society
Zamfara Bye-Elections: Blame Gov Lawal’s Poor Performance for Your Loss– APC Youth Congress to PDP
*Zamfara Bye-Elections: Blame Gov Lawal’s Poor Performance for Your Loss– APC Youth Congress to PDP
The APC Youth Congress has issued a scathing rebuke of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Governor Dauda Lawal, attributing the party’s crushing defeat in the recent Kaura-Namoda South State Constituency bye-election to Lawal’s abysmal performance in office.
The group dismissed the PDP’s claims of electoral irregularities and misuse of armed forces as baseless excuses meant to deflect from the governor’s failure to deliver on his campaign promises.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) declared Kamilu Sa’idu of the All Progressives Congress (APC) the winner of the bye-election, securing 8,182 votes against PDP candidate Muhammad Lawal Kurya’s 5,544.
The election, conducted in Sakajiki and Kyambarawa polling units, followed an inconclusive by-election due to a narrow vote margin.
In a statement, Comrade Gambo Danladi, spokesperson for the APC Youth Congress, described the PDP’s loss as a “referendum on Lawal’s incompetence.”
He accused the governor of failing to deliver on promises of development, security, and progress nearly three years into his tenure.
Danladi lambasted Lawal’s administration for plunging Zamfara into deeper insecurity and economic stagnation.
“The PDP’s loss is not the fault of the APC or the electoral system—it is the direct consequence of Lawal’s incompetence, broken promises, and betrayal of public trust,” Danladi said.
“Governor Dauda Lawal’s leadership has been nothing short of a disaster. His promises of rapid development, improved security, and economic revival have evaporated into thin air, leaving Zamfara grappling with rampant banditry, crumbling infrastructure, and widespread disillusionment.
“The electorate’s rejection of the PDP in this bye-election is a referendum on Lawal’s failure to address the state’s pressing challenges.
“His administration’s inability to deliver basic services or inspire confidence has eroded any goodwill he once enjoyed, exposing him as a leader utterly out of touch with the needs of his people. Zamfara deserves better than a governor who thrives on empty rhetoric and failed policies.
“The PDP’s claim of dominance in Zamfara is a myth. Their 2023 governorship win was built on falsehoods peddled by Dauda Lawal, who has failed to deliver even a fraction of what he promised.
“The people of Zamfara have seen through his lies and rejected him at the polls.”
The APC Youth Congress highlighted the bye-election results as evidence of the electorate’s frustration, noting that the PDP secured only six wards, marking a historic low for Lawal as the first Zamfara governor to lose a bye-election.
The statement also condemned Lawal’s alleged use of state-backed Zamfara Vigilante operatives to intimidate voters, defying federal warnings.
“These desperate tactics to manipulate the process were resoundingly rejected by the people, who delivered a decisive mandate to the APC,” Danladi said.
The APC Youth Congress called on Lawal to take responsibility for his administration’s failures and urged the PDP to stop making excuses.
“The people of Zamfara demand progress, not propaganda,” Danladi declared. “This victory belongs to the electorate, who have shown they will no longer tolerate Lawal’s ineptitude or the PDP’s politics of deception.”
The APC group congratulated Kamilu Sa’idu on his victory and reaffirmed its commitment to restoring hope and progress to Zamfara.
society
OJ International Edifice Hotel and Restaurants Opens in Grand Style
OJ International Edifice Hotel and Restaurants Opens in Grand Style
…affordable suites with sophisticated facilities
~By Oluwaseun Fabiyi
OJ International Edifice Hotel and Restaurants has officially opened its doors in a glamorous ceremony at Molasin Road, Onse, Atan-Ota, Ogun State, heralding a new era of excellence in hospitality and hotel management within Sango-Ota and beyond.
The Visionary Behind the Brand
The project is the brainchild of Alhaji Goriola Jaji, popularly known as Gory J, founder and CEO of Al Gory J Entertainment. A dynamic entrepreneur and trailblazer, Gory J brings his resourcefulness and forward-thinking approach into redefining hospitality standards in Nigeria.
