribution of raw food items to attendees as part of its welfare outreach program. This act of kindness reflects the network’s deep commitment to meeting both the spiritual and physical needs of the people.
Speaking about the event, the convener, Dr. Andy Ikekhide, “This crusade is not just another religious program—it is a divine mandate. We believe God is ready to pour out His help from above to everyone who comes with an expectant heart. In these challenging times, people need hope, and there is no greater help than the one that comes from God.”
Pastor Mrs. Faith Ikekhide added that the Lagos City Mega Crusade will be “a gathering of transformation, healing, and deliverance,” encouraging everyone to come with faith and readiness to receive.
He was Privileged to have been imparted by an African Evangelistic Legend,Evang Reinhard Bonnke with fire of reaching the unreached at palm beach Florida
TGC Network -The Great Commission Christian also among others prints free tracts for churches to use for soul winning, we visit secondary schools and speak to the future leaders preparing them for tomorrow, we also visit and extend our hands of empathy to inmates, we reach out to street girls, we reach out to the needy with our welfare outreach in different communities, we render free medicals, partner with churches during crusades etc The emphasis on this event is free and open to all. It is expected to draw a massive crowd from across Lagos State and beyond, as people gather to seek divine help and experience the tangible presence of God.
For inquiries and further information, interested participants can contact 08033276818 or 08175422409, or send an email to [email protected].
news
Alleged Christian Genocide: Let’s Be More Patriotic, Olowu Urges Nigerians
Alleged Christian Genocide: Let’s Be More Patriotic, Olowu Urges Nigerians
… Urges President Trump To Share Actionable Intelligence With Nigeria
Olowu of Kuta, HRM Oba Dr Hammeed Adekunle Makama Oyelude, CON, Tegbosun III, has urged all Nigerians to be patriotic and speak with one voice to protect our country.
Olowu, who spoke at the 35th edition of Kuta Day celebration on Saturday, said it’s imperative now more than ever to speak with one voice and unite to protect our country and defeat the terrorists once and for all.
According to Olowu, ” Irrespective of political leaning and affiliation, this is the time to show our patriotic zeal. We must all bear in mind that we must have the country first before thinking of any ambition,” he added.
To President Bola Tinubu, the monarch said, though he has improved the welfare of the military since the assumption of office on May 29, 2023, he urged him to do more to motivate our gallant officers.
To the new Service Chiefs, the revered monarch commended them for swinging into action immediately after the Senate screening and receiving oaths from their predecessors, but urged them to expedite action now that the whole world is focused on Nigeria to neutralize the terrorist groups as soon as possible.
” Your appointment is coming at the defining moment in our chequered history. I urge the service chiefs to be conscious of the fact that all resources, both human capital and equipment, must be put to the best use now to end the insurgency,” Olowu said.
Olowu, however, urged President Donald Trump to help Nigeria by sharing actionable intelligence and usable platforms that would end the insurgency as soon as possible.
society
Jubilation as *NUPRC Chief Executive Gbenga Komolafe Wins Global Sustainable Leadership Award at London Conference
Jubilation as *NUPRC Chief Executive Gbenga Komolafe Wins Global Sustainable Leadership Award at London Conference
Chief Executive of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Engr. Gbenga Komolafe, has been honoured with the Global Sustainable Leadership Award at the Global Sustainable Education and Leadership (G-SEL) Conference 2025, held at the House of Lords, Palace of Westminster, United Kingdom.
The two-day event, which drew senior policymakers, business leaders, and diplomats from across the world, recognised Komolafe’s exceptional leadership in steering reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) and positioning Nigeria as a credible, transparent, and competitive energy investment destination.
Since assuming office, Komolafe has been instrumental in deepening Nigeria’s upstream regulatory transformation. Under his watch, the country’s rig count surged from just eight in 2021 to 69 as of October 2025 — a growth of more than 760 per cent. Revenue performance has also consistently exceeded government targets, with the Commission achieving surpluses of 18.3 per cent in 2022, 14.6 per cent in 2023, and an impressive 84.2 per cent in 2024.
Beyond fiscal success, NUPRC has recorded major milestones in host community development and indigenous participation. Local operators now account for over 30 per cent of Nigeria’s oil production, while the implementation of Host Community Development Trusts has begun to channel direct benefits from oil and gas operations to local populations, aligning with global sustainability standards.
Accepting the award, Komolafe dedicated the honour to the Nigerian people, describing it as a reflection of their resilience and the government’s commitment to reform.
“This award belongs to Nigeria. It recognises the courage and faith that drive our reforms in the upstream oil and gas sector. We are building a transparent, accountable, and investment-friendly system that reflects our national values and global aspirations,” he said.
Komolafe noted that the NUPRC’s strategy is anchored on three priorities — transparency, competitiveness, and sustainability — with an emphasis on maximising the value of Nigeria’s hydrocarbon resources while advancing the energy transition.
We are not only regulating production. We are shaping the future of energy in Africa by ensuring that Nigeria remains a reliable supplier, a fair regulator, and a responsible global partner,” the NUPRC boss added.
