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Senator Mohammed Sani Musa: A Statesman Mending the Fabric of Niger East and Beyond

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By Adamu Adamu

Senator Mohammed Sani Musa, fondly called “Senator 313” in many quarters, is one of the few public servants whose names are spoken with casual familiarity and mentioned as one of the rare statesmen whose footprints on the soil of their constituency read like a map of care, competence, and custodianship. His political persona is not a mere parade of campaign rhetoric but an architecture of visible interventions: boreholes that bring water to the thirsty, vocational centres that resurrect hope for young people, rehabilitated clinics that restore dignity to the sick, and targeted empowerment programmes that seed economic agency in households.

To know Senator Sani Musa is to see how a legislator can transpose empathy into policy and philanthropy into long-term community transformation. Born on 11 May 1965 in Minna, Niger State, Musa’s formative years traversed local schools before he entered the portals of advanced management training and public-leadership programmes.

He studied Business Administration, Banking and Finance at Ahmadu Bello University and subsequently sharpened his strategic and leadership repertoire at prestigious international institutions—a trajectory that later coloured his public-sector finesse when he served as Special Adviser on Investment and Infrastructure to the Niger State Governor. That professional past is not ornamental; it explains why his interventions are invariably well-targeted and sustainable rather than performative.

From the vantage point of Niger East, and at the very heart of the senatorial district he represents, Musa’s style of governance is a deliberate service-delivery template. The architecture of that template is unmistakably woven into infrastructure for daily life, healthcare bolstering, education investments, targeted youth empowerment, and decisive legislative stewardship at the national level.

Consider the priority areas of his work: he facilitated the construction of two 50-bed hospitals—one in Sarkin Pawa, Munya LGA, and the other in Kuta, Shiroro LGA. In fulfilling his promises to his constituency, he launched an inclusive empowerment programme from which 500 women and youths benefited.

The programme provided 21 tricycles for transportation and small-scale business, 130 motorcycles for commercial use, 80 grinding machines for food processing, 80 deep freezers for preserving perishable goods, 30 generators for reliable power supply, and 95 sewing machines for tailoring and fashion design. He also distributed 4,050 bags of fertiliser—1,000 urea and 3,050 NPK—across the nine local government areas to boost agricultural productivity.

Moreover, in a remarkable show of generosity, Senator Musa disbursed ₦143 million to 2,868 constituents, with each receiving ₦50,000. Additionally, he launched a fully funded international scholarship programme, enabling 100 academically gifted students to study medicine in India and another 100 to pursue engineering, artificial intelligence, and robotics in China.

The Senator has also made multiple interventions in education: settling registration fees for undergraduate students, paying NECO and JAMB fees, and extending educational assistance to 1,000 higher-institution students across his constituency.

What distinguishes Musa’s political philanthropy is the philosophy behind it: the conviction that government ought to repair the everyday ruptures in citizens’ lives. Water, power, health, and livelihoods—these are not glamorous headlines but the quiet scaffolds of human flourishing.

In villages across the nine local government areas of Niger East, his team has installed solar-powered boreholes and rehabilitated rural roads; they have worked to electrify clinics with solar power and supplied transformers and streetlights to market centres. Children who once missed evening studies because of darkness can now read under solar streetlights; clinics that could not store vaccines because of frequent outages now maintain unbroken cold chains thanks to solar installations.

The cumulative effect of such measures is a subtle yet decisive reweaving of social normalcy. As a member of the Senate in Nigeria’s 10th National Assembly, and having at various points held leadership roles on financial and budget-oversight committees, Senator Sani Musa writes legislation with a practitioner’s sensibility.

His parliamentary focus mirrors his ground-level priorities: appropriations that favour infrastructural renewal, oversight that insists on functionality rather than box-ticking, and sponsorship of bills that aim to institutionalise development gains for his constituency and the nation.

The cultural essence of Musa’s philanthropy is both deeply local and forward-looking. On one hand, he understands the rhythms of Nigerien communal life—how a repaired market road reverberates across livelihoods, how a vocational training centre can arrest the slide of young men and women from hope into crime.

