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THE SUN SHINES SUNNIER FOR SONNY ECHONO

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By Tunde Olusunle

We had cultivated new relationships during our one-year service to fatherland as participants in the National Youth Service Corps, (NYSC). Beyond encountering fellow alumni of our alma mater, we had made new friends from other institutions across the country, from other ethnicities in our multicultural fatherland. One year, 365 days which we considered eternity when we were inaugurated into the NYSC in August 1985, had suddenly, maybe magically rolled over. It was now time for goodbyes, for extended handshakes, for knuckle bumps and for long huggings. It was time for us to board public commuter automobiles ferrying us to our respective primary addresses as we were poised to face life’s unfathomable and intertwined prospects as young adults.

Undergoing the NYSC in Owerri, Imo State helped me to make new friends. Tony Olofu, (who recently retired as an Assistant Inspector General, (AIG) of Police and Armstrong Idachaba, (who retired as acting Director-General of the National Broadcasting Commission, (NBC), were in this bracket. Since we all are resident in Abuja the nation’s capital, we find to meet, have a drink, reminisce on God’s grace and enjoy laughter. There was Dennis Eboreime who ascended to commanding heights in the banking sector and Dede Mabiaku, protege of Nigeria’s *Afrobeat* purveyor, Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. We may not have been that close those days, but there were a few “youth corpers” as we are known in local parlance, but Owerri was a denominator. We would meet in life latterly, recall each other’s face, exclaim and our hands will be locked in almost inseparable handshakes.

Sonny Sylva Togo Echono more officially known as *S T Echono* is one of such people. Oby Ezekwesili is another. We all were assembled for drills on the improvised parade ground at the *Alvan Ikoku College of Education,* (AICE), Owerri on August 27, 1985, when Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, Chief of Army Staff, (COAS) at the time, upstaged Muhammadu Buhari, the military Head of State. Days before the Babangida palace shove-aside, Andrew Uwe, the formidable and popular central defender had led Nigeria’s Under-21 men’s soccer team to the Soviet Union for the FIFA World Youth Championship, which began on August 24, 1985. Allison Madueke, then a Navy Captain was military Governor of Imo State at the time. AICE, Owerri was the makeshift camp of the NYSC. Nigeria won the bronze medal at the FIFA competition.

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Echono has been the Executive Secretary, (ES) of the Tertiary Education Trust Fund, (TETFUND) for over two years now. He had barely caught his breath upon logging a fulfilling 35 years in the Nigerian public service, when former President Buhari assigned him to TETFUND. On Saturday May 25, 2024, Echono was in Lagos, decorated by *Champion Newspapers* as the *Outstanding Public Servant of the Year.* The investiture was held at the high profile *Eko Hotels and Suites* on Victoria Island, Lagos. The correspondence which conveyed the information of Echono’s nomination for the prized award, TETFUND under his watch is reputed have dexterously pursued the vision of making the organisation an “outstanding public service institution.”

The communication salutes Echono for “focusing on upgrading the status of Nigerian universities and for restoring hope and vibrancy” in our tertiary colleges. Under Echono, according to the document, Nigeria’s universities are today “better empowered to respond to the strategic challenges of university education in Nigeria.” According to *Champion Newspapers,* Echono has shown “strong and effective products character in the leadership of TETFUND in a way that has impacted tremendously on the overall wellbeing of Nigeria’s universities today.” *Champion Newspapers* salutes Echono’s broad and extensive experiences and exposures grossed over time. It recalls his sojourn in the Nigerian public service where he rose to the professional pinnacle of his career, as Permanent Secretary.

S T Echono trained as an architect at the Ahmadu Bello University, (ABU), Zaria, obtaining a bachelors degree in 1983 and a masters in 1985. His generation of architects who studied at ABU, the foremost university in Nigeria’s north include Nigeria’s former water resources Minister, Suleiman Adamu; former deputy governor of Kogi State, Yomi Awoniyi and the Principal Partner of Cosmo Base Consortium Ltd, Benson Ezem. Echono’s class of students in his university, surely sounds like a blessed one against the backdrop of the successes recorded by members of that coterie, in later life. He began his career in the civil service as an architect with Federal Ministry of Works and Housing in 1987. Like professionals who logged more years training in university, notably medics, attorneys, and engineers than most others, Echono got off to a privileged takeoff. He was placed a few grade levels ahead of his peers. As with the culture in the civil service to ensure its employees savour multisectoral experience, Echono was shuffled around a bit. He was for example, in the Budget Monitoring and Price Intelligence Unit, (BMPIU), a creation of the Olusegun Obasanjo presidency.