Redefining Hospitality in Ogun State
OJ International Hotel and Restaurants promises more than just lodging—it offers a premium experience where affordability meets sophistication. With an edifice that reflects trust, refinement, and world-class service, the hotel is strategically positioned to set new benchmarks in hospitality not only in Ogun State but across Nigeria.
Guests can expect:
Affordable yet luxurious suites tailored for business travelers, tourists, and corporate executives.
Maximum security and comfort.
Excellent customer service driven by professionalism and integrity.
From business-class suites to premium lodging for foreigners and corporate clients, the hotel ensures every guest finds their ideal stay.
World-Class Facilities & Entertainment
All rooms are fully air-conditioned and equipped with modern amenities including plasma TVs, intercoms, and high-speed internet. Beyond lodging, OJ International Edifice enhances guests’ experiences with:
A fully equipped conference hall.
24-hour uninterrupted power supply.
Live performances from top Nigerian musicians to keep guests entertained.
Spacious, secure parking and high-standard interior décor.
Whether for short-term or long-term stays, the hotel guarantees luxury, comfort, and security.
Core Vision & Mission
Vision: To emerge as the leading hotel in Atan Ado-Odo Ota and set new standards for hospitality and hotel management.
Mission: To deliver innovative, customer-focused services that enhance excellence in hotel management while creating lasting value.
A Solemn Promise
At OJ International Edifice Hotel and Restaurants, excellence is a standard. Guests are assured of expert guidance, consistent service quality, and a legacy of hospitality that blends professionalism with a personal touch.
Special Launch Promotion
To celebrate its grand opening, the hotel is offering a special promotion: book a five-day stay and enjoy two complimentary days free.
For reservations, visit OJ International Hotel and Restaurants, Molasin Road, Onse, Atan-Ota, Ogun State, Nigeria.
Oluwaseun Fabiyi serves as the official media consultant and publicist for OJ International Edifice Hotel and Restaurants.
society
The Power Behind Every Success and Failure: Cause and Effect
The Power Behind Every Success and Failure: Cause and Effect.
By George Omagbemi Sylvester — published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com
Cause and effect is not a soft, spiritual hunch. It is the hard backbone of reality. From the motion of galaxies to the choices we make at breakfast, actions precipitate consequences. That chain (sometimes linear, sometimes tangled) governs physical phenomena and human experience alike. To understand it is to gain leverage over the world; to ignore it is to surrender to confusion, superstition and avoidable failure.
The Physics: Where Causality Wears a Lab Coat. In physics, causality is the basic expectation that effects follow causes in an orderly sequence. Newton’s mechanics capture this clearly. His third law (“for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction”) does not merely describe colliding billiard balls; it codifies the reciprocity of interactions. Push the world and it pushes back with measurable, predictable force. That symmetry undergirds engineering, aerospace and even the feel of the ground beneath your feet.
Thermodynamics adds a crucial texture: direction. The second law tells us entropy tends to increase in a closed system. In plainer language, heat flows from hot to cold; eggs scramble but do not un-scramble by themselves. This “ARROW of TIME” is the macroscopic fingerprint of CAUSE-AND-EFFECT: we can distinguish past from future because the causal chain drives systems toward more dispersed, less ordered states unless we invest energy to reverse local disorder. Every refrigerator, air-conditioner and vaccine cold chain is a deliberate intervention against entropy’s drift.
Quantum mechanics complicates (but does not erase) this picture. At microscopic scales, we exchange deterministic prediction for probabilistic causation. We cannot predict exactly when a radioactive atom will decay, but the statistical laws are astonishingly precise. Even here, causes constrain effects, just with probability distributions instead of certainty. Einstein bristled at this fuzziness (“God does not play dice with the universe,” he famously remarked) but experiment after experiment confirms that probabilistic rules are still rules. The dice are loaded by the laws of nature.
The Philosophy: Making Sense of the Chain. Philosophers have wrestled with causation for centuries because it underwrites explanation itself. Aristotle mapped “FOUR CAUSES” material (what something is made of), formal (its form or pattern), efficient (the immediate trigger) and final (its purpose). Modern science largely trades in efficient causes: this force produced that acceleration; this pathogen triggered that fever.
