Opinion
WIKE V YERIMA: SETTING A DANGEROUS PRECEDENT OF ILLEGALITY THROUGH EMOTIONAL ENDORSEMENT
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The public space has been engaged with discourse and analysis on the recent engagement between the Honourable minister of FCT and a Naval officer in respect of a supposed unlawful possession and development of a piece of land in Abuja. While some ostensibly displayed utmost pleasure that the minister met his match, some out of moral assessment preached that the minister should have refrained from insulting a uniformed man. He was wearing a uniform that represents the country and by extension, the president. While these assumptions travel through the pipes of preoccupied standpoints, some legal minds have dealt extensively to best of individuals’ perspectives. Hence, this piece joins same efforts.
Facts: the available fact as advanced by the Minster via the Special Adviser on communication and Media (as picked from his Facebook account) is thus x-rayed.
The land in question was allocated to SANTOS ESTATE LIMITED in 2007, for PARK and RECREATION. In 2022, the company wrote to the then FCT Minister, seeking approval to change LAND USE PURPOSE to residential. While still waiting for response to this request, the company decided to partition the land and sell to people, including the former Chief of Naval Staff. The then FCT Minister declined the request to change the land use purpose from PARK and RECREATION to RESIDENTIAL. Meanwhile, Santos Estate Limited already sold the land to unsuspecting people, including the former CNS, who is building DUPLEXES on his own.
From the foregoing, the issues are stemmed thus.
i. That a land was allocated to a third party; SANTOS ESTATE LIMITED for the purpose of park and recreation activities whose application for change of purpose was not declined by Hon minister Wike’s predecessor.
ii. That the said SANTOS ESTATE LIMITED sold the land to members of the public; including former Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Awwal Gambo, in contravention of the terms and conditions of the allocation.
iii. That the former Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Awwal Gambo is possession and developing a plot without allocation and in defiance of planning law. And had further stationed naval officers to deprive enforcement.
The fact that the purpose of the initial allocation was altered and there was not official approval by the appropriate authority to reflect the change rendered the land reversible to the government. More of concern is that the said portion of land was never intended to be sold for the residential purpose which is breach of sections 3, 7 of the provisions of the FEDERAL CAPITAL TERRITORY ACT 1976, section 3 creates the Federal Capital Development Authority with the among other functions “to prepare a master‐plan for the Capital city and of land use with respect to town and country planning within the rest of the Capital Territory”. While section 7(1) of the same Act specifically provides that “no person or body shall within the Federal Capital Territory carry out any development within the meaning of this Act unless the written approval of the Authority has been obtained by such person or body”. This position is also provided in section 28 of the Nigerian Urban and Regional Planning Act 1992. (1) Approval of the relevant Development Control Department shall be required for any land development.
It also expected that the ‘conditions for grant of development permit to conform with condition of issue of certificate of occupancy or a customary right of occupancy’ as stipulates in section 36 Nigerian Urban and Regional Planning Act.
Therefore, it is legal that such development must comply with the conditions attached the grant of the said portion as earlier allowed to the original grantee and noncompliance thereto renders the the allocation revocable.
The subsequent possession and development of the apportioned plot by the former Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Awwal Gambo is not only unlawful, illegal but criminal. The available remedy is for the the Executive Secretary or any other officer or servant of the Authority authorised in that behalf to have right of access at all times to any land or building within the Federal Capital Territory for the purpose of ascertaining that the provisions of this Act are not being contravened. See: Section 8(1) (a) of the FEDERAL CAPITAL TERRITORY ACT and sections 39, 47, 53, 54 and 60 NIGERIAN URBAN AND REGIONAL PLANNING ACT.
In the eye of the law and in absence of contradicting facts, the former Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Awwal Gambo illegally possessed the land and also criminally carrying out development on the said land without permit or approval. This necessitated the supercilious act of violently intimidating the authority officials who are meant to ensure compliance.
