Metro
Targeting the Ally to Weaken the Principal: The Politics Behind the FCT Storm
By Abraham Amah
Politics rarely unfolds on the surface. Its deepest battles are often waged indirectly, through proxies, symbols, and calculated distractions. What Nigeria is presently witnessing in the sustained political storm around the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory is not an isolated disagreement over governance style or administrative choices. It is a strategic attempt to weaken the principal by attacking the ally. At its core, this unfolding drama is less about Abuja and more about President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
The current effort to politically discredit President Tinubu has assumed a multilateral character. It is no longer driven by a single opposition tendency but by converging interests that share little in common beyond grievance and exclusion. One front of this convergence has materialized under the banner of a coalition that presents itself as an alternative platform. Yet a closer examination reveals that this grouping is not united by ideas, policy clarity, or a coherent national vision. Rather, it is bound together by dissatisfaction, personal injury, and unresolved political loss.
Those who parade themselves as the new face of opposition are, in truth, familiar actors with long political histories that inspire more questions than confidence. Their records do not reflect a transformative legacy or a capacity for national reinvention. This reality makes it difficult to interpret their sudden unity as anything other than an alliance of aggrieved interests seeking relevance through political disruption rather than democratic persuasion.
Alongside this coalition effort is a more sophisticated maneuver. It is the deliberate targeting of Nyesom Wike, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory. This is not accidental. In political arithmetic, Wike represents a substantial pillar within the broader coalition that produced the Tinubu presidency. His influence cuts across the South South, the South East, and significant political networks beyond these regions. To weaken Wike is to weaken a considerable portion of President Tinubu’s political support base. The calculation is simple and cold. Remove the ally and the principal becomes exposed.
This explains why the attacks on the FCT minister have been relentless and emotionally charged. They are designed to provoke isolation, induce internal fractures, and compel the President into difficult political choices. However, this strategy rests on a fundamental misreading of the man at the center of power. President Tinubu is not unfamiliar with political plots. He is a student of power, shaped by decades of contestation, negotiation, and survival within Nigeria’s complex political terrain. He understands that leadership is not sustained by panic or appeasement but by clarity, loyalty, and strategic patience.
Those who imagine that President Tinubu will sacrifice a key political ally to satisfy orchestrated outrage fail to appreciate the deeper logic of power. Politics is not governed by noise but by structure. It is not driven by momentary sentiment but by long term calculation. Tinubu knows that once a leader begins to abandon allies under pressure, authority itself begins to dissolve.
The suggestion, in some quarters, that Governor Siminalayi Fubara represents a political alternative capable of replacing Nyesom Wike within the national power equation further exposes the superficiality of the argument. Governance, especially at the highest levels, is not an apprenticeship program. It demands political maturity, institutional memory, and the ability to navigate crises without external tutelage. Comparing a relatively new political actor to a seasoned political operator is not only unrealistic but intellectually dishonest. One is still learning the alphabet of power. The other has long mastered its language.
Beyond individuals, this moment invites a broader philosophical reflection on Nigerian politics. Coalitions built on resentment rarely endure. Power pursued through sabotage often collapses under its own weight. History teaches that nations do not progress when political actors substitute grievance for vision and conspiracy for competence. What endures is not the loudness of opposition but the depth of preparation and the discipline of leadership.
In the final analysis, the storm around the Federal Capital Territory is a mirror reflecting a larger struggle for relevance and survival within Nigeria’s political elite. It is a test of political maturity for all involved. For President Tinubu, it is a familiar terrain, one he has navigated before. For his critics, it may yet become a lesson in the limits of political engineering.
Power, after all, is not merely seized. It is sustained through experience, alliances, and an unspoken understanding of when to stand firm and when to yield. Those who seek to weaken the principal by targeting the ally may soon discover that they have underestimated both.
Metro
Troops repel attack, rescue abductees in Sokoto
Troops of the Nigerian Army have repelled a terrorist attack and rescued abducted civilians during a patrol in Goronyo Local Government Area of Sokoto State.
Details of the operation were made known in a post shared on X on Thursday by security analyst Zagazola Makama, who cited security sources.
According to the post, the troops drawn from 8 Division Garrison and operating from the Forward Operating Base in Goronyo were on a fighting patrol to Gorau village at about 2:50 am on April 21 when they encountered armed terrorists.
