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Adesina is Right, The Presidency is Wrong!
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By Smolette Shittu-Alamu
Dr, Akinwumi Ayodeji Adesina is a PhD holder in Agricultural Economics. He has very intimidating credentials as a globally respected technocrat and scholar. Since the year 2015 he has been the President of the Africa Development Bank (AFDB) the monetary institution based in Abidjan, Cote D’ivoire.
He was re-elected for the same post in 2020 and would complete his second and final term as president AFDB this September. This very respected former Nigerian Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development did serve as a professional technocrat in government and in politics under the Goodluck Ebele Johnathan’s presidency from 2011 to 2015. It was from that post that he went on to serve as president of the Africa Development Bank (AfDB).
Before reaching the global renown and heights he has attained in life as well as the commanding level he has reached today in the global world, the then young little boy had known life as the son of a poor farmer. Therefore he has known the pains of not to have in life. Although he is from Ogun State, he was born and raised in Ibadan like a typical peasant farmer’s child .
Young Akinwumi attended not a high sounding school names such as Kings College nor Igbobi College; not CMS Grammar School nor St Gregory’s, but the modest Baptist High School in Ejigbo the present day Osun State. At the then University of Ife where he later on studied Agricultural Economics, he was too brilliant and too diligent a lad not to have grabbed the First Class Honours result. Oh yes he did get that.
Thus Adesina became the first ever student in the history of Unife now Obafemi Awolowo University to be awarded first class in Agricultural Economics in 1981. From Purdue University in the United States of America, Akinwumi Ayodeji Adesina bagged the MSc degree in 1985, and the PhD in 1988. His thesis won the Outstanding PhD Thesis Award in 1988.
That same year Akinwumi Adesina won the Rockefeller Foundation’s Social Sciences Fellowship. This award was what launched him into international career as an Africa and Development Expert.
Before becoming a federal minister in Nigeria he had always shown himself to be a firm believer in private sector-led growth for nations especially in the developing world.
He was Vice President in-charge of Policy and Partnership at the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA). In that capacity he had several bold and innovative policies and finance initiatives that leveraged over 4 billion dollars in Bank finance commitments to the African sector .
He equally served as Associate Director and Regional Director for the Southern Africa Office of the Rockefeller Foundation.
lndeed, we are merely speaking about a Nigerian intellectual who has written about seventy scholarly publications and who as a Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development for only four years (2011-2015) radically changed the perception of the Agric value chain in Nigeria from subsistence to a viable business that attracted 5.6 billion dollars into private sector investment.
The Electronic Wallet system he introduced as Minister, reached some 15 million farmers throughout this country. The system dramatically transformed the levels of farmers in Nigeria. The project succeeded in ending 40 years of corruption in the fertilizer business in Nigeria. By the twist of two fingers, local farmers readily got provided with subsidized farm inputs via their mobile phones.
This is a bold reform but which has had to be carelessly abandoned somehow when he left office. As President of AfDB since 2015 ,he launched the transformation of human lives on the African continent, via his Hi fives programme namely Light up Africa,Ttransform Africa, Power the Continent, Feed Africa and Integrate the Continent’s people so as to save the continent from itsself as an economically backward landmass but which ironically is the richest in the world.
Now to the purpose of this write-up.
Very recently, this highly professional Agric Economist who is the sitting president of the Africa Development Bank (AfDB) spoke out the truth to the Nigerian situation when he drew a comparison between the Nigerian people of 1960 at independence and their counterparts he finds on the streets 65 years later.
The conclusion Adesina drew was that Nigerians are worse off today then they were in 1960. Somehow this Adesina view has not gone down well with presidential spokesmen in the Villa
In a swift response to what the facts present and Dr. Akinwumi Adesina has only echoed , the presidential megaphone led by Bayo Onanuga who is Special Adviser to the President on lnformation and Strategic Communication condemns the Adesina position and blames him for basing his conclusion on what he calls “figures that do not align with available data.” Onanuga went on to say that ” no objective observer can claim that Nigeria has not made progress since 1960″.
But seriously speaking is Onanuga right? No he is not. In fact he can’t be right. This is because having plenty of money in one’s pocket does not translate into wealth. Or does it?. If the common man fed his family with five or even ten naira in a month in the 1960 years but does so with five hundred thousand naira in a month today, 65 years later would we say such a man has progressed?
Bayo Onanuga went on to say that “even as the nation awaits the NBS’s recaliberation of our GDP, we can comfortably say without contradiction that it is at least 50 times if not 100 times more than it was at independence”. lf our GDP is 100 times more than what it was in 1960 how has that helped us we may ask? We ask.
The presidential aide also accused the AfDB boss of “speaking like a politician in the mould to Peter Obi but did not do due diligence before making his unverifiable statement”. Habba, Bayo Onanuga.Will an Agricultural Economist like the AfDB boss make an unverifiable statement? Will he? Should he? Will he not do due diligence before he talks about his own country’s. Does he not readily see the result of government initiatives and policies in the people?