THE PROPRIETY AND OTHERWISE OF USING NAVAL OFFICER TO GUILD A PRIVATE PROPERTY.
Bringing the military into the civil or land related matter is unconstitutional. It is an aberration. It is a breach of national security and the threat thereon that must be taken seriously to curb attending propensity.
In the Notable judicial pronouncement, it was said:
“It is up to the police to protect our nascent democracy and not the military, otherwise the democracy might be wittingly or unwittingly militarised. This is not what the citizenry bargained for after wrestling power from the military in 1999. Conscious step or steps should be taken to civilianise the polity and thereby ensure survival and sustenance of democracy.” Per SALAMI, J.C.A. in Yusuf v. Obasanjo [2005] 18 NWLR
This was the position of the court in response to the use and/or deployment of soldiers for the election and related activities. It is apparent threat and a recipe of anarchy when the military is dragged into civil matter. It is more condemnable that the motive was to prevent officials of government institution from carrying out lawful duties.
Section 217(2) of the 1999 constitution simply allows the use of armed forces to assist civil authorities in restoring order during insurrection when directed by the President and subject to set by National Assembly and not in the circumstance of using them for illegal duty. Apparently, the use of any member of the armed forces for the purposes of civil matter is not envisioned.
Section 4 of the Armed Forces Act provides that “Notwithstanding the generality of the provisions of subsection (3) of this section (a) the Navy shall, in particular, be further charged with:- (i). enforcing and assisting in co-ordinating the enforcement of all customs, laws, including anti-bunkering, fishery and immigration laws of Nigeria at sea; (ii) enforcing and assisting in co-ordinating the enforcement of national and international maritime laws ascribed or acceded to by Nigeria”. This is the fundamental purpose/function of a Naval Officer and what whatever order from any superior authority must be for the purpose of functioning as expected in sections 3 and 4 of the Armed Forces Act. And a slight departure from the said provisions renders any order, duty and/or activity amply illegal.
Nigerian courts have held any illegal or unlawful order by the superior officer to the junior officer to be worthy of no obedience and the consequence of same to be indictable. Most recently, the apex court case of Onunze vs. State (2023) 8 NWLR (Pt. 1885) 61 at 108 SC, held thus:
“My Lords, the obligation to obey the orders of a superior does not include orders that are palpably illegal or manifestly unjust. Every military or police officer swears an oath upon commissioning. The Oath is not to obey all orders, it is to “preserve”, “protect” and defend the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria against all enemies, foreign and domestic. When an officer obeys palpably illegal orders, they become personally liable for their actions and would be expected to face court martial or official sanction for the wrongdoing.”
The gist of the position is that no officer of the Armed Forces is obliged to obey or carry our any directive or order that manifestly unlawful and illegal. The Supreme Court in the case Nigerian Air Force v. Kamaldeen (SC) (2007) 7 NWLR (Pt. 1032) 164 made it clear that an order is not always to be obeyed if it is not within the law. For the order to be obeyed, it must be lawful as stated thus:
A soldier is responsible to military and civil law, and it is erroneous to suppose that a soldier could be protected when a superior order is grossly and manifestly illegal. Therefore, a soldier is only bound to obey lawful orders and is responsible if he obeys an order not strictly lawful. [Nwaoga v. State (1972) 1 All NLR (Pt.l) 149 referred to.] (P. 188, paras. F-G)
The same position was reached by the Court in the case of Nigeria Air Force vs. James (2002) 18 NWLR (Pt. 798) 295 in condemning the tendency of anarchy tied to the obedience of carrying out unlawful order.
Can the order purportedly obeyed by A.M. Yerima be deemed to be lawful? The answer is in the negative. Considering the fact that compliance to the said order was to breach the enforcement of a civil law on possession, ownership and development of a private property. The actions of A.M. Yerima is a clear breach of civil law and this is also punishable under the Armed Forces Act.