On the other, Senator Musa’s political narrative is remarkable for its resilience. He is a man who has faced multiple electoral contestations, yet his re-election and continued public presence have positioned him as a politician whose legitimacy is grounded in visible delivery rather than mere rhetoric.

At the national level, Musa’s posture is that of a reconciler—a senator who understands the centrifugal forces pulling at Nigeria’s polity and who argues for the centripetal glue of competence-driven governance. In the Senate, where posturing can too easily eclipse policy, he is known as a lawmaker who prefers the painstaking work of committee deliberations, budget scrutiny, and legislative sponsorship. His tenure in financial-oversight roles proves his practical commitment to accountability, ensuring public resources are accounted for and budgets aligned to human needs rather than vanity projects. This posture is not merely technocratic; it is profoundly moral.

True, infrastructural deficits remain, and there is always more to be done to address the systemic causes of underdevelopment in parts of Niger and across Nigeria. Yet what distinguishes the senator from many of his peers is a demonstrable pattern: when problems are identified, he mobilises resources and follows through; when crises arrive, he responds; and when people are marginalised, he finds ways to extend assistance.

That pattern matters because politics is an ensemble of patterns, not singular events. Indeed, Musa’s blend of philanthropic disposition and institutional engagement is a template other lawmakers could emulate—not merely for Niger East but for a Nigeria hungry for leaders who can pragmatically transform the quotidian realities of millions.

To call Senator Mohammed Sani Musa a “philanthropic politician” is both accurate and insufficient. The better description is statesman-philanthropist: one who combines the soft virtues of care and proximity with the hard virtues of systems thinking and institutional stewardship. He is tender where politics demands tenderness—in healthcare corridors and market squares—and rigorous where governance demands rigour—in committee rooms and budget halls.

For the people of Niger East, he has been more than an occasional benefactor; he has been a consistent advocate of possibility. For Nigerians seeking a politics that returns to the essentials of service, Senator Musa is a voice and a record worth listening to—and learning from.

Adamu who is ateacher and writes from FUT Minna can be reached via adamudouble2000gmail.com

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Opinion

Gov Otu: Rewriting Cross River’s Healthcare Story With Historic 100% Pay Rise for Doctors

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By Linus Obogo

In the quiet town of Ogoja, where the red earth stretches endlessly beneath the tropical sun and communities rise each morning to the rhythms of resilience and hope, a weary doctor named Dr. Monjok once wrestled with a difficult question: should he remain in public service or seek greener pastures elsewhere?

For years, his calling had kept him at the bedside of children battling malaria, expectant mothers navigating the uncertainties of childbirth, and elderly patients confronting the frailties of age. Through long nights, limited resources and mounting pressures, he remained steadfast. Yet the burden of inadequate remuneration and persistent manpower shortages often weighed heavily on his spirit. Today, however, Dr. Monjok stands taller, buoyed by renewed optimism, as Governor Bassey Otu’s administration ushers in a new era with a landmark 100 per cent salary increase for doctors across Cross River State.

This historic intervention is far more than a financial adjustment. It is a powerful declaration that those who dedicate their lives to preserving the health and dignity of others deserve to be honoured, valued and rewarded. It is a recognition of countless sacrifices made in consulting rooms, emergency wards and rural health centres where doctors often labour quietly, driven not by wealth but by duty. In one bold stroke, Governor Otu has infused fresh hope into a profession that forms the backbone of every thriving society.

For many healthcare professionals, the announcement represents a turning point, a breath of fresh air. It signals the emergence of a government that understands that healthcare is not merely a social service but a sacred obligation. It is an affirmation that those entrusted with saving lives should not themselves be left to struggle under the weight of neglect. By doubling doctors’ salaries, Governor Otu has not only boosted morale but has also strengthened the state’s capacity to retain talent and attract skilled professionals who might otherwise seek opportunities beyond its borders.

Yet the salary increase is only one chapter in a broader and exhilarating story of transformation unfolding across the health sector. Since assuming office, Governor Otu has increased funding to healthcare by more than 100 per cent, reflecting a deliberate and strategic commitment to rebuilding a sector that lies at the heart of human development.

