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The Girl Child: She Is Not Just a Girl — She Is the Future
By Amb. Dr. Ogochuku Okekpolo
UN Eminent Ambassador | Gender Priority Strategy Ambassador | Certified Sustainability Advocate
Today, as the world celebrates the 2025 International Day of the Girl Child under the theme “The girl I am, the change I lead: Girls on the frontlines of crisis,” I am reminded of something powerful: the girl child is not just a girl — she is the future.
When you give a girl a voice, she changes the conversation. When you give her a platform, she changes her community. And when you give her a chance, she changes the world.
I speak not just as a woman, but as a Nigerian woman, a mother, and an advocate who has walked this journey. I’ve seen young girls rise from quiet corners into bold spaces of influence. I’ve seen brilliance unfold when they are supported, mentored, and believed in.
The truth is, girls are not waiting for the future; they are already creating it. In classrooms, communities, and even conflict zones, they are standing tall — leading with courage, creativity, and clarity of purpose.
But here’s the catch: for every girl who shines, there are many more whose dreams are silenced by poverty, cultural bias, early marriage, or lack of opportunity. And that is where we all come in — parents, governments, schools, communities, private sector, and individuals.
Investing in the girl child is not charity — it’s smart strategy. Every empowered girl grows into a woman who transforms families, drives economies, strengthens communities, and builds nations.
Let’s raise girls who are not afraid to dream. Let’s teach them to think boldly, speak fearlessly, and lead wisely. Let’s create safe spaces where their talents can blossom and their ideas can shape the future.
As a Gender Priority Strategy Ambassador and UN Eminent Ambassador, I believe this is not just a global conversation — it is a national responsibility. Nigeria must rise to give every girl equal access to education, technology, healthcare, safety, and leadership opportunities.
So, today, I celebrate every Nigerian girl — from the rural villages to bustling cities — whose voice, though small, carries the power to change the world.
She is not just a girl. She is a leader in the making. She is the future.
Let us not just celebrate her today. Let us invest in her every day. Because when the girl child rises, Nigeria rises.
News
JUST IN: New Defence Minister, Musa, vows to secure Nigeria
By Prosper Olayiwola
Newly sworn-in Minister of Defence, General Christopher Musa (rtd), on Thursday vowed to ensure a safer and more secure Nigeria, saying the outpouring of goodwill from citizens since his nomination and confirmation has strengthened his resolve to deliver results.
Speaking to journalists at the State House shortly after taking his oath of office before President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the former Chief of Defence Staff said Nigerians can look forward to a future where they go about their daily lives without fear of criminal elements.
“I want to use this medium to appreciate all Nigerians. Nigerians have shown me love, and I will guarantee them that I am going to work, whatever it takes, to ensure that Nigeria is secured,” he said.
General Musa, returning to a sector he once led as the country’s top military officer, said his immediate priority would be to reinvigorate the defence architecture and strengthen collaboration among all security agencies.
“My immediate priority is to make sure that defence takes its place fully in the country. The synergy between the armed forces and other security agencies, and all Nigerians being carried along, as we have always said, security is everybody’s responsibility,” he stated.
According to him, rebuilding and sustaining that synergy will be central to the administration’s push for lasting peace.
“It is that synergy that we need to build on and work on, and that’s what we’re going to do. I can assure you, within the shortest possible time, Nigerians will see results,” the minister added.
On his briefing with President Tinubu, Musa said the President was unequivocal in his directive that Nigeria must be secured to enable citizens to live normally again.
“He reiterated his mind on the aspect that we must make sure Nigeria is secured. Nigerians should go back and sleep with their eyes closed, go back to their farms, and schools should open without being molested,” he told reporters.
Musa said all efforts going forward will align with President Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda, which aims to create a secure environment for economic growth, education, agriculture, and community life.
“Everyone is being carried together to make sure that Nigeria continues to grow in line with the Renewed Hope programme of Mr. President,” he said.
News
Seven Suspected Bandits Nabbed Along Benin–Agbor Road in Edo State
Seven suspected bandits were nabbed along the Benin–Agbor Road in Edo State during stop-and-search operations, security sources have confirmed.
According to sources, the suspects, all identified as Fulani youths, were intercepted after being offloaded from a truck at around 6:00 p.m. on 2 December 2025. A search of their mobile phones reportedly revealed pictures of assault rifles, including AK-47s.
During interrogation, the suspects claimed they had traveled from Adamawa State. Investigations are ongoing to recover any actual firearms and to determine their possible involvement in criminal activities.
Security agencies have urged members of the public to report any suspicious movements to help prevent criminal acts in the area.
News
Finally , Appeal Court bars VIO from stopping, impounding cars
The Court of Appeal in Abuja has upheld a Federal High Court ruling from October 4, 2024, that prohibits the Vehicle Inspection Office (VIO) from stopping, impounding, or seizing vehicles, as well as imposing fines on motorists.
The appellate court’s decision affirmed the lower court’s ruling, dealing a significant blow to the agency’s enforcement powers.
A three-member panel of the appellate court delivered a judgment on Thursday, resolving the three issues identified for determination against the appellant, the Directorate of Road Traffic Services, thereby upholding the lower court’s decision.
Justice Oyejoju Oyebiola Oyewumi, who delivered the lead judgment, held that the appeal was without merit. She awarded a cost of N1million against the appellant and in favour of the respondent, a rights activist and public interest attorney, Abubakar Marshal.
Previously, the Abuja Division of the Federal High Court had ruled that the Directorate of Road Services (widely known as VIO) should cease confiscating vehicles or imposing fines on Nigerians over road traffic violations.
Justice Nkeonye Evelyn Maha said while delivering judgment in FHC/ABJ/CS/1695/2023 on October 2, 2024, that the notorious road traffic inspectorate was not legally equipped to seize vehicles or impose severe sanctions on motorists.
The judgment, which followed a lawsuit by rights attorney Mr Marshal of Falana and Falana Chambers, significantly pruned the powers of one of the country’s most dreaded road traffic enforcers and brought respite to millions of motorists across the country.
The order did not apply to the Federal Road Safety Corps, which has operated for decades as the largest body of road traffic marshals in Nigeria.
In her judgment, Ms Maha said VIO officers “are not empowered by any law or statute to stop, impound, confiscate the vehicles of motorists and or impose fine on motorists.”
Subsequently, the judge entered an order of perpetual injunction restraining the VIO and its agents, privies, allies or anybody acting on its behalf from further violating the rights of Nigerians to freedom of movement, presumption of innocence and right to own property without lawful justification.
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