David Hume, the great skeptic, warned that we never see causation directly; we see constant conjunctions and infer that one event makes another follow. “All events seem entirely loose and separate,” he wrote, insisting that necessity is a mental overlay on repeated patterns. Hume’s challenge matters because it humbles us: causal belief must be earned by evidence, not asserted by habit.
Bertrand Russell went further, provocatively declaring that “the law of causality is a relic of a bygone age.” What he meant (often misread) was not that causes do not exist, but that simplistic, single-line causal talk can fail in modern physics. That is a warning label against lazy thinking, not a license to deny causal structure. The right response is not abandonment, but refinement.
That refinement is exactly what contemporary researchers have delivered. Computer scientist Judea Pearl and colleagues formalized causal reasoning with graphical models and counterfactuals, giving us tools to move beyond mere correlation. Their message is simple and devastating to sloppy analysis: if you cannot say what would have happened if not for a given action, you do not understand the cause.
The Human Domain: Decisions, Systems and Consequences. If physics supplies CAUSE-AND-EFFECT with equations, everyday life supplies it with stakes. Actions and policies generate ripples; intended and unintended. In personal finance, spend more than you earn and debt compounds; invest regularly and returns compound. In public health, vaccination rates cause measurable shifts in disease prevalence. In education, hours of deliberate practice, quality of instruction and mentorship produce predictable distributions of skill.
Real life also features feedback loops, delays and hidden variables that make causality look messy. Consider traffic congestion: adding road capacity can initially relieve delays (short-term effect) but later induce more driving (long-term effect), landing us back in gridlock. Or economic policy: slash interest rates and you stimulate borrowing and growth; leave them low for too long and you may sow asset bubbles. Causes often arrive bundled and effects unfold on multiple clocks.
This is where causal thinking earns its keep. It forces us to ask:
What is the mechanism?
What time scale am I measuring?
What counterfactual am I comparing against?
What confounders might be fooling me?
“CORRELATION is not CAUSATION” is more than a slogan; it is a public-safety announcement for the mind. Ice cream sales rise with drownings, but neither causes the other; warm weather causes both. Without causal discipline, we will fall for mirages; superstitions in folk clothing or statistics in academic clothing.
Freedom, Responsibility, and the Myth of Inevitability. A common misreading of causality is fatalism: if everything has a cause, then nothing could be otherwise. Stephen Hawking skewered this posture with dry wit: people who say everything is predetermined still look before crossing the road. We behave as though our choices matter because they do. Causality does not erase agency; it explains it. Our brains are pattern-learning engines, exquisitely tuned to forecast consequences and choose actions accordingly. Habits are causal devices we install in ourselves.
At scale, the same logic governs institutions. Accountability is applied causality: trace an outcome back through decisions, incentives and failures, then re-engineer the system. Good governance is not about rhetoric; it is about pinpointing levers that predictably change results. Bad governance blurs causes with excuses and swaps evidence for slogans.
Evidence, Not Incantation: How to Think Causally. To move from slogans to substance, adopt the scientist’s discipline:
Define the intervention. What exactly is the action whose effect you care about? Vagueness kills causal inference.
Specify the counterfactual. Compared to what? Yesterday? A different policy? No intervention at all?
Measure on the right timeline. Short-run effects can conflict with long-run effects; report both.
Control confounders. If you can’t randomize, adjust intelligently: match groups, use instrumental variables or analyze natural experiments.
Seek mechanisms. Numbers persuade, mechanisms explain. How does A produce B?
Replicate. One study is a hint; converging evidence is a case.
These are not just academic niceties. They are the difference between policies that save lives and policies that waste money; between businesses that grow and businesses that guess.
The Moral of the Chain: Power With Responsibility. Causality confers power. If we can map the levers that move outcomes, we can design better cities, craft smarter regulations and build more resilient businesses. Power without humility invites catastrophe. Complex systems bite back. Interventions in healthcare, energy or education must be piloted, monitored and corrected. The goal is not perfect prediction, that belongs to Laplace’s mythical demon, an intelligence that knows every particle’s position and could thereby foresee the entire future. The goal is useful prediction: ENOUGH UNDERSTANDING to tilt probabilities in our favor.
