Opinion
TOYIN AKINOSHO AND HIS PENT-UP RAGE
By Lawal Itodo
I am genuinely amused, bordering on astonishment, at how low some individuals are willing to stoop, and even more entertained by the hastily assembled, yet astonishingly shoddy piece recently penned by Toyin Akinosho.
Looking back with a theatrical eye-roll, it becomes painfully obvious that the man is, once again, flat broke and frantically scavenging for any corner from which he can squeeze a few crumbs for survival.
What he has produced here is nothing short of a monumental disaster—an epic, legendary train-wreck of an article that belongs nowhere but the nearest rubbish bin. Cute attempt, Toyin, but clearly not the work of anyone who bothered to think for more than thirty seconds.
Let us speak plainly: Toyin Akinosho has always lived off others. He has never been a serious thinker, never put in the hard yards for anything he claims to own, and has spent a lifetime hunting for the path of least resistance out of the self-inflicted chaos he calls a career.
A geologist by training, he later morphed into a so-called writer and publisher—purely for the money, of course, and with a generous side helping of petty blackmail—wielding the supposed power of the fourth estate like a cheap cudgel. This pivot came only after he had floundered spectacularly in the pitch-black abyss of grinding poverty, penury, and hunger that swallowed every earlier venture he touched.
No surprise, then, that even at his advanced age he remains a walking joke, a comical relic who, incredibly, cannot even state with certainty how old he actually is—a classic symptom of the intellectually indolent who have nothing better to do than loiter around “cleverly” pilfering other people’s work.
It is precisely this unsavoury habit that recently drove him to lift huge chunks of content straight from the website of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) so he could pad out and sell copies of his rag, the African Oil and Gas Report. And let’s be honest: in an industry that churns out fresh headlines every single day, the best Toyin can manage is stale, recycled, month-old gossip served up in his amateur broadsheet mischievously called Festac News and Community Tabloid.
Sadly for him, he is only ever clever by half. This particular survival hustle has long passed its sell-by date; it has reached its natural limit, slammed into a solid brick wall, and collapsed in a heap.
Who on earth is unaware of the extraordinary, unassailable achievements of the NUPRC and the superlative performance it has delivered over the past two years alone? We are talking about an unbroken string of signature successes and unrivalled pace-setting milestones that crystallised in 2024 as an absolute blockbuster year for the Commission—soaring revenues, massive production increases, and a ferocious investment drive powered by systematic transparency, aggressive containment of oil theft, and the near-elimination of routine gas flaring.
Production has climbed from 1.46 million barrels per day in October 2024 to 1.78 million barrels per day in 2025, with the ambitious Project 1 Million Barrels per Day now firmly on track to deliver an additional full million barrels daily above the baseline.
Is he somehow unaware of the explosive rig-count surge from a pathetic eight active rigs in 2021 to thirty-six today—and heading toward seventy, with more than forty already drilling—putting the Commission comfortably on course to hit its fifty-rig target by the end of 2025?
Does he pretend not to have noticed the revolutionary data and transparency reforms, the upgraded National Data Repository (NDR) now enriched with 11,000 square kilometres of fresh 3D seismic data (part of the monumental 56,000 sq km Awalé Project) plus information from more than 10,000 wells? Or the forthcoming licensing round launching on 1 December 2025, universally praised in advance for being fully digitalised and transparently run? Or the staggering 2024 revenue haul of ₦12.25 trillion—an eye-watering 182% leap over 2023 and a full ₦5 trillion above projection—publicly celebrated by the prestigious Energy Governance Alliance for single-handedly restoring regulatory credibility to Nigeria’s upstream sector?
Do I really need to jog his memory about the masterstroke regulatory reforms anchored on the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) of 2021—reforms that have delivered crystal-clear fiscal terms, investor-friendly processes, and a suite of gazetted regulations on gas flaring, royalties, and production curtailment that industry stakeholders have openly applauded?
While a handful of serial detractors and professional wailers like Toyin Akinosho rush to press with half-baked, poorly researched hatchet jobs, the rest of the world has moved on, showering praise on the NUPRC and restoring rock-solid investor confidence through landmark partnerships with TGS-PetroData, multi-client seismic campaigns, a $20 billion field-development pipeline, and a great deal more besides.
