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Nasir El Rufai, Ayodele and Nigeria blames the Igbo because the truth terrifies them
THERE is a rhythm in the Nigerian public space that never changes. Whenever the nation begins to collapse under the weight of its own failures, someone emerges from a pulpit or a podium searching for a convenient scapegoat. Today it is the rumour around Primate Ayodele. Tomorrow it is a commentator in Beijing. The day after, it is a presidential adviser performing linguistic acrobatics on television. And now, even Nasir El Rufai has joined the procession. The names shift like shadows on a cracked wall, yet the target remains unchanged. The Igbo.....TAP TO CONTINUE READING
This is not analysis. It is Nigeria’s oldest political reflex. A habit older than our democracy. A familiar escape hatch for those who cannot bear to face the truth of this country’s decay.
Before we allow this recycled blame to replace thinking, we must invite history into the room. Not the gentle, edited history that drips from politicians. The real one. The one carved in wounds.
Few peoples on this continent have walked through condensed suffering the way the Igbo did. They survived the pogroms of 1966 when thousands were butchered for the crime of existing. They survived a civil war that buried their children in hunger and grief. They survived the decree that reduced every bank account to twenty pounds, an erasure disguised as economic policy. They survived the silence of a federal government that told them to rebuild a civilisation from rubble without compensation or acknowledgment.
And rebuild they did. Not because Nigeria helped them but because they refused to kneel before despair. Markets rose again from ashes. Industries revived from dust. Towns scarred by war glowed with commerce and invention. Their resilience became so bright it unsettled those who relied on privilege instead of effort.
And there is another truth Nigeria fears to say aloud because it exposes too much. The Igbo stand among the most educated communities in the federation, rivalled only by the Yoruba in the breadth of their learning and achievement. They are also among the most enterprising and industrious populations in West Africa, shaped by a culture where apprenticeship is an institution, where innovation is instinct and where commerce is almost a second language.
Yet in one of the greatest acts of national self harm, this same population is kept far from the Wuthering Heights of Nigerian policy making. The Igbo build the markets that keep the country alive but are denied entry into the chambers where the country decides its destiny. They drive the private economy with their sweat but are locked out of the public institutions that steer the national future. It is Nigeria turning its back on the very people who refuse to let the nation collapse under its own lethargy.
This is not a wound inflicted on the Igbo. They have rebuilt themselves before from nothing but grief and dust. The wound is on Nigeria. A country cannot sideline one of its most educated and most industrious populations without crippling its own chances of rising. If Nigeria ever hopes to escape mediocrity, it is Nigeria that needs the Igbo, not the other way around. The Igbo do not need Nigeria to dream. Nigeria needs the Igbo to finally wake up.
And now, as if on cue, Nasir El Rufai has entered the arena with a fresh coat of old blame. Yesterday, he took to Twitter and published a long essay dressed in the garments of geopolitical wisdom. He invoked Iraq, Libya and Syria. He spoke of Washington’s shadows and congressional narratives. But beneath the global metaphors sits the same old strategy. Turn the nation’s failures into an Igbo conspiracy.
In his telling, Nigeria’s problem is not the mass graves in Plateau. It is not the villages swallowed in Benue. It is not the forests in Kaduna ruled by terror. It is not the kidnapping factories in Zamfara. It is not the unending funerals across the Middle Belt. The problem, he claims, is that IPOB once hired lobbyists in Washington. The problem is that Nnamdi Kanu was convicted. The problem is that American lawmakers see persecution where the Nigerian state insists on denial.
This is not insight. It is rhetorical sleight of hand. A polished deflection crafted to lead the reader away from the blood on Nigerian soil and toward the same scapegoat Nigeria has leaned on for generations.
Rather than confront the truth, he reaches for the same escape route. The Igbo did it.
This is exactly the reflex we saw from Daniel Bwala, who blamed the Igbo for the United States naming Nigeria a Country of Particular Concern. Faced with undeniable massacres, faced with reports too detailed to deny, he chose the familiar shortcut. The Igbo. And he is not alone. A northern commentator in China echoed the same logic, blaming the Igbo instead of addressing the forces that spill blood across the nation.
