Headlines
Atiku Criticises Tinubu Government, Says Ransom Now Part Of Nigerians’ Household Budgets
Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has raised alarm over the worsening insecurity in Nigeria, declaring that ransom payments have now become a regular item in household budgets. He accused the Bola Tinubu administration of celebrating debt statistics while Nigerians struggle with hunger, fear, and collapsing livelihoods.
Atiku’s statement, released through his aide Phrank Shaibu, came in response to recent claims from the Presidency that Nigeria’s debt levels compare favourably with other African nations. He described the comparison as detached from reality, arguing that ordinary citizens are more concerned about survival than abstract figures.
According to Atiku, families across Nigeria now live under constant threat of kidnappers and bandits. He painted a grim picture of communities where road travel is a gamble, villages are attacked with disturbing frequency, and parents dread late-night calls announcing the abduction of loved ones. “It is insulting that while Nigerians are withdrawing children from school and skipping meals, the Presidency is busy celebrating debt numbers as if borrowing itself were an achievement,” he said.
The former vice president linked the insecurity crisis directly to Nigeria’s food shortages. He noted that farmers have been driven off their lands by armed gangs, leaving vast territories under the control of terrorists. This, he argued, has crippled food production, triggered soaring prices, and worsened malnutrition. “The inevitable result is what Nigerians are witnessing today — astronomical food prices, hunger, and rising anger among citizens abandoned by their government,” he added.
Atiku acknowledged that borrowing can be useful when tied to productive investments such as infrastructure and job creation. However, he insisted that under Tinubu, borrowing has only deepened poverty and insecurity. He accused the government of financing consumption and wasteful lifestyles instead of investing in projects that improve citizens’ welfare. “No nation prospers by borrowing to sustain policy failures. Nigerians see no link between the rising debt profile and any improvement in their daily lives,” he said.
He also accused the administration of relying on propaganda to distract citizens from economic mismanagement. Recalling his time in government with former President Olusegun Obasanjo, Atiku highlighted reforms that freed Nigeria from Paris Club debt and restored international confidence. He contrasted that with the current situation, where debt has ballooned without tangible benefits.
“It is tragic that a government which inherited a struggling but manageable economy has plunged the nation into deeper debt, deeper poverty, and deeper insecurity within such a short period,” Atiku said. He dismissed the Presidency’s debt comparisons as “statistical gymnastics” irrelevant to ordinary Nigerians.
For Atiku, the real questions are whether food is affordable, whether children are safe, whether businesses can survive, and whether farmers can return to their lands. He argued that under Tinubu, the answers are increasingly bleak. “Nigerians do not care about debt ratios. They care about survival, and sadly, the future looks more uncertain by the day,” he concluded.
Atiku urged the government to abandon propaganda and confront Nigeria’s harsh realities with sincerity and competence. He called for urgent action to restore security, revive food production, and ease economic hardship before the country slips further into instability.
His remarks reflect growing frustration among Nigerians who face daily threats from kidnappers and bandits while struggling with inflation and unemployment. The image of ransom payments becoming part of household budgets underscores the depth of the crisis. For many families, survival now means setting aside money not only for school fees and rent but also for the possibility of paying kidnappers to free loved ones.
Atiku’s intervention adds to mounting pressure on the Tinubu administration to deliver concrete solutions. With insecurity spreading and economic hardship worsening, the government faces a critical test of leadership. For Nigerians, the demand is clear: less propaganda, more action, and a genuine commitment to restoring hope in a country where despair has become the norm.
Headlines
FCT Security Failure: Byazhin Demands Action as Locals Forced to Fund Own Defence
In order to address the rising level of insecurity in their community, residents of Byazhin in the Federal Capital Territory’s (FCT) Bwari Area Council have demanded immediate government action.
During a visit to the village on Monday, they made the request in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).
According to NAN, some locals were observed removing overgrown plants from residential areas in an attempt to increase visibility and get rid of potential criminal hiding places.
They noted that the security situation had changed their daily routines, with their movement being restricted, especially at night, and that the exercise was intended to supplement current security efforts and make the community safer. Some locals have temporarily moved to safer areas with their family.
One of the impacted residents, Mrs. Christiana Ugo, claimed that she and her family were compelled to leave their house as they no longer felt safe.
“We fled our house because we were worried about what would occur. Until things get better, my kids and I are staying at my sister’s house.
“We hope we can go back home soon and live fearlessly,” she stated.
Ugo stated that while leaving their house was a tough choice, her family’s safety could not be compromised.
Another local, Stephen, also referred to as Papa Elijah, recalled a recent kidnapping and claimed that the victim was freed following the payment of a ransom.
In order to discourage criminal activity, Stephen further claimed that suspected kidnappers operate out of a big rock behind the neighbourhood and urged the authorities to set up a permanent security presence there.
He claims that by planning night patrols, the community has increased local security operations.
Speaking as well, resident Mr. Oluwa Deji stated that many homeowners had opted to stay in the neighbourhood despite security worries because it was not an option for them to forsake buildings they had spent years creating.
Deji observed that locals had decided to continue cooperating and supporting neighbourhood vigilante organisations in the hopes of long-term government action.
According to Mr. Adekunle Adewale, the community’s leader, there have been a few security-related events in the region, such as attempted invasions by suspected herders.
He said that residents had increased internal security by hiring security guards and setting up vigilante patrols three times a week. He also mentioned that monthly security meetings were held to discuss security tactics and examine developments.
When situations surpassed the capabilities of local volunteers, Adewale observed that the community continued to work closely with the police.
However, he voiced concerns about what he called an insufficient government presence, pointing out that the Byazhin Development Association was primarily responsible for funding security measures, infrastructure for energy, and other development projects.