Yes, challenges remain—legacy infrastructural bottlenecks, the enforcement of gas-flaring penalties (₦391 billion collected against a ₦126 billion target), occasional murmurs about data-release timelines—but the Commission is surmounting every single one at speed and repositioning Nigeria as the undisputed data-rich, investment-ready powerhouse not just of Africa’s upstream sector but of the entire global industry. The numbers speak for themselves: deliberate, progressive, and impossible to argue with.
In 2024 alone, revenue hit ₦12.25 trillion—up 182% from ₦4.34 trillion in 2023 and ₦5 trillion above the projected ₦6.93 trillion. The same year delivered an 84.2% year-on-year growth rate—the highest in three years. Crude output averaged 1.65 million barrels per day and continues climbing, propelled by the Project 1 Million Barrels per Day initiative that is targeting 2.5 million barrels per day by 2027.
Seventy-nine ambitious Field Development Plans were approved between 2024 and 2025, unlocking approximately $40 billion in potential investment while driving rig count from eight to sixty-nine by October 2025—a staggering 760% increase that screams renewed investor confidence.
Twenty-four new regulations were gazetted under the PIA, bidding processes went fully digital, gas-flare penalties soared to ₦391 billion, signature bonuses brought in ₦369 billion, and ₦358 billion was disbursed to oil-and-gas host communities, funding 536 projects, calming restiveness, and slashing crude theft from 102,900 barrels per day in 2021 to a remarkable 9,600 barrels per day by September 2025.
For this relentless drive and leadership, the NUPRC has rightly collected a shelf-full of awards in 2024 alone: SERVICOM Overall Best Performing Parastatal, four separate awards including Best Performing PSU Team B, personal recognition for the Chief Executive Engr. Gbenga Komolafe, the Best MDA in Digital Transformation award at the Nigeria GOVTECH Conference (for the game-changing Drill-or-Drop policy that activated 400 dormant fields), the Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme that attracted $2.5 billion in private investment, and, of course, global acclaim for the Project 1 Million Barrels per Day launched in October 2024 at a record 2.7 million barrels per day capacity.
So, Toyin, a word of friendly advice: next time you decide to lift content wholesale from the NUPRC website to sell your little papers overseas, at least try to be a little more artful about it. The Commission’s website and social-media handles remain an impregnable fortress of verified, unassailable fact that no amount of your creative rewriting can dent. By all means keep helping yourself to the material—it’s there, it’s free, and it obviously keeps food on your table and a roof over your family’s head in America. Far better that than exposing your desperation to the whole world with this kind of amateurish outburst.
Attempting to smear the NUPRC today is an exercise in futility; the institution has been run with exemplary competence and transparency these past few years. You and your fellow travellers in the cottage industry of fraud and blackmail would do well to stop stealing and monetising the Commission’s industry data—or at the very least show a little gratitude for the free raw material you have been gifted for years.
Turning your personal frustrations, serial failures, and bottled-up anger into yet another unsellable rant achieves nothing except reminding everyone how generously the same industry you now attack has kept you comfortable: sitting in far-away America, copying and pasting data, and converting it into dollars without ever breaking a sweat.
Perhaps it is time to accept that some stories simply cannot be spun, no matter how loudly you shout.
Itodo is a public affairs analyst writing from Port Harcourt.
Cover
IKOH NDI ABIA 2027: The Maturity Of Time For A Calm, Experience And Winning Leadership In Abia State
By Aaron Mike Odeh
Politics, especially in a developing democracy like ours, is beyond mere political activities and electoral contests. It is fundamentally about leadership, vision, emotional intelligence, capacity, and the ability to inspire confidence among the people. In moments when the destiny of a people stands at a defining crossroads, wisdom demands that political parties and stakeholders place competence, experience and acceptability above sentiments and unnecessary experimentation.
As someone who has actively participated in Abia politics for over twenty-six years, occupying different positions at appointment status, i believe I possess the moral standing and practical experience to speak with clarity on the political future of Abia State and the direction the All Progressives Congress (APC), should take ahead of the 2027 governorship election.
My political journey and Media Consultancy has taken me across the length and breadth of NIGERIA including Abia State. From Arochukwu to Ukwa, from Umunneochi to Ikwuano, I have interacted closely with party leaders, grassroots mobilizers, traditional institutions, youths, women groups and stakeholders across different divides. I have watched governments emerge and fade. I have seen political structures built and dismantled. I have equally studied the expectations, emotions and aspirations of Abia people over the years.
