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Food inflation: We weep each time we go to market, housewives lament
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Prices of food items have continued to soar in the market causing Nigerian housewives’ serious heartache.
The skyrocketing food prices in Nigeria have made many housewives and mothers ‘mathematicians’ as they constantly struggle to manage the resources available to meet family needs amid increasing prices and declining purchasing power.
“I’m always agitated anytime I remember that I have to go to the market because of the surging food prices. Things are very expensive in the market and the cost of making a pot of soup has more than tripled in the last year,” said Chidinma Kalu, a Lagos-based housewife.
Catherine Ako, a civil servant said that husbands are not passing through half of what their wives are passing through nowadays because men only give their wives money, and the women will go to the market to find out that what they have would be enough only for them to add their money to make up.
“The cost of protein is very high with meat, fish, stock fish, egg, chicken and turkey gradually going out of the reach of the poor. I spend almost 85 percent of the family feeding allowance on buying protein to cook soup, stew and other meals.
“To prepare a pot of soup for my family of eight, I have to buy meat of about N9,000, frozen fish of N10,000 and stock fish of N4,000, totalling N23,000 for protein alone. This is aside from other ingredients that are needed to make soup, which would take nothing less than N7,000. This means that every week that I make soup for my family, I spend nothing less than N30,000 but this time last year, it only cost about N10,000,” said Kalu, the mother of four.
According to her, “I always feel like crying each time am coming back from the market. I feel robbed. With a lot of money, you hardly get something to fill a nylon back. It is crazy right now in Nigeria.”
Comparing how prices have changed in the last year, Funmi Adewunmi, a nurse, said her family’s weekly feeding bill has increased from N30,000 to over N50,000.
According to the mother of two, her family of four manages to make do with N100,000 weekly expenditure on feeding alone at a time salary is not increasing.
“Since Tinubu’s administration, all we do with our salaries is to eat food without being able to do any other thing. It is now difficult for families to feed well and save money to pay other bills. We only eat food and struggle to pay children’s school fees, house rent and meet other needs,” said Adewunmi.
She said that families hardly talk about saving for investment in today’s Nigeria.
“I nearly fainted when a yam seller told me that a tuber of new yam sells for N11,000. Both old and new yam are no longer reachable to the poor. Beans and maize are also expensive, meaning that there is no more ‘poor man food’ in Nigeria because every food item is expensive,” said Efe Esosa, a Benin-based fashion designer.
She said she bought 5kg of Semovita for almost N9,000 last week and that ate into the money that she was supposed to cook soup and stew for the weekend.
The fashion designer said that the only saving grace for her family in recent times is the cooperative society where she belongs where a group of women come together to make weekly contributions.
“I contribute N5,000 every week and when is my turn to take home, I use the bulk money to stock the house. It is a bit cheaper to buy food items and even protein in bulk. This is why the rich are the ones who are buying food cheaper compared to the poor.
“The beauty of bulk buying is that it not only makes it cheaper to buy food but also takes some measure of stress off one’s shoulder. Food is expensive in Nigeria but buying it in a bit even worsens it,” Esosa said.
Franklin Godspower, a transporter told BusinessDay Sunday that he always feels for his wife who complains every time she goes to the market to buy food items for the house.
“I commend my wife because I don’t know how she manages the little money that I give her as a weekly feeding allowance. I didn’t know that things had gone this bad until last week when my wife was not feeling too well and I decided to help her buy ingredients for stew only to realise that N15,000 was not able to buy tomatoes, pepper, rice and chicken for stew. Since then, I gave kudos to Nigerian housewives,” said Godspower.
BusinessDay Sunday discovered that part of the reason why food prices are surging is the fact that middlemen and off-takers buy agricultural produce from farmers and hoard them to sell at expensive prices.
According to a dealer, who does not want his name in the print, off-takers go to farmers and buy agricultural produce in lands, when the farmers have not harvested.
The dealer said that middlemen in the supply chain contribute a great deal to the price surge. He cited an example with a basket of tomatoes that sold for as much as N140,000 in Lagos recently when off-takers were buying for as low as N40,000 or N50,000 in places like Jos, Plateau State.
He also claimed that insecurity in the northern parts of the country is also adding to a high of cost food items in Nigeria.
“Many farmers are no longer going to their farms due to insecurity and few farmers who are still going to the farm are forced to pay tolls to bandits to access their farms without any interference,” the dealer said.
He said that the high cost of logistics also plays a critical role in driving food costs to the extreme, especially with the removal of petroleum and forex subsidies by Tinubu’s administration.
Credit: BusinessDay
News
LP Approves Dr Chibuzo Okereke As 2027 Presidential Candidate
By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
The Labour Party(LP) has formally presented Dr. Chibuzo Okereke as its presidential candidate for the 2027 general election, following what the party described as a broad-based consensus among its members and stakeholders.
The announcement was made in Abuja on Friday, May 30, 2026, with party leaders expressing confidence in Okereke’s capacity to provide the visionary leadership needed to address Nigeria’s governance and development challenges.
National Publicity Secretary of the party, Ken Eluma Asogwa in a statement indicated that Dr. Okereke is a renowned governance expert, policy strategist, and reform advocate whose contributions to public policy, legislative governance, and institutional development have earned him national recognition.
He currently serves as President of ERGAF-AFRICA Legislative Governance Innovation and Policy Hub, a leading policy and legislative research institution. He is also a legislative consultant to key committees and ranking members of the National Assembly, where he provides expert guidance on governance and public policy matters.
In addition, Dr. Okereke is a Resident Lecturer in the Department of Public Policy and Administration at Miva Open University, Abuja, where he is involved in training future public sector leaders and policy professionals.
