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Sheriff Oborevwori: The Performing Governor Of Delta State
Since assuming office on May 29, 2023, Governor Sheriff Oborevwori has emerged as one of Nigeria’s most notable performing Governors. His administration’s “MORE Agenda” — Meaningful Development, Opportunities for All, Realistic Reforms, and Enhanced Peace And Security — has provided a clear roadmap for governance, translating plans into tangible outcomes across infrastructure, social welfare, and fiscal management.
Delta State under Governor Oborevwori is proving that clear vision and disciplined execution can deliver real change.
In just about every sector and aspect of leadership the protagonist of the M.O.R.E Agenda the Executive Governor of Delta State Chief Sheriff Oborevwori has shown unrivaled competency, unflinching capacity and unwavering clarity of purpose and vision.
Infrastructure Delivery: Roads, Bridges, and Connectivity.
The Oborevwori administration has prioritized large-scale infrastructure development. It might interest my readers to know that over 510 Road and Bridge Projects covering nearly 1,450 km are ongoing, and quite a huge number of these laudable projects have been completed in less than 2 and half years of Governor Oborevwori’s watch.
Need I mention the many major urban interchanges, including PTI Junction, DSC Roundabout, and Enerhen Junction which targets improved urban mobility. Should I include the very profound Projects linking the towns and villages around Asaba with the State Capital, Asaba. There is always more with the M.O.R.E Agenda of Governor Sheriff, as he is fondly called.
Rural and Riverine areas are receiving critical connectivity projects, ensuring equitable development. These initiatives not only enhance commerce and mobility but also improve daily life for Delta State residents.
From Urban Centres to Rural communities, Delta State is seeing roads and bridges that truly connect its people.
Fiscal Discipline and Economic Growth
Delta State has seen remarkable fiscal improvements under Governor Oborevwori. Under his watch, Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) rose from ₦83 billion in 2023 to ₦158 billion in 2024.
The State’s debt dropped from ₦465 billion to ₦249 billion, reflecting fiscal prudence. And Infrastructure development continues without over-reliance on borrowing.
The above figures highlight an administration that manages resources efficiently while delivering large-scale projects.
People-Centered Governance
Oborevwori’s administration emphasizes human capital and social inclusion. It is on record that in the less than 2 years and 6 months of Governor Sheriff’s administration thousands of teaching and non-teaching staff have been recruited across the Local Government Areas of Delta State.
Further to the commitment of the government to education and job creation Governor Sheriff has liberally expanded the scope, size and volume of Student Bursaries as well as the Technical Training and Skill Acquisition Centres across the State.
And remarkably, Social programs like empowerment grants and monthly stipends for vulnerable groups have benefited tens of thousands across the Local Government Areas of the State.
Governor Oborevwori’s policies ensure that no community or citizen is left behind in Delta State’s development journey.
Promoting Peace and Inclusive Governance
Sustainable development requires peace and stability. Such is the fillip that drives Governor Oborevwori’s engagement of Traditional Rulers, Youth Groups, and Community Stakeholders in ensuring a united, peaceful and harmonious Delta State, and the success of this governmental programmatic is halcyon.
It is important to state without equivocation that one of the linchpins of Sheriff’s administration is enforced accountability, and a dogged pledge to remove underperforming officials and punish erring staff.
His pledge to ensure that Delta State under his watch works for all inspires the many extended programs to previously marginalized communities, fostering inclusion. Need I mention the many Urban and Rural projects scattered across the 3 Senatorial Zones of Delta State, or need I tell you how the State has transitioned into a huge construction site under Governor Sheriff? Don’t worry the sequel to this series shall marvel you with figures and statistics.
Recognition and National Credibility
Governor Sheriff Oborevwori’s achievements have earned him numerous national acclaim amongst which is, The Governor of the Year 2024 by multiple media houses like the Thisday Newspapers and Arise TV Group, the Vanguard Newspapers, the Silverbird Group, the Sun Newspapers, News Telegraph et al.