It is a demonstration of leadership that recognizes that healthy citizens are the foundation upon which prosperous economies and stable societies are built.
This commitment is equally evident in the lifting of the long-standing embargo on employment within the health sector and the approval of the recruitment of 2,000 additional healthcare workers. Across urban centres and rural communities alike, this decision is expected to bridge critical manpower gaps, improve access to medical services and bring relief to overstretched facilities.
For many communities that have long endured shortages of healthcare personnel, the development represents a long-awaited answer to years of yearning.

In the creekside settlements, riverine communities and bustling townships of Cross River, the echoes of this transformation are already reverberating. At General Hospital, Ukem, where years of wear had dulled the promise of quality care, a new chapter is unfolding. The release of funds for its renovation, alongside the rehabilitation of Cottage Hospital, Oban, and the revival of the once-abandoned General Hospital complex in Akpabuyo, reflects a government determined to restore healthcare institutions to their rightful place as sanctuaries of healing and hope.

These projects are more than bricks and mortar. They are monuments to purposeful governance and symbols of a future in which quality healthcare is not a privilege reserved for a few but a right accessible to all. Each renovated ward, restored facility and upgraded theatre represents another step towards a healthier and more resilient Cross River.
Dr. Monjok’s story is mirrored in the experiences of countless citizens whose lives intersect daily with the healthcare system. It is reflected in the expectant mother who no longer has to travel great distances in search of prenatal care. It is evident in the child whose access to treatment is no longer determined by geography. It is seen in families who can now look towards public health facilities with renewed confidence and expectation.
Governor Otu’s reforms have also embraced nurses, pharmacists, laboratory scientists, community health officers and other critical healthcare personnel through enhanced allowances and improved welfare packages.

The establishment of the Cross River State Hospital Management Board further underscores a commitment to accountability, efficiency and institutional excellence. Together, these measures will lay the foundation for a healthcare system that is modern, responsive and sustainable.

As Dr. Monjok now gazes across the rolling landscapes of Cross River, he sees more than familiar hills and valleys. He sees the dawning of a new possibility. What has begun as a bold policy decision will sooner than later, rapidly evolve into a healthcare renaissance capable of touching every corner of the state. In that unfolding story, every doctor is valued, every healthcare worker is empowered and every citizen is placed at the heart of governance.

Indeed, Governor Otu’s historic intervention is much more than increasing salaries; it is about restoring confidence, rekindling aspirations and rewriting the healthcare story of Cross River State with uncommon vision, courage and purpose.

Obogo is Chief Press Secretary and Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to Governor Bassey Otu

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Opinion

General Olufemi Oluyede: The Man Steering Nigeria’s Defence into A New Era

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By Sambo Sule

In the crucible of a nation forged by resilience, where shadows of uncertainty stretch long across savannah and coast, General Olufemi Olatubosun Oluyede emerges as a beacon of unyielding resolve. Like the ancient warriors of Ekiti soil—steadfast sentinels against tempests—he now stands at the helm of Nigeria’s Armed Forces as Chief of Defence Staff.

His appointment marks not merely a change of guard, but the dawn of a transformative epoch. It is one where discipline meets destiny, strategy dances with synergy, and the military reclaims its sacred covenant to shield the motherland.

Oluyede’s career has been defined by excellence and resilience. Rising through the ranks of the Nigerian Army, he has commanded troops in some of the most difficult operational theatres, earning respect for his tactical ingenuity and his ability to inspire confidence among soldiers and civilians alike.

Since assuming office, General Oluyede has prioritized jointness—the seamless integration of the Army, Navy, and Air Force into a unified fighting force. He believes that Nigeria’s security challenges require synergy, not fragmentation, and under his leadership, joint operations have become the hallmark of military campaigns.

This approach has already yielded results: in May 2026 alone, Nigerian troops neutralized over 317 terrorists, arrested 314 suspects, and rescued 221 kidnapped civilians, while recovering 93 assorted arms and dismantling illegal refining sites. These achievements reflect his insistence on coordination, precision, and professionalism.

Another defining feature of his leadership is the push for indigenous defence production. General Oluyede has championed the revitalization of the Defence Industries Corporation of Nigeria (DICON), ensuring that Nigeria reduces dependence on foreign suppliers and builds local capacity.

