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Tinubu draws the line, govs face governance, leave political matters for leaders-Development Expert, Oluwafemi urges politicians
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… insists Nigeria must stop the lie
…hails TInubu for clarifying the situation
A development expert and President of Africa Development Studies Centre, ADSC, Sir Victor Oluwafemi has Nigerian Governors to face governance and leave political matters to leaders.
Oluwafemi made this disclosure in a statement on Wednesday declaring that: “President Bola TInubu has drawn the line by declaring that governors should face governance and leave political matters to leaders.
The seasoned development expert further explained that: “Nigeria’s political instability is not accidental. It is the consequence of a long-standing refusal to separate executive authority from political leadership.
“The Rivers State situation has merely exposed a problem that exists across the federation. In this context, the intervention by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is not only timely but necessary, and it deserves national commendation.
“The President is reported to have made his position clearly known to all parties by stating that Nyesom Wike remains the political leader in Rivers State, while firmly directing that any impeachment plot against the sitting governor, Siminalayi Fubara, must stop immediately.
” This statement does two important things at once. It acknowledges political reality, and it protects constitutional order.
Nigeria has lacked this clarity for too long.
“Let us be honest with ourselves. Being elected governor does not automatically confer political leadership.
“A governor is the chief executive of a state, entrusted with governance, policy execution, and service delivery.
“Political leadership is a different concept entirely. It is built over time through party structures, political machinery, coalition control, succession planning, and influence that often transcends a single electoral cycle.
“In many Nigerian states, these two roles do not reside in the same individual, and stability only exists where this reality is accepted.
“Borno State is a clear example. While Babagana Zulum is the elected governor and the executive authority, no serious political decision of consequence in Borno can be taken without recourse to Kashim Shettima.
” The Vice President remains the political anchor of Borno politics. The governor governs, but political direction and structure remain firmly rooted elsewhere.
“Lagos State provides an even more widely accepted illustration. Babajide Sanwo-Olu is the governor and runs the executive machinery of Lagos.
“Yet it is universally acknowledged that the political direction, discipline, and strategic decisions that define Lagos politics are shaped by the enduring leadership of Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
“This understanding has not weakened Lagos State. On the contrary, it has produced political stability, coherence, and continuity because roles are clearly defined and respected.
“Katsina State during the era of the late Muhammadu Buhari reinforces the same truth. Governors administered Katsina, but Buhari dictated the political tone of the state.
“No governor took core political decisions without reference to him. Governance continued smoothly because political reality was not denied.
“These examples reveal an uncomfortable but necessary truth Nigerian political parties must accept. In some states, the governor may indeed be the most powerful political actor.
“In other states, the governor is the product of a political structure built, financed, defended, and sustained by someone else. Where that is the case, it is dishonest and destabilising for a governor to emerge from that structure and then declare himself the unquestioned political leader simply because he now occupies office.
“If a political structure made you governor, office does not erase political lineage. Executive power does not cancel political reality.
” When governors attempt to collapse political leadership into executive authority, the result is almost always confrontational, legislative sabotage, betrayal, and governance paralysis.
“This pattern has repeated itself across Nigeria, and the consequences are well known.
“Political parties must therefore stop misleading the public by proclaiming governors as automatic political leaders in all circumstances.
“A governor is the executive. Nothing more, nothing less. Political leadership is separate, contextual, and rooted in structure and influence. Confusing the two is one of the primary reasons Nigeria continues to experience unnecessary political crises and democratic instability.
“President Tinubu’s intervention in Rivers State deserves commendation because it restores this long-ignored distinction.
“By making his position known to both parties, he has reaffirmed political truth while drawing a firm red line against the weaponisation of impeachment. This is statesmanship. This is political maturity. This is leadership.
This statement is issued by Sir Victor Walsh Oluwafemi, KJW, international development expert, reputation architecture builder, and President of the Africa Development Studies Centre. It reflects a long-standing position grounded in governance reform, political stability, and institutional integrity across Africa and beyond. Nigeria must stop confusing titles with authority, and power with legitimacy. Governors must govern. Political leaders must lead politically. Democracy only stabilises when each understands and respects their lane.
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APC plans to release El-Rufai after 2027 election – ADC
The African Democratic Congress, ADC, on Thursday alleged that the All Progressives Congress, APC, plans to release former Kaduna State governor, Nasir El-Rufai after the 2027 elections.
ADC’s spokesman, Bolaji Abdullahi said the APC knows that the opposition would be stronger if El-Rufai is released before the election.
Featuring on Channels Television’s Politics Today, Abdullahi insisted that the ADC is against making it difficult for El-Rufai to be granted bail.
He said: “ADC is not opposed to anybody who has a legitimate case to answer from being prosecuted but when you are holding someone in custody for bailable offences and you proceed to arraign that person and make impossible conditions for bail to meet, it creates room for us to believe that you deliberate intend to hold this person in perpetuity.