He has also been named The Most Prolific Governor of the Year 2025 by the Democracy Heroes Award.
He has been generously commended by elder statesmen and civic leaders for tangible achievements in leadership in such a short period, and this underscores the clarity of purpose and vision of Governor Sheriff.
Challenges and the Road Ahead
While performance is evident, challenges remain, and the ebullient Governor of Delta State Chief Sheriff Oborevwori is not unmindful of this fact. He is therefore committed to sustaining the quality of large-scale projects in the State. He is also committed to ensuring that more jobs are created and greater rural economic development is achieved. And he is committed to strengthening transparency and citizen engagement.
I shall talk about the bold and daring foray into fixing Federal Roads that directly impact the lives of Deltans in the sequel to this effort. Are you aware that very recently he flagged-off the Construction of the Benin-Sapele Road (a Federal Road), do not salivate just yet, I promise you more details and data in the sequel.
Governor Sheriff Oborevwori has proven that purpose-driven governance produces results. Delta State’s transformation under his leadership is manifestly cast-in-iron. And with Governor Sheriff M.O.R.E is Assured.
Dr. Emmanuel Ashikodi
Concerned Professionals For Good Governance. (A Good Governance Advocacy Group).
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Now Hiring: Academic and Technical Staff at a Leading Private University in Gombe State
Available Positions
- Lecturer II
- Assistant Lecturer (AL)
- Graduate Assistant (GA)
- Laboratory Technologists
Disciplines / Departments
- Law – Common and Islamic Law
- Medical Laboratory Science
- Nursing Science
- Physiotherapy
- Occupational Therapy
- Radiography and Radiation Science
- Public Health
- Quantity Surveying
- Cyber Security
- Accounting
- Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
Requirements
- Assistant Lecturer (AL): Master’s degree from an accredited university. Evidence of scholarly publications is an advantage.
- Graduate Assistant (GA): Bachelor’s degree with a minimum of Second Class Upper (2:1) from an accredited university.
- Lecturer II: Master’s degree with relevant teaching/research experience and scholarly publications.
- Laboratory Technologist: Minimum of National Diploma in Medical Laboratory Technology or related field from a recognized institution. Must be a registered member of relevant professional bodies.
- Visiting/Sabbatical Staff: Senior academics with proven teaching and research experience.
Relevant professional certifications and prior teaching or industry experience will be an added advantage for all positions.
How to Apply
Interested and qualified candidates should email a detailed Curriculum Vitae to
applyhere167@gmail.com within seven (7) days of this publication.
Subject Line: Use the desired position as the subject of your email.
Example: Application for Assistant Lecturer – Nursing Science
Only shortlisted candidates for full-time appointments will be contacted for an interview.
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June , 12 and the Reconfiguration of the Nigerian state : Rentierism, Political Settlements and the Political Economy of the 2027 Presidential Contest
Introduction: June 12 as a Critical Juncture in the Political Economy of State Formation
Within dominant public discourse, June 12 is conventionally memorialized as a symbol of interrupted democratization and the annulment of Nigeria’s most credible presidential election. Such interpretations, while historically significant, remain analytically incomplete. A more theoretically grounded reading situates June 12 as a critical juncture through which the underlying architecture of state power, elite reproduction, and distributive politics in Nigeria becomes visible.
The annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election was not merely an authoritarian repudiation of electoral sovereignty. Rather, it represented a profound crisis within the prevailing political settlement governing the allocation of state-mediated rents, the organization of elite coalitions, and the distribution of economic privileges embedded within Nigeria’s petroleum-dependent political economy. At stake was not simply electoral victory but the reconfiguration of access to the institutional mechanisms through which political authority and economic accumulation were reproduced.
More than three decades later, the structural contradictions exposed by June 12 remain unresolved. Nigeria approaches the 2027 presidential election amidst a conjuncture characterized by fiscal restructuring, macroeconomic liberalization, elite realignment, declining distributive rents, increasing social precarity, and intensified inter-elite competition. The removal of fuel subsidies, exchange-rate unification, tax-system rationalization, and the emergence of alternative opposition coalitions have collectively altered the material foundations upon which political authority has historically been organized.