We do this every day. Seat belts reduce fatalities. Smoking cessation lowers cancer risk. Early childhood education improves lifetime outcomes. These are not miracles; they are examples of measured causes yielding reliable effects. Progress is the patient accumulation of such levers.
Quotable Anchors for the Mind. A few concise lines, properly used, sharpen our causal instincts:
Isaac Newton: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. That’s reciprocity made law.
Albert Einstein: “God does not play dice with the universe.” A dissent that keeps us honest about the limits of randomness.
David Hume: We infer necessary connection from repeated patterns; we must not mistake habit for proof.
Stephen Hawking: Even those who preach predestination look before crossing the street, agency lives within causality.
Judea Pearl (paraphrased): Without counterfactuals and models, we cannot speak meaningfully about causes.
Bertrand Russell: Beware simplistic causal talk; modern science demands precision.
Each quote, trimmed to its essence, points the same way: understand the chain or be dragged by it.
Closing Argument: Master the Chain, Don’t Be Chained by It. The law of cause and effect is the world’s operating system. It is not a metaphysical garnish but the main course. Physics gives it equations; philosophy gives it clarity; data science gives it tools; and everyday life gives it consequences. When we act with causal literacy (naming mechanisms, testing interventions, measuring timeliness) we become responsible authors of our outcomes.
Leave nothing to luck that you can assign to law. Name your levers. Test your assumptions. Demand the counterfactual. Then PULL, MEASURE and ADJUST. That is how rockets reach orbit, hospitals cut mortality, startups escape gravity and citizens bend history toward justice. The chain is unbreakable; but in your hands, it is also steerable.
news
NNPP Chieftain Olufemi Ajadi writes a letter to President Trump over the stringent US visa rules for Nigerians
NNPP Chieftain Olufemi Ajadi writes a letter to President Trump over the stringent US visa rules for Nigerians
Ambassador Ajadi and Donald Trump – By Our Correspondent
A chieftain of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP), Ambassador Olufemi Ajadi Oguntoyinbo, has written an open letter to former United States President Donald J. Trump, advising to him to remove the stringent visa restrictions currently affecting Nigerians who wish to travel to the US.
In the strongly worded letter made available to journalists on Tuesday, Ajadi noted that Nigerians have long enjoyed cordial relations with the United States, and that the imposition of harsh visa rules undermines people-to-people ties, business collaborations, and educational opportunities.
According to him, many law-abiding Nigerians are unfairly denied access to the US due to policies that stereotype the country’s citizens, despite Nigeria’s significant contributions to global development and the large Nigerian diaspora community in America.
“Mr. President, Nigeria is a nation of hardworking and resourceful people,” Ajadi wrote. “Our citizens contribute positively to the US economy, academia, technology, medicine, and culture. It is therefore unfair to subject them to unnecessary bottlenecks and humiliating visa processes. I respectfully urge you to consider a review of these rules in the spirit of fairness, justice, and mutual respect.”
Ajadi, who is also a businessman and social activist, emphasized that easing visa restrictions would not only strengthen diplomatic ties but also create opportunities for trade, cultural exchange, and bilateral cooperation.
He called for fairer treatment of Nigerian travelers, while assuring that the government and people of Nigeria remain committed to international peace and collaboration.
READ ALSO: State Clear Reasons for U.S. Visa Denial -Ajadi’s Legal Team Demands CCTV, Audio Tape Review, Document Re-Examination
He further argued that many young Nigerians look up to the US as a destination for higher education and innovation, stressing that rigid visa hurdles discourage intellectual growth and international partnerships.
Ajadi concluded his letter by expressing optimism that President Trump, known for his bold decisions, would give fair consideration to the plight of millions of Nigerians who seek legitimate entry into the United States for studies, tourism, business, and family reunification.
The NNPP chieftain’s appeal adds to growing voices from civil society, political leaders, and the Nigerian diaspora calling for a review of immigration policies that affect the movement of Nigerians to the United States.
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