So how does a people with so little power suddenly become the problem of Nigeria. The accusation collapses the moment you examine the geography of power. Where are the Igbo in the command structure. Not in the office of the National Security Adviser. Not among the Chiefs of Defence Staff. Not among the Inspectors General of Police. For more than fifty years they have been the least represented major ethnic group in Nigeria’s highest security architecture. A people locked out of the control room cannot be blamed for the direction of the ship.
Where are they in the presidency since nineteen ninety nine. Every region has tasted executive power except the South East. They do not command the armed forces. They do not supervise defence spending. They do not control the ministries that direct the nation’s fate. How then can a people who hold so little in the engine room of the federation be blamed for the malfunction of the machine.
Even in the economy the accusation fails. Yes, they excel in trade. Yes, their entrepreneurs turn empty land into markets. But the national economy revolves around oil, ports, customs, foreign exchange and federal contracts. None are in Igbo hands. Their success is a triumph of effort, not privilege.
Nigeria does not lack problems. Nigeria lacks honesty. The Igbo are not the obstacle blocking the country from greatness. They are the evidence of what Nigerians can achieve when discipline replaces entitlement and when work replaces inherited arrogance. To accuse such a people of being the nation’s problem is not only dishonest. It is a confession of fear. It is the cry of a leadership terrified of its own reflection.
Blame the Igbo if you must. It will not change a single thing. Not the graves. Not the hunger. Not the fear on the highways. Blame is the opium of a dying republic. But truth is stubborn. Nigeria will rise only when it stops fearing its best minds and starts confronting its worst leaders.
Josephine Akioyamen writes from Edo State.
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BREAKING: “Some people are tormenting Nigeria with orchestrated insecurity” – Akpabio reveals
Senate President Godswill Akpabio has declared that Nigeria is grappling with what he described as “organised and orchestrated insecurity” driven by terrorism, banditry and insurgency.....TAP TO CONTINUE READING
Akpabio spoke on Thursday at the 14th national caucus meeting of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the state house conference centre in Abuja.
His words: “We are very sad that people have decided to torment Nigeria with very serious, organised and orchestrated insecurity.
“So as we grow there will be envy, there will be jealousy, and with jealousy comes hatred, and with hatred comes challenges.
“So Mr. President, ours in this caucus today is to assure you that we are not only with you, we are also praying for you, praying for you to overcome the challenges of the day, and also praying for Nigeria.”
The Senate President said the caucus aligned with states mourning lives lost to attacks by terrorists, bandits and insurgents.
He commended President Bola Tinubu for securing the release of more than 100 children kidnapped recently.
“We thank the President for the release of over 100 children who were kidnapped very recently, and we pray to God to give him the ability and the enablement to release the remaining children to rejoin their families,” Akpabio said.
He consoled families of victims and members of the armed forces killed in the line of duty.
“We condole with members of the families who have lost their loved ones, including the armed forces, who lost their lives in the course of trying to protect not just those children, but protecting lives and properties in the country,” he said.
Akpabio said Nigeria’s stability is closely linked to developments in neighbouring countries.
He praised Tinubu for intervening in the Benin Republic to stabilise democracy and urged sustained regional engagement.
Akpabio disclosed that the Senate had taken what he described as “bold decisions” to deter criminality.
He said lawmakers were pushing to classify kidnapping as terrorism, making kidnappers liable to the death penalty once the bill receives presidential assent.
The Senate President also urged governors to enforce laws on capital offences, warning that reluctance to sign execution warrants could embolden criminals.
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BREAKING NEWS: Deputy Superintendent of Police, DSP Dies in Suspected Suicide Over Alleged Arms Supply to Bandits – FULL DETAILS
A Deputy Superintendent of Police, DSP, Isah Abdullahi, also known as Kunkuri, attached to MOPOL 12 in Minna, Niger State, has died after shooting himself with a pistol in the armoury he headed.....TAP TO CONTINUE READING
The tragic incident followed allegations linking him to the supply of arms and ammunition to bandits and other criminals in the state.
The crisis began for the deceased DSP during a routine audit of MOPOL 12’s armoury by detectives from Abuja, who discovered 13 missing AK-47 rifles and over 2,000 rounds of ammunition.