He notably served in the federal ministries of: Defence; Water Resources; Environment; Agriculture and Power among others, logging loads of vistas on his career trail. Echono can very rightly be described as one of Nigeria’s most seasoned and experienced “technocrat-bureacrats.” Because he was one of the pioneer civil servants who were trained in “public procurement,” he functioned serially and consistently on this schedule across ministries before his appointment as Permanent Secretary in 2014. This was after his 27th year in the employ of the federal government. Echono had stops in Agriculture and Communications between 2014 and 2017. He was thereafter transferred to the Federal Ministry of Education in 2017 which was his duty post for the five concluding years of his 35-year sojourn in the nation’s bureaucracy.

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Early March 2022, Echono was appointed the chief executive officer of TETFUND by Buhari to replace Suleiman Elias Bogoro. For a public officer who spent the concluding five years of his career superintending over the education sector as Permanent Secretary, being called up for his present assignment couldn’t have been more appropriate, more fitting. He stated in an interview he granted last April, that “cartels” were in-charge of TETFUND projects in the past. This gave the establishment a bad name as it was conceived by the public as the habitat of graft and sleaze. Echono moved quickly to introduce reforms to enable the organisation focus on its core objectives and to regain credibility. Under his superintendence, TETFUND has entered into strategic partnerships for the training of Nigerian professionals in vocations critical to the nation’s needs at this point in time. TETFUND has transnational cooperations with Brazil, Britain, the African Union, (AU) and the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, (NESG), in the growth and development of tertiary education and agriculture.

Sonny Sylva Togo Echono was born December 16, 1962 in Otukpo, the sociocultural headquarters of the Idoma nationality of Benue State. He attended St. Mary’s Primary School, Otukpo, before proceeding to St. Theresa and St. Mulumba College in Jos for his high school education. He sat for the advanced levels at the erstwhile Murtala College of Arts, Science and Technology, now Benue State Polytechnic. He proceeded thereafter to ABU, Zaria. Public service has opened him up to further education and training in other institutions including the University of Calabar and the University of Turin, Italy. He was installed as the 28th President of the Nigerian Institute of Architects, (NIA) in 2019, a position he held until 2021.

Back home in the Idoma country, Echono is highly regarded because of his unobtrusive commitment to community development. He is credited for instance with facilitating the domiciliation of a Federal College of Education, (FCE) in Odugbo, in Apa local government area. The institution matriculated its pioneer set of students, 500 in all, in May last year. Echono is reported to have pleaded with his kinsmen to make deliberate sacrifices to ensure the hitch-free operationalisation of the new college. In concert with well-meaning leaders from his part of Benue State, Echono has stridently called for the establishment of at least a unit of well-honed federal government-owned security outfit in his beleaguered constituency. This follows recurring incidents of terrorism by bandits and herdsmen. Specifically, no less than 50 innocents have been felled by blood-thirsty hounds in Apa, Agatu and Otukpo local government areas since the beginning of this year. Homes and farmlands have been mindlessly destroyed in the predominantly agrarian sub-zone, landowners displaced in many instances. For Echono’s conscientious, unblemished service to nation, he has been deservedly garlanded with the national honour of *Officer of the Order of the Niger, (OON),* among other recognitions.

*Tunde Olusunle, PhD, is a Fellow of the Association of Nigerian Authors, (FANA)*

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Drug war: First Lady Senator Tinubu, UNODC, Marwa charge states on community-based interventions(Photos)

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. ‘62,595 suspects arrested, 11,628 convicted and 10.3million kilograms illicit drugs seized in 51 months’

State governments have been charged to embrace and entrench community-based interventions that will curb the impact of the scourge of substance abuse and illicit drug trafficking at the grassroots in line with the National Drug Control Master Plan (NDCMP).

The charge was the highpoint of remarks by the First Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu; Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, (NDLEA) Brig Gen Mohamed Buba Marwa; Country Representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Cheikh Ousmane Toure as well as ECOWAS representative, Dr. Daniel Amankwaah at a training workshop organized by NDLEA for the Nigeria Governors Spouses’ Forum in Abuja on Tuesday 6th May 2025.

In her keynote address to the gathering, Senator Tinubu who was represented by wife of the Deputy Senate President, Hajiya Laila Jibrin Barau commended the NDLEA, and NGSF for the initiative aimed at advancing drug control efforts to the grassroots across the country. She specifically commended Marwa and his team “for courageously confronting the fight against illicit drug abuse and trafficking in the country.”

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According to her, “This training cannot be coming at any better time than now when statistics and daily life experiences are revealing that drugs have infiltrated every nook and cranny of our communities. As a nation, we are confronted with a growing crisis, one that affects the very core of our society, the health, safety, and future of our children.

“The rising tide of drug and substance abuse amongst adolescents is a challenge that we must no longer ignore or tackle in isolation. It requires concerted efforts, community-driven response, one that integrates enforcement, education, family support, and sustained intervention. Our presence at this training testifies to the collective resolve we display in ensuring that we strengthen, secure, and safeguard families and communities.