Section 114 of the Armed Forces Act provides that:
(1) A person subject to service law under this Act who commits any other civil offence, whether or not listed under this Act or committed in Nigeria or elsewhere, is guilty of an offence under this section. (2) For the purposes of subsection (1) of this section, “civil offence” means an act or omission punishable as an offence under the penal provisions of any law enacted in or applicable to Nigeria, and in this Act “corresponding civil offence” means the civil offence the commission of which constitutes the offence under this section.
In conclusion, military follows lawful orders from their superior. The order is lawful when is within the legally permissible frame. An order that manifestly offend the Armed Forces and Civil Laws are not to be obeyed. Intervening in civil property related activities absent a clear military nexus and same exceed reasonable military order. It is important to note that obedience to such unlawful order does not absolve personal responsibility for illegality where rule of law is expected to be prioritized over the cliché of order is order. In the case of Nigerian Army v. Yakubu (2013) 8 NWLR (SC) (Pt. 1355) 1 the Supreme Court affirmed that: “The law is not a respecter of persons or any corporate institution, or any organization who or which violates the provisions of the law…”
It worth mention however, that the Minister for the Federal Capital Territory is empower to enforce the law accordingly in this circumstance. Nonetheless that some are of the view that the minister possesses no such power. I am of a considered view that the law permits the Minister of the federal capital to enforce applicable law just like a State Governor. He possess such power (as delegated by the president) to the extent of enforcing all laws applicable in the federal capital Territory as set bellow in section 18 of the FEDERAL CAPITAL TERRITORY ACT:
Delegation of powers to the Minister for the Federal Capital Territory As from the 28th May, 1984, the President has delegated to the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory the following functions, that is to say‐ (a) any function or power conferred on the chairman of the Federal Capital Development Authority under this Act; (b) any executive power of the Federal Government vested in the President pursuant to section 299 (a) or any other section of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and exercisable within the Federal Capital Territory; (c) any function or power conferred by any law set out in the Second Schedule to this Act vested in the Governor or Military Governor of a State;
Thus, the provisions of section 18 of the FEDERAL CAPITAL TERRITORY ACT exactly endorsed his power to carry out his functions and powers as delegated by the President. Apparently, the Minister of the Federal capital weights the power of the president and obstructing his responsibility amount to obstructing the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Olu Akinkuowo Esq
Managing Partner
OLU AKINKUOWO LAW FIRM
Abuja,
oluakinkuowo@gmail.com
Opinion
Digital Switch Over and free-to-air broadcasting
By
Sonny Aragba-Akpore
With an ambitious move to generate nearly N600b in revenue yearly, the Digital Switch Over (DSO) programme launched recently by the Federal Government of Nigeria may not be as smooth as envisioned despite its promise of free-to-air broadcast systems. The government also anticipates nearly $1b from Spectrum sales alone, and other speculated income streams, and the Information and National Orientation Minister, Mr Idris Mohammed, and his Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy counterpart, Mr Bosun Tijani, are very enthusiastic that DSO will certainly be a game changer.
Nigeria is about 20 years behind the schedule announced by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU). With a wobbling analogue television broadcasting believed to be inefficient and massive misuse of radio frequency bands, the government feels that the transition to DSO, no matter how late, will boost government revenues. “Turning off analogue transmitters frees up high-value frequencies in the 700MHz and 800MHz bands.”
Government intends to sell this freed-up space—known as the “Digital Dividend”—to telecommunications companies for 4G and 5G rollout and mobile broadband expansion to boost internet connectivity, and this single process is projected to generate over $1 billion in direct auction revenue. 40 million homes are expected to pay minimal yearly fees to keep their converter boxes active, thus creating a recurring, high-volume pool of capital, and the government takes a regulatory cut of these administrative fees.
But is revenue generation the ultimate purview of the government? Apart from the Information and Communications Ministries’ involvement at policy formulation levels, the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) and Nigerian Communications Satellite Limited (NIGCOMSAT) are expected to play key roles as regulators and service providers.