The G-SEL London Conference 2025, themed ‘The intersection of innovation, sustainability and equity for energy access’, served as a major forum for global dialogue on the future of energy, education, and inclusive growth.
Komolafe’s recognition reinforces Nigeria’s growing reputation as an energy hub built on regulatory integrity, sustainable growth, and global partnership — a milestone that underscores the nation’s role in shaping the next phase of Africa’s energy future.
Other recipients of the Global Sustainable Leadership Award included Angela Wilkinson, Chief Executive Officer of the World Energy Council; Jason Jackson, Mayor of Islington, London; Riad Meddeb, Director of Sustainable Energy at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP); and Ben Parsons, Partner at Oakin Energy Transition Strategy, United Kingdom. Others were Macenje “Che Che” Mazoka, Zambia’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom; Seema Malhotra FRSA, Member of Parliament for Feltham and Heston and Minister at the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office; and Joel Singh, Director at General Electric Company, United Kingdom.
The award also went to Hon. Dr. Toreria Moyo, Minister of Primary and Secondary Education of Zimbabwe; Mr. Alex Wachira, CBS, Principal Secretary at Kenya’s Ministry of Energy and Petroleum; and H.E. Dr. Morie K. Manyeh, Sierra Leone’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom — rounding off a distinguished roster of leaders honoured for their commitment to sustainable growth, inclusive governance, and energy transition across Africa and beyond.
society
Move Fast or Face the Consequence: A Call to Stop Terror, Not Muslims
Move Fast or Face the Consequence: A Call to Stop Terror, Not Muslims.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by saharaweeklyNG.com
“The Real Message of Donald Trump’s Warning to Nigeria and Why Some Choose to Misinterpret It.”
The uproar surrounding Donald Trump’s recent warning to Nigeria begs a fundamental question: Are we twisting his words or ignoring the hard truth he sought to highlight? Trump did not declare war on Muslims. He did not call for the overthrow of the Nigerian government. What he did say was blunt and targeted, “MOVE FAST, STOP THE KILLINGS, PROTECT NIGERIANS” and that message should reverberate across this troubled nation.
On 1 November 2025, President Trump designated Nigeria as a “COUNTRY of PARTICULAR CONCERN” for alleged violations of religious freedom and posted.
“If the Nigerian Government continues to allow the killing of Christians, the U.S.A. will immediately stop all aid and assistance to Nigeria and may very well go into that now disgraced country, ‘guns-a-blazing,’ to completely wipe out the Islamic Terrorists who are committing these horrible atrocities.”
He added:
“If we attack, it will be fast, vicious and sweet, just like the terrorist thugs attack our CHERISHED Christians. WARNING: THE NIGERIAN GOVERNMENT BETTER MOVE FAST”
Look at that language: it does not say “we are coming for Muslims”; it says “we may act against terrorist actors if Nigeria fails to protect its citizens.” The conditional “IF” is not a declaration of war, but a wake-up call. And to anyone who says it targets Muslims, you must ask, why assume religious identity when the actor is identified as “TERRORISTS”?
The core message “A demand for accountability.”
The key line is this “Move fast, if you don’t, the United States will step in.” That sentence lays responsibility clearly at the door of the Nigerian authorities. It says; it is your turn first. If you fail, others may do what you didn’t. And, this should not be controversial. Consider these facts:
Nigeria faces a multi-front security crisis: from long-running insurgency by Boko Haram and the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) in the northeast, to farmer-herder clashes across the Middle Belt and widespread banditry.
According to the human-conflict monitor ACLED, among nearly 1,923 attacks on civilians in Nigeria in a given year, only about 50 were directly linked to victims due to Christian identity, a sobering reminder that the violence is not purely religious in nature, though sometimes portrayed that way.
Nigeria’s own government has rejected the claim it is religiously intolerant, with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu insisting the country protects citizens of all faiths and that the violence is complex and inter-sectarian.
Thus, the message from Trump (whether one supports his style or not) is Nigeria, you must act, you have not acted enough and the cost of continued inaction will be external pressure. That is what he said. Not “WE HATE MUSLIMS”; “WE HATE TERROR.”
Why some distort the message. In my view, the twisting of this message comes from two sources:
Beneficiaries of the status quo. Those who profit (politically, economically or socially) from Nigeria’s slow-motion collapse in many regions will fear exposure. A foreign-led threat to “STEP IN” acts as a catalyst for change they would rather avoid.
The uninformed about reality. Many commentators leap to slogans and labels without disaggregating the actors, the ethnic dynamics, the local militias, the failings of governance. They assume religious framing instead of nuance and so wind up mis-interpreting or mis-representing statements like this.
If you cannot point to perpetrators, if you cannot demonstrate arrests, prosecutions and accountability; then your outrage rings hollow.
Take the specific atrocities you mention, the burning of homes and destruction of entire communities in places such as Yelwata, Bokkos or Taraba. If the victims were destroyed and displaced, how many perpetrators have been ARRESTED, PARADED, TRIED and CONVICTED? That profound lack of accountability is what undercuts Nigeria’s credibility.