“Today’s training will ensure that we are adequately armed with the right knowledge, tools, skills, and competencies necessary to effectively tackle this complex issue. It is my hope that this capacity-building workshop, through honest discussions and sharing of best practices, will provide valuable insights into evidence-based strategies for prevention, early intervention, and holistic treatment approaches, especially targeting marginalized and vulnerable communities.
“I urge us to utilize the knowledge gathered at this training to develop viable solutions while collaborating with relevant stakeholders, especially the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, other law enforcement agencies, MDAs, civil society organizations, healthcare providers, educators, and community leaders.

“Let us always bear in mind that as state First Ladies, you owe our people the duty to lead by example, to bear their burden, and share in their pain as we jointly confront drug abuse in our society. I urge us to continue to provide the right direction through prevention initiatives, advocating for those whose voices have been silenced by addiction, providing community interventions to support recovery and reintegrate people into communities after treatment.
“Let us approach the formidable task ahead with humility, doggedness, and commitment to enable us to build communities where our children are protected from harm and empowered to thrive. Together, we can change the narrative, restore dignity to our communities, and ensure a healthier, safer future for all Nigerians.”

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In his welcome address, Marwa noted that the drug scourge obstructs progress and dims prospects in an already beleaguered world. “Regrettably, Nigeria is not immune to this scourge, which steadily infiltrates every stratum of our society. Statistics, academic research, and lived experiences alike reveal a grim reality about illicit drug use and consequences in the country. The magnitude and impact of the drug crisis render the attainment of our national aspiration—improving the health and security of all who dwell within our borders, as enshrined in the National Drug Control Master Plan 2021–2025—a daunting yet inevitable task for any government and people worthy of the name.”

He said it is imperative for all stakeholders at the workshop to adopt urgent, holistic, and inclusive strategies to dismantle the drug menace. According to him, “Over the past four years, the NDLEA has pursued this mission with renewed and unwavering zeal, ensuring that Nigeria’s hard-won global and regional drug control successes are not merely preserved but expanded.

“Permit me to inform this distinguished gathering that over the four years, the NDLEA has deployed substantial resources towards a comprehensive assault on the drug problem, yielding significant outcomes. Under the drug supply reduction mandate—encompassing drug seizures, arrests, prosecutions, and convictions—we recorded the arrest of 62,595 drug suspects (Including 68 drug barons), the seizure of 10,317,137.55 kilograms of assorted drugs, and secured the conviction of 11,628 offenders. Furthermore, 1,330.56553 hectares of cannabis farms were identified and destroyed.

“To ensure a balanced approach in accordance with international best practices, equal emphasis has been placed on drug demand reduction. Between January 2021 and March 2025, a total of 24,375 drug users received counselling and treatment at NDLEA facilities, primarily through brief interventions. Concurrently, 10,501 drug sensitisation programmes were conducted nationwide under the auspices of the War Against Drug Abuse (WADA) social advocacy campaign, reaching diverse target groups within communities. In parallel, a remarkable 3, 843, 789 participants were mobilized to partake in these enlightenment initiatives undertaken across the nation.”
He charged the stakeholders not surrender to despair over the menace of drug abuse. “As patriots and vanguards of our nation’s well-being, it falls on us to strengthen our resolve, to move with deliberate speed towards practical and lasting resolutions that will, God willing, break the vicious cycle of drug abuse. This capacity building event represents a stride, small though it may seem, in the proper direction.

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“Since it is at the community level that the burden of the drug menace is most acutely felt, it is vital that stakeholders, including all of us gathered here today, address the different dimensions of the problem from a community-centred perspective. This gathering must strive for common ground, developing indigenous and pragmatic solutions that go beyond mere statistics and harrowing headlines, addressing instead the real and harrowing human toll of drug abuse.”

He expressed confidence that the training will strengthen capacities, harness community resources, and unlock the potential needed to formulate and implement evidence-based interventions that will salvage and rejuvenate every segment of beleaguered communities. “Let us, as frontliners, ever remember: the cost of inaction is infinitely higher than the cost of collective action. Your Excellencies, your roles as mothers, changemakers, and drivers of the State Drug Control Committees (SDCC) place upon you a sacred trust—a responsibility not to be borne lightly. Through your ingenuity, your states may yet emerge as shining examples, immortalised in gold as bastions of hope that defied the tides of darkness.