Already, Nigcomsat has a Direct to Home (DTH) centre where it is expected to warehouse programmes with the help of content creators, beam signals of about 100 programmes to multiple radio stations nationwide via its satellite, the Nigcomsat 1R, at no cost to subscribers.
Although there are expected free set-top boxes to track signals for radio stations and TV with no monthly fees, NBC has structured the setup boxes to include a yearly access or activation fee (often called a “Free TV Carriage Fee” or smartcard renewal fee, as the case may be. But that is where the excitement stops.
Millions of homes paying a minimal yearly fee to keep their converter boxes active creates a recurring, high-volume pool of capital. The government takes a regulatory cut of these administrative fees. Analysts say that under the old analogue regime, individual TV stations owned and managed their own expensive transmission masts. By the DSO model, TV channels focus only on making content. They must pay licensed National Signal Distributors (like ITS or Pinnacle) to transmit their channels to the public.
The government generates direct revenue by licensing these signal distributors and takes a percentage-based regulatory levy on the carriage fees paid by the TV stations to remain on the Free TV network. The free set-up boxes are internet-enabled, and so users will have unfettered access to crisp digital signals for optimal content. There will be an advertisement boom projected to hit over N600 billion, from which the government will have cuts as tax. But beautiful as the initiative is, it will not gain currency until December 31, 2028.
Although the DSO programme appears populist, can it compete with DSTV and Star Times even though their tariffs are prohibitive? We just hope DSO is not a wild goose chase. ITU initiated DSO in 2006 with a mandate to migrate tv and radio broadcasts from analogue to digital terrestrial broadcasting.
The 2006 decision was reached at the Regional Radiocommunication Conference held in Geneva. Member nations signed the Geneva 2006 (GE06) Agreement, which originally set a global switch-off deadline for June 2015. Because many regions struggled to meet this target, it was subsequently extended to 2020. Nigeria officially began its DSO journey with a pilot programme in Jos, Plateau State, on April 30, 2016. Following a steady progression, the Federal Government initiated a major nationwide rollout of the DSO but was stifled by a lack of political will laced with alleged personal interests.
While other countries on this belt are striving to create an enabling environment for the implementation of DSO, some countries, including Nigeria, were unable to catch up. The updated rollout pivots to a satellite-first approach to reach nationwide coverage faster, offering seamless picture quality and audio. Even when there are manifest prospects from DSO, there are also palpable contradictions and concerns over its availability.
The hybrid satellite approach appears not to be comfortable with some stakeholders in the Broadcasting Organisations of Nigeria (BON). Analysts reason that true DSO legally requires Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT) to free up bandwidth for telecom operators, warning that the satellite model shifts dish and decoder costs to citizens. And this is unfortunate. The satellite option may be on edge as the Nigerian satellite operator has no backup satellite to mitigate the situation in the event of downtime.
If fully realised, the DSO may free up premium frequency bands (like 700MHz and 800MHz) for auctioning to telecom operators to expand 4G/5G broadband. It is also designed to create thousands of jobs in local content creation and offer an integrated audience measurement system for advertisers with an estimated turnover of over N600 billion yearly. StarTimes and DSTV may lose market shares as advertisers will cash in on the free tv channels to boost their revenue.
But Star Times has a comparable advantage since it is uniquely insulated because it operates as the primary technical partner to the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) through its joint venture, Integrated Television Services (ITS)—one of the licensed national signal distributors. Because StarTimes built much of the digital terrestrial television (DTT) infrastructure used for the DSO, the company stands to generate substantial business-to-business revenue from transmission fees and infrastructure management.
MultiChoice’s lower-tier GOtv packages face immense pressure; its premium DStv tier remains relatively protected. FreeTV cannot compete with DStv’s exclusive live sports broadcasting rights (such as the English Premier League) and expensive international content libraries. MultiChoice will likely be forced to pivot aggressively toward premium exclusivity and its Showmax streaming platform to hedge against losing the market.