He urged the government to bolster community security and upgrade access routes, arguing that improved infrastructure and ongoing security measures will further improve property and life safety.
The Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) and pertinent security agencies were urged by the locals to improve surveillance, step up routine patrols, and take aggressive steps to safeguard people and property. (NAN)
Headlines
SSCE Fee Hike: Government Must Balance Cost Recovery with Access to Education
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Can Nigeria’s drone industry deliver Africa’s defence sovereignty
Military manufacturing may be growing, but defence sovereignty depends on far more than production.
Across Africa, the ability to defend borders, monitor territory and protect critical infrastructure remains heavily dependent on foreign suppliers. Turkish drones patrol borders, Chinese surveillance systems monitor cities and Russian fighter jets form the backbone of several air forces.
For decades, African militaries have turned abroad for critical defence technologies, leaving the continent largely positioned as a buyer rather than a producer.
An Abuja-based start-up is attempting to change that equation.
Terra Industries, founded in 2024 by Nathan Nwachuku and Maxwell Maduka, both in their early twenties, designs and manufactures drones, autonomous surveillance towers and unmanned ground vehicles from facilities in Abuja and Accra.
Unlike companies that primarily assemble imported components, Terra says it develops its own software, airframes, propellers and lithium-ion battery packs, with more than 70 percent of its inputs sourced locally.
The company says its systems are currently used to protect infrastructure valued at approximately $11bn, including power plants, lithium and gold mines, oil refineries and other strategic assets across eight African countries and Canada.
Building capability
The shift from importing security technology to producing it locally has become an increasingly important debate across Africa. Governments facing armed groups, porous borders, maritime insecurity and attacks on critical infrastructure are searching for faster and more adaptable solutions.
Terra’s move from private infrastructure security into engagements with Nigeria’s defence institutions reflects that changing environment. The company says its systems are designed to address challenges ranging from maritime surveillance and border monitoring to the protection of energy and mining assets.
![The Archer drone, developed by Terra Industries, is part of a new generation of locally manufactured military technology emerging across Africa [Terra Industries]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/IMG_4128-1-1783618110.jpeg?w=770&resize=770%2C580&quality=80)
“Coastal states in West Africa are focused on maritime surveillance because of piracy and illegal fishing in the Gulf of Guinea,” chief executive Nathan Nwachuku told Al Jazeera. “States dealing with insurgency and porous borders want persistent aerial surveillance and a rapid-response capability. Others are looking at protection for pipelines, power and energy infrastructure, and mining assets, the same problems we started solving in Nigeria.”
The company is now preparing for a larger regional footprint. Nwachuku confirmed that Terra’s second production facility in Ghana will become Africa’s largest drone manufacturing hub, with an annual production capacity of 50,000 units by 2028.
“Our long-term ambition goes beyond the continent because the threats our systems are designed to address exist across the Global South,” he said. “Governments in South Asia and South America face them too, and they face the same dependency on foreign suppliers. We intend to serve them as we grow.”
Investor confidence
The scale of investment behind Terra reflects growing interest in Africa’s emerging defence technology sector. The company has raised $34m in seed funding, which it describes as one of the largest early-stage funding rounds in African technology.
The investment was led by 8VC, the venture capital firm founded by Palantir Technologies co-founder Joe Lonsdale, alongside Lux Capital and Valor Equity Partners, investors behind companies such as Anduril and SpaceX.
“The round closed in under two weeks, which is rare even by global standards,” Tage Kene-Okafor, Terra Industries’ director of communications, told Al Jazeera. “But what has been more exciting is our cap table, where we have the likes of 8VC, Lux Capital and Valor Equity Partners, investors that have backed companies shaping the future of defence and advanced manufacturing globally.”
Security imperative
The interest in companies like Terra comes as drones become increasingly central to conflicts across Africa. In the Sahel, inexpensive commercial drones have moved from surveillance tools to weapons used on the battlefield, creating new challenges for militaries that often lack effective counter-drone capabilities.
According to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED), Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), the al-Qaeda-linked coalition operating in Mali and Burkina Faso, has carried out more than 100 drone attacks since 2023, with 2025 recording the highest number to date.
Terra says its Kama interceptor drone was developed in response to this changing threat environment. The company says the system can reach speeds of up to 300kph and is designed to counter hostile drones in environments where traditional air defence systems may be unavailable or too expensive.
Building defence technology, however, is not the same as achieving defence sovereignty.
Sovereignty question
While a country can build manufacturing capacity through investment, engineering talent and industrial policy, defence sovereignty requires institutions capable of managing procurement, ensuring accountability and sustaining strategic industries over the long term.
Janice Greaver, director at the Pan African Sustainable, Innovation and Development Associates (PASIDA), argues that local production alone cannot answer those questions.
“Seventy percent local sourcing means little until we know who controls the intellectual property, who is employed and who is left out,” she told Al Jazeera. “And when private capital arms the state with no visible civil society oversight, we are simply trading one dependency (on foreign suppliers) for another (on unaccountable domestic capital).”
Terra Industries has demonstrated that sophisticated defence technologies can be designed and manufactured in Africa. Its rapid rise reflects both growing technical capability on the continent and the pressure created by worsening security challenges.
Whether that becomes genuine defence sovereignty will depend on what happens beyond the factory floor: how governments buy, regulate and oversee the technologies they increasingly seek to build themselves.
As Greaver cautions: “Its manufacturing capacity is being built, sovereignty requires the accountability structures that do not yet exist”.
Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/7/13/can-nigerias-drone-industry-deliver-africas-defence-sovereignty
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