On contact, the soldiers engaged the attackers in a gun battle and overpowered them, forcing the terrorists to flee and abandon four kidnapped victims.
According to Makama, preliminary findings indicated that the attackers, numbering about 20, had earlier invaded the village, killing three residents and leaving three others with gunshot injuries.
“The injured victims were quickly evacuated for medical treatment, while the rescued abductees were safely reunited with their families,” Makama wrote.
Security sources said troops have since intensified clearance operations in the area to prevent further attacks and restore calm in the community.
Metro
Two Injured as Police Foil Kidnapping Plot in Ibadan
Two persons sustained gunshot injuries during a failed kidnapping attempt at the Old Kara area of Bodija in Ibadan North Local Government Area of Oyo State.
The incident, which occurred on April 21, 2026, at about 7:50 p.m., comes just days after a similar attack in Onigambari village along the Ijebu-Ode axis in Oluyole Local Government Area, where a victim identified as Dasola was killed.
Confirming the latest attack, the Police Public Relations Officer, Ayanlade Olayinka, said security operatives responded swiftly after receiving a distress call from a resident reporting that about four armed men had invaded a Point of Sale (POS) shop and opened fire.
He said police operatives, working alongside local hunters, quickly moved to the scene and disrupted the attackers’ operation, preventing what appeared to be a coordinated abduction attempt.
During the gun duel that followed, two people were hit by stray bullets. They were rescued and taken to a nearby medical facility, where they are currently receiving treatment and are said to be responding positively.
Olayinka added that efforts are ongoing to track down the fleeing suspects, with intensified bush-combing operations launched in surrounding areas. The Commissioner of Police in Oyo State has also ordered the deployment of additional security personnel to vulnerable locations across the state.
The command reassured residents of its commitment to safeguarding lives and property, urging the public to remain vigilant and report suspicious movements as investigations continue.
Metro
British Grandmother Who Went To Ghana To Try Get Her £1m Savings Back From Scammers K!lled In Car Crash
A British widow d!ed in a car crash in Ghana after she was conned by romance fraudsters out of her entire £1million life savings, an inquest has heard.
According to Mail Online, Janet Fordham suffered fatal injuries in the collision on February 14, 2023, having travelled to Ghana the previous October.
At the time of travelling to Ghana, the 69-year-old was living in a caravan with her son Martin and daughter-in-law Melanie Fordham in Honiton, Devon, after using all of her savings and selling up her home and land.
Mrs Fordham’s problems started when she started using online dating websites in 2017 and fell in love with a romance fraudster who was claiming to be a British Army sergeant working in Syria.
Devon Coroner’s Court heard how Mrs Fordham was conned into sending him around £150,000, but her family are unclear how she transitioned from one fraud to the next.
The inquest heard Mrs Fordham had fallen victim to several online scams over a five-year period that saw her lose her home and life savings.
During this time, the widow sent £140,000 of her family’s money to scammers, withdrew the maximum £500 a day of cash, and even had her car seized to stop her going to ATM machines.
Mrs Fordham’s family desperately tried everything to stop her, while detectives spoke to her about allegations of fraud in 2017, 2020, and 2022. But no matter what everyone tried, the police could not investigate further as Mrs Fordham refused to cooperate.
The retired housekeeper then flew to Ghana in October 2022 to meet a man named Kofi, who claimed he could help her get her money back.
They had become romantically involved and were on their way to get approval from a member of his family for marriage, when the fatal crash happened on Valentine’s Day 2023.
Kofi was driving when the car left the road and crashed, with Mrs Fordham suffering fatal injuries. He later pleaded guilty to driving offences and received a suspended prison sentence and fine, the court heard.
Detective Sergeant Ben Smith, of Devon and Cornwall Police, confirmed there was no evidence of any third-party involvement in Mrs Fordham’s death.
The romance fraud began when Mrs Fordham started online dating in 2017 and met a man claiming to be a British Army sergeant major working in Syria who needed her help to get gold bars to the UK.
‘He was retiring soon to return to the UK. She said they were in love and they were going to buy a house together,’ Melanie said.
‘Janet mentioned nothing about any money at that point, but I remember candidly saying to her that it all seemed a little unbelievable, and the next thing he would be asking for money.
‘I told her categorically not to send him any. Janet had been sending money to him, but we didn’t find out about this until years later. I believe she gave him around £150,000.’