When terror actors roam free and their sponsors (whether STATE-LINKED, MILITIA-LINKED or OTHERWISE) operate with impunity, the weakness is not just in one region; but a national crisis.
Why Trump’s demand matters. Let us not mince words, Nigeria is at a crossroads. If the killing continues unchecked, if entire villages vanish and communities are left to fend for themselves, the result is not only humanitarian catastrophe, but a breakdown of state legitimacy.
Renowned analysts warn that Nigeria’s diplomacy and governance are under strain. According to the Atlantic Council, the designation of Nigeria as a CPC and Trump’s threat mark “a diplomatic alarm bell” for Nigeria’s leadership, “unless Abuja demonstrates measurable improvements.”
Here is what is at stake:
Rule of law: When villages are razed without recourse or justice, the contract between citizen and state shatters.
Inter-religious harmony: When violence portrays itself as “Christian vs Muslim” but in fact cuts across minorities and majorities, mis-labelling risks deepening the wound. As one analyst put it: “The wrong thing to do is to invade Nigeria and override the authorities or the authority of the Nigerian government. Doing that will be counter-productive.”
Global credibility: Nigeria claims to be the “giant of Africa,” yet if its foreign allies perceive it as failing to protect citizens, investments, aid and partnerships will falter.
Domestic narrative: If the government tolerates or ignores terror linked to any identity (ethnic, religious, regional) then its claim to protect “ALL NIGERIANS” rings hollow.
Hence Trump’s message (whether blunt or unilateral) demands Nigeria move. It places the burden first on national leadership. That is exactly how you framed his words: “He spoke against terrorists move fast.” That is valid.
Let us be clear; this is about TERROR, not FAITH.
It is tempting, perhaps politically expedient, to frame every attack as MUSLIM-ON-CHRISTIAN or NORTHERN-ON-SOUTHERN. The data suggests otherwise.
“While Christians are among those targeted, the vast majority of victims of armed groups are Muslims in Nigeria’s Muslim-majority north, where most attacks occur.”
This underlines the fact that Nigeria’s crisis is not simply one of religious hatred, but of FAILED GOVERNANCE, BROKEN SECURITY, HUNGER, DISPLACEMENT and CRIMINAL IMPUNITY. Yet when commentators label Trump’s message as ANTI-MUSLIM, they imply that Muslims are uniformly the perpetrators or automatically the victims when in reality, TERRORISM SPARES NONE.
If you stand for justice, for Nigerian lives (whether they are Muslim, Christian, traditionalist or otherwise) then you should support the call for decisive action. The message is universal; stop the killings, regardless of faith.
Why the outrage then? If Trump’s message is as you interpret (a challenge to terror and failed response) then why the outrage? Let me suggest:
Some hold to tribal or religious narratives and view any external intervention or threat as automatically hostile to their identity group, even when the message is not so.
Some fear loss of impunity. When terror actors are exposed, exploitation of communities for resource, land or politics becomes harder. So the message is resisted.
Misinformation spreads faster than nuance. Quick social-media posts, slogans, memes offer easy binaries. Muslim vs Christian, North vs South. The real nuance of “terror vs victim” is harder to sell.
Yet refusing to acknowledge the seriousness of the challenge does not make it go away.
What must Nigeria do now? The parties that bear responsibility are not just Abuja in theory, they include state governments, security services, local communities, civil society. The federal government has the central role. The concrete steps include:
Arrest, prosecute, convict the perpetrators of village destructions; regardless of their ethnicity or religion. Without accountability, deterrence is absent.
Protect displaced communities, rebuild homes, restore livelihoods, offer compensation. A community left without hope is fertile ground for further radicalisation.
Address root causes; poverty, youth unemployment, land conflicts, resource scarcity. Terror and militia violence thrive in neglected zones.
Narrate truth; Government must speak of the victims in all categories and resist selective victimhood. Recognise that terror acts on all Nigerians, not only one faith.
Engage partners but maintain sovereignty; If international assistance is welcomed, it must respect Nigerian leadership but hold it to result. As one expert put it, “The country must cultivate an atmosphere of transparency that allows external observers to assess the facts firsthand.”
The Way Forward.
Those interpreting Donald Trump’s statement as a war on Muslims are mis-reading the message. He invoked a conditional threat; you must act or risk intervention and he spotlighted terrorism, not an entire faith. If we truly want an end to the pain in Yelwata, Bokkos, Taraba and beyond, then every Nigerian (Muslim or Christian) must demand that the killers be caught, the violence halted, and the lives of ordinary citizens restored.
Supporters of the status quo will resist such demand. The uninformed will mislabel it. The truth remains, the demand is simple. Move fast. Stop the terror. Protect Nigerians. Restore dignity. If our leaders cannot hear the message or choose to misinterpret it, it is ordinary Nigerians who pay the price.
Let us not twist the words. Let us heed the substance. Our nation deserves nothing less.
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