“What I can tell you is that the thinking within the ADC is that the APC government has concluded that they will not release Mallam Nasir El-Rufai until after the election.
“That’s what we believe, that’s the plan, and that’s what they plan to do. They know that with Mallam Nasir El-Rufai freed, the opposition is stronger and they know that if they release him, he would remind them of certain things that they would rather forget.
“We in the opposition believe that they are doing everything to make sure that El-Rufai remains in custody until after the election.”
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EFCC Arraigns Miyetti Allah Leader Bodejo Over Alleged $2.33m Money Laundering
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arraigned the leader of Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, Bello Bodejo, before Justice Inyang Edem Ekwo of the Federal High Court, Abuja, for alleged fraud.
Bodejo was arraigned on a 12-count charge bordering on alleged money laundering to the tune of $2.33 million.
At the day’s proceedings, the prosecution counsel, Wahab Shittu, drew the attention of the court to a 12-count charge application dated June 24, 2026 and filed June 25, 2026, urging the court to allow the defendant to take his plea, to which the judge granted his request.
He pleaded not guilty to the charges, following which the prosecution counsel, Shittu, asked the court for a trial date and for the defendant to be remanded in the custody of the Nigeria Correctional Service.
Counsel for the defence, Ahmed Raji, however, prayed the court to admit his client to bail in respect of his bail application, filed on June 30, 2026.
The bail application was, however, opposed by the prosecution counsel, who drew the attention of the court to his counter-affidavit. He pointed out that the defendant is a public risk, as the Department of State Security Services (DSS) is on the lookout for him, and that being an influential person, he may manipulate the witnesses and the progress of the case.
Justice Inyang Ekwo ordered that he be remanded at the EFCC’s holding facility and adjourned the matter till July 20 for ruling on the bail application.
Count one of the charge reads: “That you, Bello Abdullahi Bodejo (male, adult), on or about the 11th day of January 2022, at Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, did knowingly and wilfully, without lawful authority or excuse, accept a cash payment of the sum of One Hundred Thousand United States Dollars (USD $100,000.00) in physical currency from one Sa’idu Abubakar, a former Accountant-General of Bauchi State who is currently in the lawful custody of the Nigeria Police Force, which sum exceeded the statutory cash transaction threshold of Five Million Naira (N5,000,000.00), prescribed under Section 1(a) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 (as amended), without routing the said transaction through a financial institution as required by law, and you thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 16(1)(d) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2011 (as amended) and punishable under Section 16(2)(b) of the same Act.”
Count four reads: “That you, Bello Abdullahi Bodejo (male, adult), on or about the 7th day of February 2024, at Abuja, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, did knowingly and wilfully, without lawful authority or excuse, accept a cash payment of the sum of Nine Hundred and Eighty Thousand United States Dollars (USD $980,000.00) in physical currency from one Sa’idu Abubakar, a former Accountant-General of Bauchi State, who is currently in the lawful custody of the Nigeria Police Force, which sum exceeded the statutory cash transaction threshold of Five Million Naira (N5,000,000.00) prescribed under Section 2(1)(a) of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022, without routing the said transaction through a financial institution as required by law, and you thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 19(1)(d) of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022 and punishable under Section 19(2)(b) of the same Act.”
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Insecurity: Senate Approves N403.1bn Police Trust Fund Budgets For 2025, 2026
The Senate has approved a total of ₦403.1 billion for the Nigerian Police Trust Fund to strengthen policing and support the fight against terrorism, kidnapping, and other security challenges across the country for two consecutive years.
The upper chamber approved ₦170.1 billion for the Police Trust Fund’s 2025 fiscal year, as well as ₦233 billion for the 2026 fiscal year.
The approved 2026 budget covers personnel costs, capital projects, and overhead expenditures aimed at enhancing the operational capacity of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF).
Lawmakers expressed optimism that the funding will improve the provision of critical equipment, infrastructure, training and other resources needed to bolster security operations and address the country’s growing security concerns.
The move comes amid a rising spate of crime across Nigeria, with citizens calling for authorities to tighten security in the nation.
Tinubu Seeks Senate’s Approval For Criminal Justice Reform Bill
Meanwhile, President Bola Tinubu has transmitted a legislative proposal to the Senate seeking to reform the country’s criminal justice system through the repeal and reenactment of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA).
The proposed legislation seeks to repeal the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2015, and replace it with the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, 2026, as part of efforts to strengthen the country’s criminal justice framework.
A key provision of the bill is the establishment of a criminal justice monitoring council to oversee the implementation of the law in courts within the FCT and other federal courts across the country.
In a communication to the Senate during plenary, President Tinubu said the proposed legislation is designed to address procedural gaps and long-standing challenges that have hindered the speedy dispensation of justice.
According to the President, the bill also seeks to align Nigeria’s criminal justice system with emerging developments by promoting the use of technology, introducing innovative measures and enhancing the effective implementation of the law by relevant institutions.
The proposed legislation is to undergo legislative consideration by the Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights, and Legal Matters.
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