It was gathered that further investigation led to the arrest of Inspector John Moses, attached to the Niger State Government House, who confessed that the late DSP supplied him with arms for delivery to bandits in Erena, Shiroro Local Government Area. Moses reportedly named his brother, an informant to the criminals, as the middleman in the deal.
Against this background, the suspects were taken to Abuja by operatives from the Office of the National Security Adviser, ONSA, for deeper investigation.
DAILY POST learnt that as probes intensified, Abdullahi was brought from Abuja to the armoury for a physical audit. It was there that he allegedly grabbed a pistol and shot himself in the head, dying instantly.
The armoury’s electronic controls, accessible only to Abdullahi, reportedly gave him the opportunity to commit the act.
Furthermore, it was gathered that officers with him were arrested for negligence and faced an Orderly Room trial, while four other police officers linked to Abdullahi are being interrogated.
Confirming the development, the Niger State Police Commissioner, Adamu Elleman, said Inspector Moses is currently under investigation by the Office of the National Security Adviser, ONSA.
According to him, “He (Abdullahi) smartly brought out a pistol and shot himself when empty ammunition boxes were discovered.”
A special ONSA team is guarding the armoury, and an autopsy is planned to determine the exact cause of death.
Also, in a statement issued by the command’s Public Relations Officer, SP Wasiu Abiodun, who confirmed the incident, it was stated that DSP Abdullahi shot himself during an investigation into his involvement in illegal ammunition dealings.
According to him, “On December 16, 2025, at about 2:30 pm, one DSP Abdullahi Isah, attached to 12 PMF Minna, who was initially arrested on 15th December for being suspected of involvement in illegal dealings of ammunition, was taken to his office for a routine arms audit.
“Unfortunately, while the audit process was ongoing, the said officer shot himself in the head through a pistol he picked up within the office and died on the spot.”
Abiodun also disclosed, “Meanwhile, the policemen who were detailed along for the audit and investigation activities were arrested for negligence in the line of duty, for allowing such a situation to occur. Further investigation is in progress at Paiko Road Police Station, Minna.”
It was further gathered that the armoury is now under 24-hour guard by an ONSA team as authorities work to unravel the full extent of the alleged scheme.
Sources also revealed that Abdullahi owned multiple properties and cars.
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Top Reason Why President Tinubu Reconstitutes NERC Board [Full List]
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the reconstitution of the Board of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), following the Senate’s confirmation of its members on December 16.....TAP TO CONTINUE READING
Naija News reports that this was disclosed in a statement on Thursday by Tinubu’s Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga.
Members of the reconstituted Board are:
• Mulisiu Olalekan Oseni, PhD. — Chairman
Dr Oseni started his service as a Commissioner in January 2017. He was subsequently appointed Vice Chairman of the Commission.
His appointment as Chairman took effect from 1 December 2025 and shall subsist until the completion of his ten-year tenure at the Commission, in accordance with the provisions of the Electricity Act, 2023.
• Yusuf Ali, PhD. — Vice Chairman
Dr Ali was first appointed as a Commissioner in February 2022. His designation as Vice Chairman took effect on 1 December 2025 and shall remain in effect until the completion of his first term.
• Mr Nathan Rogers Shatti — Commissioner
Mr Shatti is serving a second term as commissioner. He was first appointed in January 2017.
• Mr Dafe Akpeneye — Commissioner
Mr Akpeneye is serving a second term, having been first appointed as a Commissioner in January 2017.
• Aisha Mahmud Kanti Bello — Commissioner
Aisha Bello is serving her second term, having been first appointed as a Commissioner in December 2020.
• Dr Chidi Ike — Commissioner
Dr Ike is serving his first term, having been first appointed as a Commissioner in February 2022.
• Dr Fouad Animashaun — Commissioner. Dr Animashaun is serving his first term, effective December 2025.
He is an energy economist with extensive experience in the Nigerian power sector and most recently served as Executive Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer of the Lagos State Electricity Regulatory Commission.
“President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has charged the board members of NERC to deepen and consolidate the ongoing transformation of Nigeria’s power sector, in strict alignment with the letter and spirit of the Electricity Act, 2023,” the statement added.
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