The widow later learned she had been further defrauded by a ‘diplomat’ after her UK bank accounts were frozen.
‘I think she realised that she had been scammed, but initially struggled to accept it,’ her daughter-in-law said.
‘We’re not clear how Janet transitioned from one fraud to the next.
‘We became aware that she transferred money by several means, including bank transfers, wire transfers at the post office, and potentially a travel agent.
‘The banks, post office etc stopped her from using their services, transferring money, because they recognised that it was fraud.’
The inquest heard that another man, Kofi, contacted Mrs Fordham saying he was a doctor in Ghana working part-time in a friend’s mobile phone repair shop.
‘He was working on a phone that saw messages to and from Janet on there. He believed Janet had been scammed,’ Mrs Fordham said.
‘He felt compelled to help her get her money back. So, he took her phone number and made contact.’
Police spoke to Mrs Fordham about Kofi, but officers could not further the investigation due to her lack of engagement.
The court heard Mrs Fordham contacted police again because her mother-in-law was continuing to transfer money abroad using bitcoin and ATMs.
‘Whether she was in so deep, she couldn’t accept it was all gone, she had to keep piling money in the hope of getting something back,’ she said.
‘Whether she genuinely believed what she was being told, we will never know.’
She also borrowed money from other family members, which totalled around £140,000, and was also in arrears on loans and credit cards.
‘Janet wouldn’t tell us much, so we started opening some of her mail and discovered that she had cashed in a chunk of her pension,’ Melanie said.
‘She was withdrawing the maximum £500 a day, we believe to stockpile, and then transferred cash as the banks had stopped her doing electronic transfers.
‘I was very aware that we don’t know everything and there is probably a whole lot more.’
In October 2022, Mrs Fordham flew to Ghana to meet Kofi who she was romantically linked to.
‘As a family, we tried everything to stop her, but she was adamant,’ her daughter-in-law said.
‘I spoke to her doctor, sought legal advice, but because she was of sound mind, albeit brainwashed, she was deemed to have capacity and there was nothing we could do.’
Detective Sergeant Smith said officers had contact with Mrs Fordham about allegations of fraud in 2017, 2020, and 2022.
‘It shows Janet Fordham as a sustained victim of fraud throughout that period,’ he said.
‘It’s believed that Janet has sent a considerable amount of money, estimated at between £800,000 and £1million over that period.
‘As a result, she had used all her savings, sold her home and land, and was living in a caravan with Martin and Melanie in their garden.
‘Police throughout these investigations have endeavoured to do everything they can to persuade Janet not to have any contact with the criminals and not to hand over money.
‘There was no issue with capacity, and that she was making these decisions of her own free will.’
Mr Smith said on the day she died, Mrs Fordham and Kofi were driving from Accra to the Oti region ‘to get approval from a family member for marriage’.
Mrs Fordham suffered fatal injuries in the crash. Philip Spinney, senior coroner for Devon, Plymouth and Torbay, recorded a narrative conclusion.
‘The evidence shows that Janet Fordham lost a considerable amount of money between 2017 and 2022,’ he said.
‘The true figure is not known, but it’s believed to be between £800,000 and £1million.
‘Devon and Cornwall Police investigated these matters, although I should point out that Janet herself did not ever make a formal complaint to the police, nor did she co-operate fully with the police investigation.
‘In October 2022, she travelled to Ghana to meet a man named Kofi. He had agreed to help her try and recover some of the money.
‘The family believed that she also went for romantic reasons. Indeed, it’s believed that she planned to marry Kofi.’
He added: ‘I conclude that Janet Fordham d!ed as a consequence of a head injury that was probably sustained in a road traffic collision.’
Her son Mel said on a Gofundme page set up to fly her body home: ‘Janet lost absolutely everything. The Ghanaian scammers were able to manipulate her and by coercive control, managed to destroy her life.
‘She was no longer the mum and grandmother that her family knew and loved. Before her death, all that she had was taken from her.
‘We tried everything in our power to stop this from happening. We spoke to the bank, her doctor, a solicitor and on multiple occasions the police.
‘But the system very much let us down. Everywhere we turned we were told there was no help.
‘Because she was of sound mind, we couldn’t take control of her finances. All we ever wanted to do was to protect Janet.
‘But because she was of sound mind, although everyone could see she was being controlled, we were absolutely powerless to step in and help.’
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