Let us be more frank and factual.As President of AfDB can Dr.Adesina truly be said to be some one who does not have economic indices of all African nations at his finger tips?
We may not be experts in Economic matters even as Onanuga wants us to believe. We can give it to him that GDP per capita is not the only criterion we can use to determine whether people live better now than they did in the past. All the same our little understanding of basic Economics tells us it is a poor tool for assessing the living standard of our people. Is GDP per capita not always silent on whether we as Nigerians enjoy better access to health care, education and transportation such as rail, and air now than we did in 1960 65 years back.
Yes Nigeria today has more primary schools, secondary schools, tertiary institutions than she had in 1960. We have more road networks , medical facilities, phone lines accessibility etc. But with a population leap from 45 million in 1960 to the nearly 230 million in 2025, has our population not shot up to about 5 times in 65 years? Is this not a problem? Have our facilities this exponential increase in population growth causes not rendered useless and inaccessible all the imaginary gains?
Yes every Tom Dick or Harry has access to phones but have the available facilities translated into effective service provision? The answer is a big No. 65 years on, electricity supply to our homes remains on by which band you belong to. A B C or D. Is this something we must be proud of? Does this happen in the developed climes?
Today 65 years after independence, our school system can not contain all our children of school-going age. It is a known fact that 2,000 students in our higher institutions do receive learning in halls meant to sit just about 500 people at a go! The students when they come out can’t access jobs for years and so have to japa in the end.
There is insecurity in the land. Everywhere there is strife, there is disappointment hunger,thirst, frustration and killings. No where is safe today.Yet in 1960 to the 1980 years one could travel the length and breadth of our country without blinking an eye.We had factories that produced or assembled cars,produced batteries brake pads and tyres. Food was very available.
We lived a life of being our brother’s keeper. The poor could eat and did not have to beg nor play tricks to live. Are we not worse at 65 years ago? We all are, except those in the corridors of political power and Yahoo Yahoo practitioners.
The presidency’s rather dismissive reaction to Dr Akinwumi Adesina’s very clear statement of fact is rather worrisome. We conclude by stating that Dr Adesina is right; but the presidency’s reaction is very wrong. Ethics as moral principles show how people should conduct themselves in social affairs.
Ethics ensure the imposition of obligations on us as public functionaries to refrain from doing or saying whatever things are wrong. Our Presidential Aides must learn to study and develop ethical standards. They must try to live up to reasonable and solidly based conducts.
They must refrain from being often time economical with the truth.They will do this by accepting to stand by the truth always
and be able able to stand on the side of the people they have been invited to serve.
Smolette Adetoyese Shittu-Alamu
Osogbo.Former Director of news osun state broadcasting corporation
News
Ports post robust first-quarter gains as cargo volumes and vessel capacity rise
…NPA records 46.75m GRT as Cargo throughout hits 32.38m tons
…bigger ships and surging vehicle traffic boost performance across Nigerian terminals
By Gloria Ikibah
Nigeria’s port system delivered a strong showing in the opening quarter of 2026, with fresh figures pointing to notable increases in both vessel capacity and cargo movement.
Data released in the Q1 operational review by the Nigerian Ports Authority showed that Gross Registered Tonnage for ocean-going vessels climbed by 19.5 per cent to reach 46.75 million. Cargo throughput also remained solid, hitting 32.38 million tonnes during the period.
The figures reflect a growing preference for higher-capacity vessels calling at Nigerian ports, a trend widely linked to improving efficiencies and rising confidence among global shipping operators. The shift has been further supported by developments such as the Lekki Deep Sea Port, which continues to attract larger ships and expand handling capabilities.
Vehicle imports recorded a particularly sharp rise, jumping by 67 per cent, adding further momentum to overall port activity.
This uptick comes as authorities push ahead with plans to modernise port infrastructure and streamline operations in a bid to strengthen Nigeria’s position within the African Continental Free Trade Area framework AfCFTA.
Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority, Abubakar Dantsoho, has emphasised the need for faster turnaround times, improved logistics and greater innovation if Nigeria is to secure a larger share of cargo flows in an increasingly competitive African market.
Speaking at an industry forum in Lagos, the NPA Boss reiterated that efficiency, speed, innovation and reliability will determine which countries dominate cargo flows in the new continental trade environment.
“The time has come for a paradigm shift in the structure of Nigeria’s economy towards the full utilisation of our marine resources. Our port system, if properly harnessed, can serve as a major driver of economic growth,” he said.
Cargo activity across Nigerian ports maintained a steady upward trend in the first quarter of 2026, even when crude oil terminals were excluded. Throughput rose by 11.6 per cent year-on-year to 32.38 million metric tonnes, up from 29.02 million metric tonnes recorded in the same period of 2025.
According to the Nigerian Ports Authority, the increase was driven by higher trade volumes, stronger import and export flows, improved efficiency at the ports and sustained demand for related services.
Exports proved to be a standout performer during the quarter, with outward cargo climbing by 23.7 per cent to 14.13 million metric tonnes. This points to improving competitiveness of Nigerian goods and a deeper foothold in both regional and global supply chains.