The CDS’ vision is to see Nigeria emerge as a regional hub for defence technology, capable of sustaining its own military requirements and contributing to African security. By encouraging local innovation, he is laying the foundation for a self-reliant Armed Forces that can adapt to evolving threats.

Civil-military relations are also central to his philosophy. General Oluyede has consistently emphasized that the Armed Forces exist to protect the people, not to intimidate them.

He has directed troops to uphold professionalism and respect for human rights in all operations, reinforcing trust between the military and civilians. His swift responses to crises—deploying reinforcements, ordering aerial surveillance, and ensuring humanitarian support—demonstrate his people-centric approach.

For him, threats against civilian peace are intolerable affronts to national sovereignty. Beyond operations, General Oluyede has invested in the intellectual and doctrinal development of the Armed Forces.

He has positioned the Joint Doctrine and Warfare Centre (JDWC) as the intellectual hub of Nigeria’s defence establishment, advancing doctrine, innovation, and technology to keep the Armed Forces adaptive to evolving threats. This institution ensures that Nigeria’s military remains aligned with global best practices while developing strategies tailored to local realities.

General Oluyede’s leadership style blends firmness with empathy. He commends troops for gallantry and tactical ingenuity, reinforcing morale across operational theatres.

At the same time, he insists on accountability, ensuring that discipline remains the bedrock of military service. His ability to balance operational demands with welfare considerations has strengthened the Armed Forces as an institution.

General Oluyede’s legacy is already taking shape. He is positioning Nigeria’s Armed Forces as a modern, self-reliant, and highly professional military. His emphasis on jointness, indigenous production, and civilian protection ensures that the Armed Forces remain not only a guarantor of sovereignty but also a trusted institution in the eyes of the people.

The CDS tenure is redefining Nigeria’s defence posture, positioning the country as a regional leader in security and stability. In the broader context of national development, his leadership underscores the critical role of the military in creating an environment of peace and stability.

By securing communities, protecting borders, and dismantling criminal networks, the Armed Forces under his command are enabling economic growth, social development, and national unity. His vision is not limited to the battlefield; it extends to the future of Nigeria as a secure, prosperous, and respected nation.

General Olufemi Oluyede is, indeed, the man steering Nigeria’s defence into a new era. His story is one of discipline, vision, and service—a reminder that leadership in uniform is not about power, but about responsibility, sacrifice, and the unwavering commitment to protect the nation and its people.

Sule is a public affairs analyst writing from Kaduna.

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Opinion

The Man Behind the Rebuilding of Nigeria’s North-East

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By Musa Sule

Alhaji Mohammed Goni Alkali, the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of the North-East Development Commission (NEDC), has become a defining figure in Nigeria’s quest to restore dignity, rebuild infrastructure, and rekindle hope in a region long scarred by insurgency and underdevelopment. His leadership is not only about projects and policies; it is about people, about lives transformed, and about a vision that sees beyond the ruins of conflict to the promise of renewal.

From the very beginning of his career, Alkali distinguished himself as a man of intellect and discipline. Graduating with a First-Class degree in Accounting from Bayero University, Kano, and later earning a Master’s in Accounting and Finance from the London School of Economics, he laid a foundation of excellence that would guide his professional journey. His nearly three decades in banking, culminating in his role as Executive Director of Operations at the Bank of Industry (BOI), gave him the tools to manage complex financial systems and design interventions that empower communities. At BOI, he was instrumental in national schemes such as the ₦10 billion Rice Processing Fund and the ₦100 billion Cotton, Textile, and Garment Development Scheme, initiatives that revitalized industries and created jobs across Nigeria.

When Alkali was appointed to lead the NEDC in 2019, the North-East was at a crossroads. Years of insurgency had displaced millions, destroyed schools and hospitals, and left communities struggling to survive. His reappointment in 2023 was a testament to the confidence placed in his vision and his ability to deliver results. Under his stewardship, the Commission has become a beacon of hope, rolling out projects that directly touch lives. More than 3,500 housing units have been built across six states, providing shelter for families who had lost everything. Eighteen mega schools have been established, restoring education to children whose futures had been interrupted by conflict. Strategic roads such as Gombe-Abba-Kirfi and Alkaleri-Futuk have been developed, opening up trade corridors and reconnecting communities. Healthcare facilities have been equipped, and agricultural communities have been revived, ensuring that livelihoods are restored and dignity is returned.