A distinguished scholar, Okereke holds a PhD in Legislative Governance Studies, as well as Master’s degrees in Public Administration and Legislative Studies, both obtained with distinction
His expertise in governance, accountability, and national development has made him a respected voice on major national and international media platforms.
Beyond academia and policy advocacy, the Labour Party noted that Dr. Okereke has demonstrated a strong commitment to youth empowerment, educational advancement, and democratic reforms.
The party described him as a leader whose intellectual capacity, integrity, and dedication to public service align with its vision for a more accountable, competent, and prosperous Nigeria.
The party expressed optimism that his candidacy would inspire Nigerians seeking transformational leadership ahead of the 2027 presidential election.
News
Nigerian Catholic priest convicted of sexual assault in US
A Texas jury has convicted former Roman Catholic priest Anthony Odiong of sexually assaulting women to whom he provided spiritual direction, concluding a closely watched case involving allegations that he abused his position as a clergyman to pursue sexual relationships with vulnerable parishioners.
The jury, comprising eight women and four men, found Odiong, 57, guilty of one count of first-degree sexual assault and two counts of second-degree sexual assault involving two women who testified during the trial in Waco.
Odiong, who pleaded not guilty, now faces a possible life sentence on the first-degree charge. Sentencing proceedings are scheduled to begin Monday before the same jury. The second-degree convictions each carry potential prison terms ranging from two to 20 years, The Guardian reports.
Jurors deliberated for about two hours before returning their verdict.
The case initially included allegations involving a third woman, but prosecutors Ryan Calvert and Liz Buice dropped that portion of the case after the complainant, described as being in an “extremely emotionally fragile” state, did not appear in court to testify. Prosecutors said they chose not to compel her appearance, citing her “extremely tenuous” emotional condition.
According to courtroom accounts, Odiong showed little visible reaction as Judge Thomas West read the verdict. He reportedly looked straight ahead during the proceedings before lowering his head as deputies escorted him from the courtroom.
The prosecution stemmed from allegations first brought to public attention in February 2024 by a group of women who accused Odiong of sexual coercion, unwanted touching and abusive financial control while serving as a Catholic priest in Texas and later in Louisiana.
One of the complainants, identified by the pseudonym Mary Doe, later presented a copy of a media report detailing the allegations to Waco police and accused Odiong of assaulting her over three years beginning in 2008.
Investigators subsequently identified a second complainant, known as Jane Doe, who also alleged abuse during the same period while Odiong served in the Waco area. Authorities said additional reports from other women helped establish probable cause for his arrest and prosecution despite the age of the allegations.
During the trial, Mary Doe testified that Odiong initiated a long-term sexual relationship with her while acting as her spiritual adviser as she navigated a difficult divorce and cared for seven children. She and one of her sons told jurors that the child once discovered them having sexual intercourse in her bedroom following a family gathering.
Jane Doe testified that she sought spiritual guidance from Odiong while trapped in an abusive marriage. She alleged that he pressured her to permit sexual acts with her husband that she found painful and then required her to discuss the encounters with him. Prosecutors argued that such conduct constituted sexual assault under Texas law even though Odiong was not directly involved in the sexual activity.
Both women said they met Odiong while he served at St Peter Catholic Center in Waco, a church frequented by students and employees of Baylor University. Their former husbands were Baylor employees, placing them within Odiong’s pastoral reach.
Jurors also heard evidence that DNA testing established Odiong had fathered a child in 2023 with a woman identified as Presley Jones, whom he had counselled spiritually while serving as pastor of St Anthony of Padua Church in Luling, Louisiana.
Although Odiong was not charged in connection with Jones because Louisiana lacks a law similar to Texas’ clergy sexual assault statute, prosecutors argued that the child demonstrated a pattern of sexual relationships with women he met through his ministerial work.
Expert witnesses told the court that clergy members bear responsibility for maintaining professional and spiritual boundaries with those under their care. Jurors also heard testimony regarding the Catholic Church’s requirement that priests remain celibate.
The defence called only one witness, a former parishioner, who testified about Odiong’s character and recalled attending a 2011 gathering at Mary Doe’s home. Under cross-examination, however, the witness acknowledged that Odiong’s conduct fell short of expectations for a religious leader.
Odiong, a naturalised United States citizen, was ordained a Catholic priest in 1993 in his native Nigeria. He was transferred to the Austin Diocese region, which includes Waco, in 2006 under then-Bishop Gregory Aymond.
After studying in Rome, Odiong moved to Luling in 2015, by which time Aymond had become Archbishop of New Orleans.
Church officials in Austin later said they suspended Odiong from ministry in 2019 over allegations involving multiple women. The suspension was not publicly announced at the time, though officials said New Orleans church leaders were informed. Archbishop Aymond did not publicly disclose a similar suspension in New Orleans until late 2023.
News
‘So much injustice going on in Nigeria’ – British rapper Skepta
British-Nigerian rapper, Joseph Adenuga, popularly known as Skepta, has expressed deep concern over the worsening injustice in his Nigeria.
Speaking in a video broadcast, the ‘Bad Energy Stay Far Away’ crooner appealed to celebrities and the international community to assist Nigerians in drawing the global attention to the injustices in Nigeria.
He explained that Nigerians are resilient but have been suffering injustice for long.
“There is so much injustice in Nigeria. And whenever I can whether it is at my shows, verbally or images, whatever I can do, we are going to speak up for injustice at all time.
“Nigerians need help. We need people to speak up for us as well. We need to protect Nigerians. There is so much injustice in Nigeria.
“This is my message to the people; please, I know that we [Nigerians] are resilient and we make everything look good, but we need help, too. Please, help us,” he appealed.
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