The nationwide platform launch of June 17, 2026, was the official activation of Nigeria’s National Digital Broadcasting Platform. Managed via a partnership between the NBC and NIGCOMSAT, this initial rollout went live with over 57 digital channels, scaling toward a target of 100+ free-to-air stations. From 2026 – 2028 (The Hybrid Rollout Phase) will lead to the deployment of a converged broadcast model.
This combines Direct-to-Home satellite (DTH), Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT), and Internet Protocol (IP) networks to resolve regional infrastructure gaps. December 31, 2028, is the definitive deadline for all analogue transmitters across Nigeria to be permanently turned off. Beyond this date, standard TV antennas will no longer pick up broadcast signals without a digital converter box.
Opinion
10TH Senate Takes on Nigeria’s Toughest Security Question: State Police
By Ken Harries, Esq.
It often begins as an ordinary day. A commercial bus pulls out before dawn, its passengers expecting nothing more than traffic delays and bad roads. Traders carry the week’s earnings. Students return to school. A nursing mother cradles her child. A retired civil servant travels to visit his family. Elsewhere, anxious parents wave goodbye as a school bus disappears through the gates, expecting to see their children again that afternoon. Then, somewhere along a lonely highway or beside a quiet rural school, armed men emerge from the bush. Within minutes, ordinary life gives way to terror. Passengers are dragged into the forest. Schoolchildren are herded into waiting vehicles. Families receive the dreaded telephone call demanding ransom. By nightfall, another community has joined the growing list of Nigerians praying that their loved ones will return home alive.
That story is no longer exceptional. It has been repeated so often, in different states and under different circumstances, that it has become a grim national pattern. Across Nigeria, parents hesitate before sending their children to school. Farmers weigh every trip to their fields against the possibility that they may never return. Travellers study routes not for the shortest distance but for the greatest chance of survival. In a country blessed with enormous human and natural resources, fear has become an invisible checkpoint on countless roads.
It is against this backdrop that the debate over state police has acquired fresh urgency.
For decades, Nigerians have argued over whether policing should remain the exclusive responsibility of the Federal Government or whether states should be empowered to establish their own police services. It is a conversation that has generated more heat than light, with strong emotions on both sides.
The State Police Bill, now making its way through the constitutional amendment process, represents the most determined effort yet to answer that question and make community policing a constitutional reality.
More importantly, it reflects a growing national consensus that the country’s evolving security challenges require a policing structure that is closer to the people, more responsive to local realities, and better equipped to detect and prevent crime before it occurs. Whether one ultimately supports or opposes state police, there can be little doubt that the debate has moved beyond theory. It is now about finding practical solutions to one of the greatest threats confronting Nigeria’s unity, stability, and future.
It is certainly an ambitious proposal. The strongest argument in favour of state police begins with a simple reality: Nigeria has grown too large, too complex, and too diverse for a completely centralised policing structure to respond effectively to every local security challenge.
A police officer deployed hundreds of kilometres away can rarely know a community as intimately as those who live there. Local officers are more likely to understand the terrain, recognise unfamiliar faces, detect emerging threats, and build the trust that encourages residents to volunteer vital intelligence before crimes occur rather than after lives have been lost. They also have a deeper personal stake in preserving peace. Their families live in the community. Their friends are there. Their children attend its schools. Their lives are woven into its social fabric. That sense of belonging often translates into a stronger commitment to preventing crime because every threat to the community is also a threat to the people and places they call home.
Such local knowledge can make all the difference. It can be the difference between prevention and tragedy. It can enable security agencies to identify suspicious movements before they become deadly attacks, respond more swiftly to kidnappings and violent crimes, resolve communal tensions before they escalate, and gather intelligence that outsiders might never obtain. At the same time, it would allow federal security agencies to concentrate their resources on terrorism, organised crime, transnational offences, and other threats that transcend state boundaries.