From this wealth of experience and practical evaluation of Abia politics, one fact has remained consistently clear: for APC to genuinely position itself for victory in 2027, the party must present a candidate with political maturity, administrative experience, emotional stability, credibility and the capacity to unite various interests within and outside the party.
Without hesitation, I strongly believe that Chief Henry Ikechukwu Ikoh perfectly fits into this critical expectation.
Chief Ikoh represents a rare blend of humility, experience, consistency and strategic political understanding. In a political environment often dominated by controversies, unnecessary bitterness and divisive tendencies, he has remained calm, focused, approachable and remarkably stable. These qualities may appear ordinary to some people, but in practical governance and political management, they are indispensable virtues that sustain leadership and build confidence among the electorate.
One of the strongest assets Chief Ikoh possesses is his maturity and ability to relate across political, ethnic and social lines. Politics in Abia today requires a leader who can build bridges rather than walls; a leader who understands that governance succeeds better when stakeholders are respected and united under a common vision. Chief Ikoh has demonstrated this quality over the years through his interactions with people across party affiliations and communities.
Beyond his personal qualities, Chief Henry Ikechukwu Ikoh possesses extensive experience in public service and political administration. Leadership is not learned overnight. It is developed through years of service, sacrifice, strategic engagement and practical exposure. Abia State at this moment requires a leader who understands governance, appreciates political realities and possesses the administrative competence to navigate the challenges confronting our people.
Another important factor that distinguishes Chief Ikoh is his consistency of purpose. His aspiration to govern Abia State is not a sudden ambition driven by opportunism or political convenience. Since 2003, he has remained steadfast, focused and committed to his vision for the state. Such consistency speaks volumes about conviction, preparedness and genuine passion for service.
In politics, consistency builds trust. It reassures the people that a leader is not merely pursuing personal ambition but is driven by a long-term vision and commitment to societal development. This is one quality many Abians have come to appreciate in Chief Ikoh.
Furthermore, APC as a party must begin to prioritize electability and acceptability ahead of internal sentiments. Elections are won not merely through slogans, but through strategic calculations, grassroots acceptance and broad-based support. The reality before us is that the people of Abia are yearning for a leadership that is calm, responsible, inclusive and development-oriented. They desire a leader who can listen, unite and inspire confidence across different sectors of society.
Chief Henry Ikechukwu Ikoh possesses these qualities in abundance.
His calm disposition, amiable personality and infectious ebullience naturally attract people to him. He is not known for needless controversies or divisive politics. Rather, he embodies the spirit of maturity and responsible engagement that APC needs to expand its acceptance across Abia State.
The journey toward 2027 should therefore not be approached with bitterness, selfish calculations or divisive tendencies. It should be approached with sincerity, wisdom and genuine concern for the future of Abia State and the success of our great party.
There comes a moment in the life of every people when destiny presents an opportunity that must not be ignored. I strongly believe that moment has come for APC in Abia State.
Indeed, as the Holy Scripture declares, “The time to favour Zion, yea, the set time, has come.” For Abia State, this is the maturity of time to embrace tested experience, political maturity and purposeful leadership.
With deep sense of responsibility and commitment to the progress of our state, I most respectfully appeal to APC stakeholders, leaders and delegates to rally behind Chief Henry Ikechukwu Ikoh and support the vision of IKOH NDI ABIA 2027.
This is not merely about an individual ambition; it is about giving APC the strongest opportunity to win the governorship election and provide purposeful leadership for the good people of Abia State.
The task before us is collective. The future is now. And the time is ripe for a leader with capacity, humility, experience and vision.
THE SET TIME IS NOW!
Aaron Mike Odeh, A Public Affairs Analyst, Media Consultant, Human and Community development advocate wrote from Post Army Housing Estate Kurudu Abuja
Opinion
BOARD ROOM TO TRENCHES: HOW MOHAMMED GONI ALKALI SUSTAINS HIS LEADERSHIP PROWESS
By James Ikuku
Leadership powers reforms, while innovation drives development. Leadership, therefore, is not merely about holding a title or occupying an office, but about functionality, sound decision-making, effective citizen mobilization, and consistent results delivery, especially under pressure during times of upheaval and distress.
A true leader must always remain strategically clear about the chosen direction, execute plans in alignment with that vision, and do so with full accountability—boots on the ground—while delivering tangible outcomes.
