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Zamfara Receives Over 1trn From FG In Two Years – Matawalle

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Zamfara Receives Over 1trn From FG In Two Years – Matawalle

‎…Assures End of Banditry Soon

‎Former Zamfara State Governor and Minister of State for Defence, Bello Mohammed Matawalle, has said the state under Governor Dauda Lawal’s administration has collected over one trillion naira, ranging from monthly statutory allocations and bailouts meant for the development of the state and the fight for poverty and hunger.

‎Matawalle made this disclosure on Friday at the state headquarters of the APC in Gusau, Zamfara State capital, while addressing thousands of party supporters and his well-wishers during his three-day visit to the state.

‎The Minister further challenged that, whatever good people of Zamfara saw short of their expectations in the aspect of delivery of dividends of democracy, should make enquiries from the present Governor Dauda-led government, as the Tinubu’s administration has been doing everything possible to ensure the state government is receiving enough funds to make their life better.

‎He lamented that there is not a single local government area out of the other thirteen local government areas of the state, apart from Gusau, the state capital, that benefits a ten billion naira worth project within the two years of the PDP-led government in the state.

‎“Renovations and completion of inherited projects could not in any way justify the spending of over one trillion naira collected from the federal coffers, which was virtually meant for uplifting the state’s economy and change of poor citizens miserable lives to better ones under this era of hardship and insecurity.

‎“Let me at this junction, let you know that, as Minister of State for Defense and son of the soil of Zamfara State, I have done all my best to work with Governor Dauda Lawal against the insecurity bedeviled our dear state, but he refused, only that spent his times working to convince President Tinubu to sack me as Minister of Defense”.

‎Matawalle informed the gathering of the federal government’s fresh efforts to ensure the end of insecurity in Zamfara and beyond, “As I am speaking to you now, the Defence Headquarters has already deployed fresh troops alongside fighting aircraft to finally crush bandits and other criminal elements.

‎“The gallant troops have just launched formidable attacks on bandits’ hideouts and are already gaining ground. Let me also tell you that, immediately after this gathering, I will visit the troops and consolidate the Presidential order on them, that no single bandit must escape this time around”, Matawalle has stressed.

Sahara weekly online is published by First Sahara weekly international. contact [email protected]

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Ogun Rector appreciates and congratulates Gov.Dapo Abiodun

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Ogun Rector appreciates and congratulates Gov.Dapo Abiodun

 

The pioneer Rector of Ogun state Polytechnic of Health and Allied sciences,Dr.Rasak Akinbo congratulates Gov.Dapo Abiodun for the completion and commissioning of Akute-Ajuwon-Alagbole road today in Ifo local govt area of the state
The Rector who is from iperu-remo but resides in akute ajuwon area congratulated the governor for keeping to his promise when he came to the area years back
He said the Governor is a ‘promise keeper’ who has been transforming Ogun state
He said the road has been neglected by previous administrations despite the fact that Ifo local govt is one of the most populated local govt in the state
The Governor promised to do more as the people of the local govt have always believed in him…he concluded

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OSMD NETWORK BOOSTS FOOTBALL IN OYO

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OSMD NETWORK BOOSTS FOOTBALL IN OYO

12th November 2025

OSMD Network – (Oyo Si Ma Dun) – an Ibadan based not for profit organization dedicated to youth empowerment has announced the commencement of the OSMD Unity Cup Football Tournament which will take place between 15th November and 13th December 2025.

The tournament which is designed to foster unity, youth engagement, and grassroots sports development across Oyo State will feature football teams representing each of the 33 Local Government Areas of Oyo State within the 8 geo-political zones (Ibadan 1, 2 and 3, Oke Ogun 1 and 2, Oyo, Ibarapa and Ogbomoso).

Following the draws which took place on Monday at the Indoor Sports Hall of the Lekan Salami Stadium Adamasingba Ibadan on Monday, the tournament will officially kick off on Saturday, November 15, across all match centres in the state.