“The SDCCs remain a potent platform for fostering multisectoral collaboration in the crucial task of drug demand reduction at the state level. I must fervently implore you to ensure the establishment, strengthening, and revitalisation of these Committees across your respective states. Let us always remember that the value of these training events lies not in the richness of their content alone, but in the continued motion and effectiveness of the SDCCs—moving resolutely towards our collective aspiration of a drug-free, resilient Nigeria”, he added.
Also speaking at the workshop, UNODC Country Rep Cheikh Ousmane Toure stated that “If the root of this crisis lies in our neighborhoods, schools, and homes, then the solution must too. The National Drug Control Master Plan and the WADA initiative remind us of that national framework alone cannot heal fractured communities. Lasting change begins when states and local governments own this fight.”

He reminded the first ladies that their influence transcends politics, adding that “you are the custodian of trust in your states. When you speak, community listens. When you act, local governments follow. Today, I urge us to channel this unique power into three pillars of action.

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Number one, state-led resource mobilization. Every state must prioritize dedicated budget for prevention and treatment. This means establishing a state-specific drug control task force to align with NDLEA’s national efforts, allocating local government funds to build community drop-in centres, safe space for counseling, and care within walking distance of those in need.”

The UNODC chief stated further that states must adopt evidence-based programmes to their cultural contexts, and decentralize treatment access. The head of ECOWAS Drug Prevention and Control Division, Dr. Daniel Amankwaah spoke in same light in his goodwill message, urging state governments to invest in prevention and treatment efforts at the state and community-levels.

Experts who served as resource persons during the technical session of the workshop include: Dr. Martins Agwogie, Prof. Akintunde Oyedokun, Dr. Akanidomo Ibanga, Dr. Kunle Adeshina, Dr. Abubakar Salami, Dr. Kunle Adeshina and Dr. Ngozi Madubuike.

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Court bans Nnamdi Kanu’s in-law from 3 proceedings over live streaming

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Robert Imoh by Robert Imoh May 6, 2025
Court bans Nnamdi Kanu’s in-law from 3 proceedings over live streaming

The Federal High Court in Abuja, on Tuesday, banished Mrs Favour Kanu, wife of Prince Fineboy Kanu, the younger brother to Nnamdi Kanu for streaming the proceedings of the court life on her Facebook page.

Kanu, the leader of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), is being prosecuted by the Federal Government for alleged terrorism charge.

Justice James Omotosho, who gave the order, after Mrs Favour admitted engaging in the act and apologised to the court, held that Mrs Favour would have been charged for contempt of court.

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Although Kanu’s lawyer, Chief Kanu Agabi, SAN, also apologised on her behalf, Justice Omotosho insisted that Mrs Favour would be barred from three proceedings.

The judge expressed surprise that despite that Mrs Favour’s phone was confiscated on the last adjourned date when she was caught recording him, she still went ahead to post the video online.

” I want to hear from her. Were you not the one that I took your phone?

“I did not give order to forfeit that phone. I don’t know if she might be a wife to my brother (Nnamdi Kanu,” the judge said, but Prince told the judge that she is his wife.

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The judge, who cautioned against any act that could cause delay in the trial, assured all parties in the case that justice would be served.

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Defence minister confirms over 8,000 terrorists, bandits wasted under Tinubu’s admin

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The Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle, has announced that over 8,000 terrorists and bandits were neutralised across Nigeria in 2024 under the leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

Matawalle attributed the improved security outcomes to renewed strategic military operations and the focused leadership brought by the Tinubu administration.

In addition to the killings, security forces reportedly arrested more than 11,600 suspected criminals and recovered over 10,000 illegal firearms nationwide.

These figures were contained in a statement released Monday by Patience Ituke, on behalf of the Ministry of Defence’s Director of Information and Public Relations.

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Commending the President’s reform agenda, Matawalle expressed confidence that Tinubu’s efforts are laying the groundwork for national progress and may position him favorably for re-election in 2027.

“Bello Matawalle lauded President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for his transformative reforms, asserting that these initiatives will pave the way for a brighter future for Nigeria and potentially secure Tinubu’s re-election in 2027,” the statement noted.

The minister outlined several major accomplishments under the current administration, particularly in the defence sector.

The neutralisation of over 8,000 terrorists and bandits, arrest of 11,600 suspected criminals and recovery of more than 10,000 illegal weapons.

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He also highlighted the establishment of the Multi-Agency Anti-Kidnap Fusion Cell as a significant step in strengthening coordination among security agencies to combat kidnapping.

Matawalle further cited the creation of the Ministry of Livestock Development as a strategic move to boost agricultural productivity and reduce grain prices, particularly in northern Nigeria.

“The Ministry of Livestock Development is harnessing the agricultural potential of the region, boosting the economy, and improving livelihoods,” he said.

On infrastructure, the minister mentioned ongoing road construction projects and upgrades to the nation’s transportation networks. He believes these efforts will drive economic growth, especially in underserved communities.

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While confident in the President’s record so far, Matawalle noted that Tinubu’s chances for a second term would ultimately depend on the sustained momentum of these initiatives.

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