Alhaji Mohammed Goni Alkali is not just a leader; he is a leader with a distinct difference. From his Maiduguri office as the Managing Director of the North East Development Commission (NEDC), he meticulously plans the Commission’s operations, which involve the management of billions of Naira, all anchored on comprehensive recovery frameworks.
Yet, he frequently steps out with his boots firmly on the ground across the six states under the Commission’s coverage—Adamawa, Borno, Bauchi, Gombe, Taraba, and Yobe. There, Alhaji Mohammed personally ensures that what is documented on paper is precisely what materializes on the ground.
Each state receives its fair share of the dividends of the Renewed Hope Agenda: schools are constructed or renovated, health centres are equipped and new ones built in underserved communities, and farming communities long devastated by years of Boko Haram insurgency are steadily rebuilt and restored.
These are the defining hallmarks of the leadership of this ubiquitous enigma. From the boardroom to the trenches, Alhaji Mohammed is recreating the NEDC, redefining its priorities, and transforming it into a masterpiece of humanitarian and post-conflict disaster management. His efforts continue to earn consistent applause as he delivers results even at the most challenging conflict-affected points.
Indeed, with a rich background of experience garnered from the private sector, Alhaji Mohammed cannot be taken for granted when it comes to adherence to standard operational procedures, workplace discipline, personal integrity, and an unwavering focus on results. He does not treat the Commission as a mere contract-dispensing agency.
Instead, he runs it as a proactive human conflict interventionist organization whose core target is the full reconstruction and rehabilitation of the entire North East region, alongside a deliberate reduction—if not elimination—of the prevailing level of poverty.
Driven by a strong sense of accountability and boardroom-level rigor, he ensures that every kobo allocated and released to the agency is utilized strictly for the benefit of the people. To achieve this, he mandates that all contracts pass through rigorous due process, maintaining zero tolerance for padding or any form of financial impropriety.
As a grassroots mobilizer, Alhaji Mohammed’s leadership is both seen and deeply felt by the people. Under his watch, roads, bridges, schools, and healthcare facilities have been constructed across all six states, covering their 112 Local Government Areas.
To address the yawning education gaps created by the destruction of schools during the insurgency and the persistent challenge of out-of-school children, Alhaji Goni embarked on an ambitious programme of school construction and renovation.
Through the launch of the ₦6 billion Education Endowment Fund and various targeted programmes for the training and re-training of teachers in Tsangaya and Islamiyya schools, he has successfully infused new life and vigour into an educational system that had almost collapsed under the weight of prolonged insurgency.
To revive food security and agricultural productivity, Alhaji Mohammed activated a comprehensive integrated Agricultural Programme. This initiative distributes farming inputs and tools—including improved seeds, fertilizers, machinery, and extension services—to enhance food production, sustain local economies, and support smallholder farmers who lost their livelihoods during the crisis years.
To cushion the devastating effects of years of insurgency and provide meaningful relief to displaced persons still living in IDP camps, he rolled out multiple targeted interventions. These include the deployment of ₦3 billion worth of ophthalmology equipment to Borno State, among other critical support measures.
A proactive administrator and astute strategist determined to redefine the operations of this humanitarian support agency, Alhaji Goni prioritizes three key pillars of intervention. Working collaboratively as a team, he deliberately delegates roles and responsibilities to the executive directors in charge of humanitarian affairs, operations, and finance.
He promotes the efficient use of collaboration, stakeholder engagement, synergy, and inter-agency cooperation. This approach has brought state governors together, fostering greater community ownership of the various programmes and projects established within their respective states.
In 2025, the Commission effectively utilized the ₦131.34 billion allocation it received, achieving 59% implementation of its ₦290.99 billion budgetary provision. Building on this foundation, Alhaji Mohammed has prioritized infrastructural development, humanitarian support, and socio-economic recovery. These priorities are clearly encapsulated in the Commission’s 2026 budget proposal of ₦244.07 billion.
His administration rests firmly on the twin foundations of transparency and the prudent utilization of resources, with accountability as its central fulcrum. Alhaji Mohammed adopts a pragmatic and innovative approach to the management of the Commission, ensuring proper and deliberate forecasting of needs and outcomes.
In a region where development funds have historically disappeared without trace, it is to Alhaji Mohammed’s credit that his leadership is anchored on truth. He insists on timely and open reporting of budget performance, doing so with honesty even when implementation is only partial.