Containerised exports also expanded sharply. Outward laden container traffic rose by 67.6 per cent, moving from 61,332 TEUs in the first quarter of 2025 to 102,803 TEUs in the same period this year, reflecting gains in logistics coordination and terminal operations.
Vehicle handling recorded similar momentum, with total units processed surging by 67 per cent to 58,870, compared with 35,262 a year earlier.
Transshipment activity saw one of the most dramatic increases, with container volumes in that category rising by 83.1 per cent. Analysts say this is a key signal that Nigeria is becoming more central to cargo redistribution within West Africa, an important development as the African Continental Free Trade Area continues to lower barriers to trade across the continent.
Ongoing reforms under the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu have focused on modernising infrastructure, expanding digital systems and restructuring institutions to position the country as a leading maritime and logistics hub in Africa.
A central part of this effort is the large-scale upgrade of major facilities, including the Lagos Port Complex and the Tin Can Island Port, where rehabilitation works are underway following the approval of a one-billion-dollar overhaul aimed at tackling long-standing infrastructure gaps and improving competitiveness.
Efforts to upgrade Nigeria’s port system are being broadened, with the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Adegboyega Oyetola, confirming that procurement is in progress for improvement works at ports in Warri, Port Harcourt, Onne and Calabar. The move is part of a wider plan to ensure more even development across the country’s maritime infrastructure.
Alongside physical upgrades, the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu is advancing a strong digitalisation drive. This includes rolling out systems such as the Port Community System and the National Single Window, both designed to simplify cargo clearance, cut delays and improve transparency across port operations.
Stakeholders in the sector say these measures could help reduce the cost of doing business while boosting efficiency and shortening vessel turnaround times.
Attention has also turned to improving cargo evacuation, with increased investment in rail links, inland dry ports, barging services and dedicated export corridors aimed at easing congestion around port access routes.
Security conditions in Nigerian waters have also improved markedly. The country has gone more than four years without recorded piracy incidents, a shift widely credited to the Deep Blue Programme and enhanced maritime surveillance capabilities.
According to the Nigerian Ports Authority, the latest performance figures indicate that the sector is steadily transforming into a more commercially active and cargo-driven system, better positioned to support trade, economic growth and regional integration.
Even so, challenges remain. Despite accounting for a significant share of West Africa’s economic output, Nigeria still handles only about a quarter of the region’s cargo traffic, highlighting the need to sustain reforms and fully unlock the country’s maritime potential.
“With sustained commitment to these initiatives, Nigeria’s port system will enter a new phase and emerge as a leading maritime logistics hub in Africa,” he assured.
News
Galatasaray looking for player who can fill Osimhen’s big shoes
Galatasaray are looking for a player who can fill striker Victor Osimhen’s shoes at the club in the near future.
This was disclosed by Turkish sports commentator Ibrahim Seten.
Speaking on the 343 Digital YouTube, Seten shared information regarding current events at Galatasaray.
He said, “Galatasaray is looking for a young player who can fill Osimhen’s shoes when he’s not there, but also who can play alongside Osimhen, both on the wings and in the back.
“They told me, ‘Like a younger version of Batshuayi’,” he said.
Osimhen, who led Galatasaray to win the Turkish Super Lig on Saturday, has been linked with a move away from the club this summer.
News
Serious allegation: Gumi claims US intelligence behind insecurity in Nigeria
Kaduna-based Islamic cleric Ahmad Gumi has claimed that American intelligence agencies are behind banditry and Boko Haram terrorism in Nigeria.
Gumi made the allegation in a Facebook post on Saturday while reacting to comments by Mike Arnold, who has spoken publicly about alleged persecution of Christians in Nigeria.
Arnold had shared photos of himself with several Nigerians, including former Cross River Governor Donald Duke and Nigeria’s Information Minister Mohammed Idris.
“These are a few of the people I’ve met and places I’ve been to in Nigeria over the years,” Arnold wrote while sharing the photos.
In response, Gumi accused Arnold of spreading what he described as a false narrative about Christian killings in Nigeria.
He also alleged that American intelligence agencies were linked to insecurity in some northern states.
“After all the barking about ‘fake Christian genocide’, it is shameful to realise that this man has been almost everywhere where Christians are prosperous, yet he has not visited Zamfara, Katsina and other northern states suffering from the activities of bandits and Boko Haram allegedly sponsored by the same American intelligence. One of the things Islam abhors is lies and liars,” Gumi wrote.
Gumi has repeatedly criticised US involvement in Nigeria’s security issues.
In December, after airstrikes reportedly ordered by US President Donald Trump targeted suspected terrorist hideouts in Sokoto State, Gumi condemned the action and described it as an attack on Islam.
The latest allegation comes as Nigeria and the United States continue to strengthen security cooperation to combat insecurity.
On Friday, presidential spokesman Bayo Onanuga said National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu met with US Vice President JD Vance and other American officials to discuss deeper cooperation on Nigeria’s security challenges.
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