There is another advantage that is often overlooked. Effective policing depends not only on uniforms, weapons, and patrol vehicles, but also on public confidence. People are far more likely to cooperate with law enforcement when they regard police officers as members of their own communities rather than distant representatives of an impersonal bureaucracy. They are more willing to report suspicious activities, identify criminal elements, and volunteer intelligence that could prevent crimes before they occur. In the fight against insecurity, timely information is often the most powerful weapon, and that information flows most readily where trust has been earned.
Yet, if the promise of state police is considerable, so too are the risks. No constitutional reform should be judged solely by its potential benefits; it must also be tested against the possibility of unintended consequences. It is here that the debate becomes more complex.
Nigeria’s political history gives critics ample reason for caution. Governors already wield significant influence within their states. Entrusting them with operational control over police formations inevitably raises difficult questions. Could state police be used to intimidate political opponents? Could elections become even more contentious if security agencies are perceived to serve incumbents rather than the law? Could legitimate dissent be treated as political disloyalty? These are not hypothetical concerns. They arise from Nigeria’s own political experience and deserve credible constitutional and institutional safeguards.
Beyond the question of political misuse lies an equally practical challenge: funding. Professional policing is expensive. It requires far more than uniforms and patrol vehicles. Officers need rigorous training, competitive remuneration, modern equipment, reliable communication systems, forensic capabilities, intelligence infrastructure, and continuous oversight. Many states already struggle to pay salaries and finance essential public services. Without a sustainable funding framework, some states could build highly professional police services while others struggle to maintain basic operational capacity. That would not strengthen national security; it would simply replace one centralised policing problem with thirty-six unequal policing systems.
There is also the issue of coordination. Criminals do not stop at state borders to admire welcome signs. They move across jurisdictions with ease. Any state policing framework must therefore establish clear rules for cooperation between state and federal agencies, intelligence sharing, joint operations, and conflict resolution. Otherwise, confusion could become as dangerous as the insecurity the reform seeks to address.
These are difficult questions, but difficult questions are precisely what serious legislatures exist to confront. That is why the Senate’s handling of the State Police Bill deserves plaudits.
Under the leadership of Senate President Godswill Akpabio, the 10th Senate has chosen engagement over avoidance. Few constitutional questions are as politically sensitive as those touching the nation’s security architecture. They evoke competing interests, regional anxieties, constitutional concerns, and deeply held convictions about the nature of the Nigerian federation. Faced with such complexity, the easier course would have been to postpone the debate or leave it to another Assembly. Instead, the Senate elected to confront the issue directly, recognising that a nation under relentless security pressure cannot indefinitely defer difficult decisions.
By encouraging public hearings, inviting diverse perspectives, and steering deliberations through the constitutional process, the Senate has transformed what was once an endless national argument into structured legislative engagement. That is how democratic institutions are supposed to function. The objective is not to eliminate disagreement. It is to channel disagreement into laws that strengthen the republic.
The State Police Bill is certainly not a magic wand. No legislation, however well crafted, can eliminate insecurity overnight. Laws create frameworks; institutions and leadership determine outcomes. The success of state police will therefore depend not merely on the passage of the Bill but on how faithfully its provisions are implemented and how effectively its safeguards are enforced. Independent oversight, merit-based and transparent recruitment, sustainable funding, clear operational protocols, professional accountability, and robust protection against political interference will determine whether state police emerge as trusted guardians of public safety or degenerate into instruments of partisan power.
Achieving those objectives is not solely the responsibility of the National Assembly. It demands a sustained commitment from every stakeholder in the security ecosystem. State governments must resist the temptation to politicise the police. Security professionals must uphold the highest standards of professionalism and integrity. Civil society must remain vigilant in demanding accountability, while citizens must embrace the civic responsibility of cooperating with law enforcement. Only through such a shared commitment can the promise of state police be translated into lasting public safety.