He demands the even distribution of interventions across all 112 Local Government Areas, maintaining that development must not exist only on budget documents but must be manifest, verifiable, consistent, and impactful.
Reconstruction under his watch is practical, accountable, and people-centric, with emphasis placed on justice rather than partisan politics. For a region long defined by insurgency and years of neglect, this is more than leadership—it is resilience in action.
Little wonder, then, that the 2026 budget of ₦244.07 billion, targeted at critical infrastructure, humanitarian support, and socio-economic recovery, speaks volumes. It prioritizes road construction, relief materials, agricultural skills acquisition, and capacity development for Commission staff. This reflects a man who is both competent and capable of doing what is right.
His insistence on regular field monitoring, transparency, and contextual integration further amplifies the fact that his plan is not a generic ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach, but a progressive, adaptive action designed to rebuild what is broken, restore what has been lost, and prevent any relapse into crisis.
This is where strategy, funding, and legitimacy combine to win the war against underdevelopment. It is where boardroom promises ultimately meet ground realities.
Indeed, Alhaji Mohammed Goni Alkali’s plans are working because he personally bridges both worlds—he does the work in the boardroom and equally commits to the trenches.
For him, politics may have provided the seat, but operational excellence is what keeps him firmly at the table of impactful service. This is the story of a man who has taken policy to reality, who refused to remain only at the top but deliberately moved to the ground-level spaces where decisions are tested by weather, politics, insecurity, and complex human behaviour—and is steadily winning.
Ikuku writes from Abuja
Opinion
TAJUDEEN ABBAS AND HIS ZARIA INDABA FOR TINUBU’S 2027
By Philip Agbese
There is a clear difference between an organic mammoth crowd and a rented crowd. The organic mammoth crowd is a very huge crowd that shows up unsolicited, unpaid, and uncoerced. This crowd grows out from the real, audacious buy-in, not artificial mobilization.
Basically, the structure of an organic mammoth crowd is tied to the attendance of traditional rulers, market women, children, clerics, youth leaders, and grassroots structures. They are there because they have a stake in what is taking place. It is a proof of intactness, and a powerful currency. This is what the South Africans call an “indaba.”
It was indeed an indaba in Zaria, when the Rt. Honourable Speaker, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas, PhD, GCON, made the grand declaration reaffirming support for President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, and the All Progressives Congress (APC), ahead of the 2027 general election.
I must confess that I have not seen this Zaria crowd anywhere in Nigeria before. We all had the mindset that the usual northern crowd died when former President Buhari went to be with the Lord. Alas, I was wrong.
For a man whose performance at the National Assembly has been nothing less than superlative, the rally, turned into an Indaba — a gathering of intent — was however not strange.
Since June 2023, when he became the Hon. Speaker of the 10th Assembly, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas has leveraged the national budget and his connections to carry out gigantic interventions in his Zaria Federal Constituency and across the entire North West.
Given the 25 road projects that have been fully completed and the 18 more that are slated for commencement soon, along with the various police stations built or upgraded across the length and breadth of the constituency, TJ Abbas has spoken for himself. He has demonstrated his avowed commitment to both the fight against insecurity and improved interconnectivity, so much so that the indaba is a powerful symbol.
Few people are aware of the construction of various Primary Health Centres, including those in Bizaro and Dambo wards which have been fully equipped with state-of-the-art medical supplies, all initiated by him. Neither are they informed of the modern ICT Centres in Amaru and Kwarbai A ward.
The people of Abba village had to flow out in their thousands to that historic 10km road march because the reconstruction of the bridge that links them to the rest of the world — which was destroyed since 2014 — remains indelible in their hearts.
In the same vein, the hundreds of thousands of farmers who came out did so because they could easily associate the gathering with the over 80,000 bags of fertilizers, thousands of farm inputs, equipment, and the two-year supply of farm seedlings distributed to them by Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas.
Again, the 1,865 constituents, including those from Zaria Zone 1 and Nuhu Babajo Stadium, who have benefited from the distribution of motorcycles initiated by Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas remain grateful to his gracious magnanimity and had to come out to attest to this.