This paper advances the argument that contemporary Nigerian politics is best understood through the combined analytical lenses of Rentier State Theory and Political Settlements Theory. Together, these frameworks illuminate the enduring relationship between resource dependence, elite bargaining, institutional stability, and democratic governance. The central thesis is that the 2027 presidential election represents not merely an electoral contest but a struggle over the reconstruction of the political settlement that governs access to state resources during a period of transition from classical rentier distributive mechanisms toward a potentially more fiscally embedded state.

Rentier State Theory and the Structural Crisis of Democratic Accountability
Rentier State Theory remains one of the most influential explanatory frameworks for understanding the political consequences of resource dependence in postcolonial states. Associated with scholars such as Hazem Beblawi, Giacomo Luciani, Terry Lynn Karl, and Michael Ross, the theory posits that states deriving a substantial proportion of public revenue from externally generated rents develop institutional configurations distinct from those characteristic of productive capitalist economies.
The defining attribute of rentierism is the relative fiscal autonomy of the state from society. In tax-dependent political systems, state capacity and political legitimacy emerge through reciprocal bargaining relationships between rulers and citizens. Taxation generates demands for representation, accountability, and institutional constraints on executive authority. Conversely, rent-financed states are insulated from these pressures because public expenditure is financed through externally derived revenues rather than domestic productive activity.
Nigeria’s incorporation into the global petroleum economy fundamentally transformed the fiscal foundations of state-society relations. Oil rents enabled successive governments to finance state operations without cultivating broad-based productive taxation. Consequently, political authority became increasingly detached from societal consent and increasingly dependent upon control over strategic rent-generating institutions.
The result was the consolidation of a rentier political order characterized by extreme fiscal centralization, patron-client networks, neopatrimonial modes of governance, weak mechanisms of democratic accountability, and persistent elite competition over access to state-controlled resources. Under such conditions, the state became the primary site of accumulation, transforming political office into a critical instrument of wealth generation and elite reproduction.
From this perspective, the June 12 crisis can be understood as a manifestation of tensions within the rentier order itself. The electoral process threatened to redistribute access to strategic rent circuits and alter existing configurations of elite power. Its annulment therefore reflected not merely authoritarian resistance to democratization but the defensive reaction of actors whose material interests were embedded within the existing distributive regime.
The transition to civilian rule in 1999 altered the institutional modalities through which power was contested without fundamentally transforming the political economy underpinning state authority. Electoral competition became institutionalized, yet the state remained the principal arena of accumulation. What emerged was not the displacement of rentier governance but its democratized adaptation. Military rent management evolved into electoral rent management, while patronage politics became embedded within formally democratic institutions.
Fiscal Restructuring and the Emergence of a Post-Rentier Political Environment
The contemporary political economy of Nigeria differs significantly from previous electoral cycles because the material foundations of distributive politics are undergoing substantial transformation.
The removal of fuel subsidies in 2023 constituted perhaps the most significant restructuring of Nigeria’s distributive political economy since the era of structural adjustment. Fuel subsidies functioned not merely as economic instruments but as mechanisms of political incorporation through which petroleum rents were indirectly redistributed to citizens. They served as a compensatory device that mitigated the social contradictions generated by resource dependence.
Their removal fundamentally altered the implicit social contract linking state and society. Simultaneously, exchange-rate liberalization and comprehensive tax reforms signaled a broader attempt to reconstruct the fiscal foundations of governance. The implementation of extensive tax reforms from 2026 reflects a gradual movement away from exclusive dependence on hydrocarbon rents toward expanded domestic revenue mobilization.
This transition carries significant political implications. Historically, taxation has generated stronger demands for representation, transparency, and accountability because citizens acquire a more direct stake in public expenditure. As the state becomes increasingly dependent upon internally generated revenue, pressures for institutional responsiveness are likely to intensify.