Alkali’s leadership is marked by integrity and transparency. He has consistently emphasized that the NEDC is not a contract-dispensing agency but a humanitarian interventionist body. Every naira allocated to the Commission is judiciously used, reflecting his discipline and accountability. His grassroots approach—personally visiting communities, listening to their needs, and ensuring projects are executed faithfully—has earned him recognition as an Ambassador of Peace. Groups such as the North-East Elders and Youths Peoples Forum have praised his dedication to fostering unity and reconciliation, acknowledging that his leadership is not only rebuilding infrastructure but also healing wounds and restoring trust.

The impact of his work is visible everywhere. Children are returning to classrooms, families are moving into new homes, farmers are cultivating their land once more, and traders are reconnecting with markets through newly built roads. These are not abstract achievements; they are tangible transformations that speak to the power of visionary leadership. Alkali’s legacy will be remembered not just in the structures built but in the lives rebuilt, in the dignity restored, and in the hope rekindled across the region.

His story is ultimately one of transformation—of a man who has taken on the monumental task of rebuilding a region scarred by conflict and has done so with integrity, vision, and humanity. He is more than a technocrat; he is a bridge between government and grassroots realities, between policy and people, between despair and hope. His leadership at the NEDC is a testament to what is possible when competence meets compassion, and it offers a powerful reminder that even in the most challenging circumstances, visionary leadership can light the path toward a brighter future.

Alhaji Mohammed Goni Alkali’s leadership also underscores the importance of continuity and consistency in governance. By being reappointed in 2023, he has been able to sustain the momentum of NEDC’s projects, ensuring that initiatives are not abandoned midway but are carried through to completion. This continuity has allowed communities to trust the Commission’s work, knowing that promises made will be promises kept. His ability to balance immediate humanitarian needs with long-term development goals has created a framework that not only addresses the present but also secures the future.

In the broader context of Nigeria’s development, Alkali’s work at NEDC serves as a model for how interventionist agencies can function effectively. His insistence on transparency, his grassroots engagement, and his humanitarian focus are qualities that should inspire leaders across the country. He has shown that leadership is not about titles or positions, but about service, accountability, and impact. His legacy will endure not just in the North-East, but in the lessons his leadership offers to the entire nation.

Alkali’s leadership has also been about restoring confidence in governance. In a region where mistrust of institutions had grown due to years of neglect and conflict, his hands-on approach has reassured communities that government can indeed be a force for good. His presence in villages, his willingness to listen, and his determination to deliver have created a bond of trust between the Commission and the people it serves. This trust is invaluable, for it is the foundation upon which peace and progress are built.

Beyond infrastructure, Alkali has focused on human capital development. He understands that rebuilding the North-East is not just about bricks and mortar, but about investing in people. His emphasis on education, healthcare, and agriculture reflects a holistic vision of development. By equipping schools, training teachers, supporting farmers, and strengthening healthcare systems, he is laying the groundwork for a future where the North-East can thrive independently, resilient against future challenges.

His leadership has also had a symbolic impact. In a region often portrayed through the lens of conflict and despair, Alkali’s work has shifted the narrative to one of resilience and renewal. The stories emerging from the North-East today are not just about destruction, but about reconstruction; not just about displacement, but about resettlement; not just about despair, but about hope. This shift in narrative is powerful, for it changes how the region is perceived both within Nigeria and internationally, opening doors to investment, collaboration, and growth.

Alhaji Mohammed Goni Alkali is, indeed, the man behind the rebuilding of Nigeria’s North-East. His name will be remembered as one of the architects of hope, a leader who turned challenges into opportunities, despair into resilience, and destruction into reconstruction. His work is not just about today—it is about laying the foundation for generations to come, ensuring that the North-East is defined not by its past struggles but by its future promise.

Sule is a public affairs analyst based in Yola.

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