Still, there is value in recognising progress when it occurs. For too long, Nigeria’s security conversation has revolved around managing recurring crises instead of questioning whether the structures themselves require reform. The State Police Bill signals a willingness to examine first principles and ask whether yesterday’s solutions remain adequate for today’s realities.
That willingness matters. Nation-building is seldom about finding perfect answers. More often, it is about having the courage to ask the right questions and the wisdom to improve institutions one reform at a time.
The Senate has opened that door. What remains is to ensure that what ultimately emerges from it strengthens security, deepens accountability, and restores public confidence in law enforcement. The true test of state police will not be the passage of the Bill but whether it produces police officers who know the communities they serve, share in their hopes and anxieties, and recognise that every threat to those communities is also a threat to their own families, neighbours, and future. Only then will Nigerians have renewed confidence that the institutions established to protect them are not distant enforcers of the law, but trusted guardians of the communities whose fate and destiny they share.
Ken Harries Esq is an Abuja based Development Communication Strategist
Opinion
A Tribute to Senator Patrick Abba Moro: A Visionary Leader and Pride of Idomaland
By Michael Agbaji
As Senator Patrick Abba Moro marks another birthday, it is fitting to celebrate a distinguished statesman, visionary leader, and compassionate philanthropist whose life has been defined by selfless service, exemplary leadership, and an unwavering commitment to the advancement of humanity.
A proud son of Okwungaga in Ugbokolo District, Okpokwu Local Government Area of Benue State, Senator Moro has continued to distinguish himself as one of the most accomplished sons of Idomaland. Okpokwu Local Government has produced many outstanding men and women who have served the nation with honour and distinction, and Senator Moro remains one of its finest ambassadors.
After his meritorious service as a Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Senator Moro returned home with an unwavering determination to improve the lives of his people. Rather than retreat into personal comfort after years in public office, he chose the path of sacrifice by dedicating himself to education, youth empowerment, community development, and support for the less privileged.
Through his leadership and representation, numerous developmental projects have been executed across Benue South Senatorial District. These include the provision of potable water, healthcare facilities, educational support, road infrastructure, agricultural equipment, and empowerment programmes for youths, women, and the elderly. These interventions have positively transformed lives and will continue to benefit generations to come.
Senator Moro’s impact extends far beyond physical infrastructure. During his tenure as Minister, he facilitated opportunities for many qualified young Nigerians to serve their country. His mentorship, encouragement, and commitment to human capital development have positively influenced countless lives, not only in Benue South but across Benue State and Nigeria as a whole.
The English philosopher Herbert Spencer once observed, “The great aim of education is not knowledge but action.” Senator Patrick Abba Moro has consistently demonstrated throughout his public life that genuine leadership is measured not by promises but by meaningful action and lasting impact.
To me, Senator Patrick Abba Moro is far more than a respected elder statesman and accomplished politician. He is a mentor, a role model, and a source of inspiration to everyone who believes that leadership is rooted in selfless service to humanity.
By the grace of God, I aspire to emulate his example by dedicating my life to serving humanity, empowering young people, and contributing meaningfully to the development of Benue South Senatorial District, Benue State, and Nigeria.
As you celebrate another year today, I pray that Almighty God grants you continued good health, divine wisdom, renewed strength, and many more years of impactful service to our nation and humanity.
May your remarkable legacy of leadership, education, philanthropy, and community development continue to inspire the present generation and those yet to come.
Your life remains a shining reminder that true greatness is not defined by the offices one occupies but by the positive difference one makes in the lives of others.
Happy Birthday, Distinguished Senator Patrick Abba Moro. May your tomorrow be greater than today, and may God’s abundant blessings continue to rest upon you.
Signed:
Comrade Michael Ojonigwu Agbaji
News Editor, Dargic Online Media
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