According to a press statement in Ibadan on Wednesday Babajide Olagunju the OSMD Cup spokesperson emphasized that the OSMD Unity Cup is not just about football, but about creating opportunities

“This is one of the many initiatives of OSMD to engage and empower youths with a view to talent discovery and football development in a football loving state. We are poised to showcase the football talents abound in Oyo State in a competition that will promote peace, unity and community bonding at the grassroots level”

“A tournament of this nature is a celebration of our shared heritage and a platform to discover and empower young talents across Oyo State. We believe sports, especially football remains one of the strongest unifying forces in our society. Through the one month long tournament to be played on a knockout basis on Saturdays and Sundays we will be redefining youth engagement and grassroots football”

The ceremonial kickoff of the tournament will take place at the Olubadan Stadium, Ibadan; by 4:00pm this Saturday while the finals will be played on Saturday 13th December 2025 with awards for Most Valuable Player, Golden Boots Golden Gloves, Best Coach and Fair Play Team

Managed by The Tall and Wide Company Limited with Kayog Sports International and Oyo State Football Association (OYO FA) serving as technical partners to ensure top class coordination and adherence to professional football standards, residents especially football lovers across of Oyo State are encouraged to follow the OSMD Unity Cup matches and support the teams representing their Local Government Areas in the battle for glory in what promises to be one of the most exciting grassroots football events of the year.

OSMD NETWORK BOOSTS FOOTBALL IN OYO
e-signed

OSMD CUP MEDIA TEAM

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NDUME’S TRUTH, ASO ROCK’S SILENCE

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NDUME’S TRUTH, ASO ROCK’S SILENCE.

George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com

 

“When Silence Becomes Complicity: Senator Ndume Exposes Corruption and Incompetence at the Heart of Aso Rock”

Two days ago, a veteran senator, Ali Ndume, tore off the veneer of polite politics on national television and laid bare what many Nigerians already know; yet fear to say. Speaking on Arise TV, Ndume accused the Bola Ahmed Tinubu‑led administration of corruption so brazen that even the hallowed walls of the Aso Rock Presidential Villa remain silent. By now, the silence from the presidency isn’t simply deafening, it has become a sign of tacit complicity.

Senator Ndume did not mince words. He asserted that the Tinubu regime is dominated by “KAKISTOCRATS” (meaning those least qualified to hold office) and “KLEPTOCRATS” (meaning thieves masquerading as leaders). These are not rhetorical barbs but issues of survival: “The people who are supposed to help him are the ones deceiving him or damaging his image,” he warned.

More damning still, Ndume says that even accessing the President is blocked by a crude question: “owo da?” (“Where is money?”) — in other words, “What payoff are you bringing?” He says this is the experience of everyone wanting a meeting with the presidency. Pending no refutation from Aso Rock, the claim stands.

The presidency’s silence is no accident. It is calculated. Because if the Presidency were to respond with rebuttal or justification, then the matter would enter the arena of accountability. Silence, by contrast, suggests one of two things: either the presidency lacks confidence in its own position, or it actually agrees (just without saying so). In either scenario, Nigerians lose.

The Reality of Governance Under Tinubu. Let us take stock. This is a regime in which:

A minister removed for corruption walks free; supporters call for her recall rather than prosecution.

A minister is observed driving a Rolls‑Royce, replies “and so?” when asked; yet claims to have never worked his entire life.

Land allocation receipts fly left, right, front and centre to children, cronies, family members. The minister defends them.

Million‑dollar houses in the United States tied to sitting ministers? Allegations exist. And on the Nigerian side, the presidency and the anti‑graft agencies like Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) act like ostriches: see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.

Meanwhile, the citizenry struggles under groaning economic hardship, soaring inflation, a faltering currency, indefinite power outages, insecurity unchecked and the sense that state resources vanish into private pockets.

These are not fanciful stories. The facts, in many cases, are public. One study by Chatham House shows that Nigeria still ranks among the top 40 most corrupt countries globally and counts among the lowest performing in governance indices.