The thousands of civil servants and non-traditional students, out of the over 500,000 strong voters’ population of one of the strongest constituencies in Nigeria, that turned out did so in response to the National Open University Campus sited in the constituency, which now grants them easy and uninterrupted access to affordable university education. Meanwhile, the hundreds of lawyers who attended did so out of the fact that they have variously benefitted from the College of Legal Studies located in Zaria, an initiative of Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas.
It is indeed noteworthy to state that the thousands of school children and hundreds of teachers came to give their support to a man who brought them a new initiative of enhanced leadership development, enhanced teachers’ productivity through the Teachers’ Education Fund, and also renovated hundreds of schools, changing the learning and teaching environment favourably.
Mr. Speaker will remain an enigma and a very strong formidable political force, not just in Zaria Federal Constituency but in the entire North West because of the over 50 billion Naira allocation that he attracted into the 2025 budget for sundry projects across 8 LGAs in Kaduna North Senatorial District, including ABA, Kasu, College of Education, and Gidan Waya.
Distinctively, using his clout and congruence, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas as the Speaker of the 10th Assembly institutionalised the North West development plan beyond his Zaria home to the entire North West by concretising the Bill that created the North West Development Commission (NWDC). He also ensured the inauguration of the House Committee to oversee it.
He did not stop there but also made sure the Commission has a comprehensive Needs Assessment, inclusive of a 10-year strategic plan. In doing all these, he neither conferred with flesh and blood but instead publicly demonstrated strong deliberate action towards tackling the insecurity, poverty, and infrastructural decay within the region.
As the distinguished Hon. Speaker, Rt. Hon. Abbas remains the instrument for the passage of more Bills than any other House since 1999, and has personally sponsored more legislations on insecurity, agricultural policies, pharmaceutical regulations, and the resolution of ASUU-FG disputes than any other legislator. For these, the people of Zaria Federal Constituency are not just extremely proud of him but are willing to follow his direction.
His grassroots mobilisation and strategic influence in attracting several key federal government appointments and his unique partnership with his state governor, Governor Uba Sani, which has led to the establishment of several unprecedented development projects, programs and interventions in Kaduna and Zaria is not unnoticed by his constituents but has drawn applause, commitment and acceptability from them.
The Zaria crowd was therefore not an accident. They were there because TJ, as he is fondly called, has turned up when nobody did. They came in their thousands because Rt. Hon. Abbas turned the office of the Speaker into a delivery multipurpose vehicle. And now he came with a simple message, which they were all willing to listen to and act upon: “the North, after Buhari, is still here, and we are with President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu into 2027”.
The myth of a ‘Dead’ Northern crowd is only an assumption proven wrong by Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas. The gathering was not a nostalgia to Late President Buhari; it was instead an alignment around a new centre of gravity and President Tinubu is good to go into 2027.
Zaria is symbolic, historic, and intact. It remains the leading centre of learning, commerce, and traditional authority not just in the North but all of Africa. Zaria also represents the North West corridor.
Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas and his quality representation is a currency of inestimable value. A currency of consolidation, and a demonstration and assurance of a secured base before the field becomes crowded.
The ‘Indaba’ worked because it is a consultation, not a campaign. Traditional rulers spoke, clerics prayed effectually and fervently, youth leaders pledged their unalloyed loyalty and unreserved support, fostering a framework of shared responsibility and consensus, which was solidly built on the altar of public trust and acceptability.
A bulldozer, bridge builder, and strategic visioneer, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas resonates as a low-key but effective strategist with strong propensity to align federal projects with northern priorities.
He spoke the language of the Emirate system and the Ulama. He amplified cultural fluency, granting him immediate access and eliminating other federal characters. Without any personal cult or noisy aggrandisement, Rt. Hon. Abbas tied his political identity to President Tinubu, forging a strong administrative agenda that goes beyond self to an institution, and creating a larger buy-in.
Through this Indaba, he has sent a clear, unambiguous signal to conspirators that the North West has a formidable structure which has been reactivated early and will not repeat the mistake of 2023. He has made it clear that this organic northern mammoth crowd, with a majority of youths, was motivated above pecuniary benefits, less dependent on a single man, and strongly Buhari’s base without Buhari, but remains an alignment with continuity, stability, and federal projects.
Indeed, the Zaria Indaba is not a Buhari crowd but a reconstructed Indaba, and Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas is the architect of this organic mammoth crowd of like-minds.
*Hon. Agbese, the Deputy Spokesperson, Federal House of Representatives writes from Abuja
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