As one scholar put it: “The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership.” That failure becomes grotesque when state institutions meant to enforce transparency are rendered toothless by the very regime they are supposed to police. Prof. John Oyedepo of the University of Lagos notes: “Governance without accountability is not governance; it is legalized robbery.”

Why Ndume’s Accusations Matter. Why do these allegations from a senator of the ruling party matter? Because it signals that the rot is not external but internal. When a loyalist stands up, when a Senate leader turns whistle‑blower, the crisis is deeper than opposition bravado, it is a systemic collapse.

Ndume’s charge that the government is run by “KAKISTOCRATS and KLEPTOCRATS” is not mere hyperbole. He defined the two: kakistocrats are “people holding positions they are not supposed to be in”; kleptocrats are “those in politics for personal gain, not public service.”

And he explained the damage in sharp terms: “The President cannot go out to the streets like I do and know how the people feel. Even outside the Villa they drive him in tinted glass so he doesn’t even see what is going on.”

This is governance by isolation, cushioned by privilege, and cushioned further by silence. When insiders begin to speak, one might hope for correction. But the silence from Aso Rock has been total. It is not just negligence; it is abdication of moral leadership.

The Silent President, The Loud Reality. The contrast is stark: the presidency enjoys pomp, ceremony, tinted limousines, and global photo‑ops — yet at home, the people suffer. The gap between public image and private record has never been greater.

Government supporters rush to defend with excuses. The All Progressives Congress (APC) Youth Network responded to Ndume’s previous comments by calling them “misleading”, “reckless”, and “unbecoming of a ranking legislator.” But defence does not equate to performance. And signals of crisis remain.

Anti‑graft agencies boast of recoveries; the EFCC claimed it recovered nearly half a billion dollars in one year, according to SaharaWeeklyNG.com. But even that pales when stripped against the scale of the problem. Recoveries are reactive; prevention would require structural reform; which remains absent. Dr. Akin Oyebode, a governance analyst, adds: “The issue is not just theft, it is normalization of theft in governance. That is the real danger.”

A Call to Recognition, Not Defeatism. Let us be clear: pointing out corruption, incompetence, and patronage is not defeatism; it is news, it is accountability, it is citizenship.

As Dr Ngozi Okonjo‑Iweala remarked years ago: “People have lost faith. They don’t believe anyone can serve their country”. When those within the regime echo that sentiment, the rupture between the people and the powerful becomes undeniable.

We must demand of the presidency: respond. We must demand of the anti‑graft agencies: act. We must demand that governance be more than display, more than cameras, more than slogans of fiscal reform, it must translate into integrity, transparency, responsibility, service.

The silence of Aso Rock is a vacuum. Into that vacuum seep cronyism, entitlement and theft. It is not enough for the president to say, “Be patient.” Patience has limits when citizens watch national coffers bleed and personal fortunes blossom. Prof. Chukwuemeka Eze notes, “Corruption thrives in silence. Confronting it requires courage, even from those within the system.”

The Take Away and The Road Forward. Senator Ndume’s words ring with conviction because they reflect lived experience and structural breakdown. The pharmaceutical term for this: when help is expected from institutions, but the institutions themselves have become carriers of the disease.

The presidency’s failure (or refusal) to respond is neither trivial nor temporary. It reveals dysfunction at the core of state leadership. The crisis is not only that some individuals are corrupt; the crisis is that the system accommodates them, protects them, remains inert.

This moment will not be measured by the allegations alone. It will be measured by response; by whether the presidency and its proxies choose silence and shield, or accountability and reform. The people of Nigeria deserve an administration that listens, not one that ignores; one that sees, not one that is driven past in tinted glass. They deserve leaders of competence and character; not the least suitable or the most brazen thieves cloaked in power.

Senator Ndume spoke. The question now is: who will answer?

NDUME’S TRUTH, ASO ROCK’S SILENCE.
George Omagbemi Sylvester | Published by SaharaWeeklyNG.com

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