Consequently, Nigeria may be entering a phase of partial post-rentier transition in which governments can no longer rely exclusively on distributive patronage to secure legitimacy. Political performance increasingly becomes evaluated through indicators such as inflation management, employment generation, public service delivery, macroeconomic stability, and institutional effectiveness.
The significance of the 2027 election therefore lies in its potential emergence as Nigeria’s first major presidential contest conducted under conditions where traditional rent-distribution mechanisms have been substantially weakened.
Political Settlements Theory and the Recomposition of Elite Coalitions
While Rentier State Theory illuminates the economic foundations of state power, Political Settlements Theory provides a framework for understanding the organization of power among competing elite actors.
Associated with the work of Mushtaq Khan, Tim Kelsall, Brian Levy, and David Booth, Political Settlements Theory argues that institutional stability depends less upon formal constitutional arrangements than upon the underlying distribution of power among politically relevant actors. A political settlement exists when influential groups accept a common set of arrangements governing access to resources, authority, and opportunities for accumulation.
Institutional crises emerge when existing settlements lose legitimacy or become incapable of accommodating shifting configurations of power.
Viewed through this lens, the June 12 crisis represented a breakdown in the prevailing settlement governing elite accommodation within the late military era. Similarly, contemporary Nigerian politics exhibits features consistent with a period of settlement renegotiation.
The approach to 2027 has been characterized by intensified coalition formation, strategic defections, regional bargaining, succession negotiations, and attempts to reconstruct alternative governing alliances. Across partisan boundaries, political actors are engaged in a complex process of elite recomposition aimed at redefining future access to executive authority, bureaucratic influence, and fiscal resources.
Political Settlements Theory suggests that these developments should not be interpreted merely as routine electoral maneuvering. Rather, they represent struggles among competing elite blocs to establish a new equilibrium governing the distribution of power within an evolving political economy.
The central question confronting Nigerian elites is therefore not simply who wins the next election but which coalition acquires the capacity to institutionalize a new settlement capable of maintaining political order under conditions of declining distributive rents.
The 2027 Presidential Election as a Contest Over State Reconfiguration
When examined through the combined analytical framework of rentierism and political settlements, the 2027 presidential election assumes a significance that transcends conventional electoral competition.
At stake is a multidimensional struggle over the future configuration of the Nigerian state.
First is the struggle over fiscal authority. The gradual transition toward greater tax dependence raises fundamental questions concerning revenue allocation, fiscal federalism, intergovernmental relations, and the territorial distribution of state resources.
Second is the struggle over elite incorporation. Ongoing coalition restructuring reflects broader negotiations concerning regional representation, generational succession, elite circulation, and access to executive power.
Third is the struggle over reform trajectories. Competing political coalitions are likely to advance divergent positions regarding the continuity, modification, or reversal of ongoing economic reforms.
Fourth is the struggle over political legitimacy. As traditional patronage mechanisms weaken, governing coalitions must increasingly derive legitimacy from policy performance and developmental outcomes rather than distributive rent allocation.
These interconnected dynamics render the 2027 election one of the most consequential moments in Nigeria’s post-1999 political development.
Beyond Electoralism: The Developmental State Imperative
The deeper lesson of June 12 is that democratic consolidation cannot be reduced to procedural electoralism. Sustainable political stability ultimately requires transformation of the economic foundations upon which state authority rests.
The central challenge confronting Nigeria is therefore not merely democratic transition but developmental state formation.
A developmental state differs fundamentally from a rentier state in both its economic logic and institutional orientation. Whereas rentier systems generate wealth through extraction and distribution, developmental states generate wealth through production, industrial transformation, technological upgrading, and productivity enhancement.
For Nigeria, such a transition requires four interconnected transformations.
First, economic diversification capable of reducing hydrocarbon dependence while expanding manufacturing, agro-industrial production, technological innovation, and export competitiveness.
Second, deeper fiscal federalization aimed at strengthening subnational accountability and reducing structural dependence on centrally distributed revenues.
Third, institutional insulation that protects electoral commissions, judicial institutions, regulatory agencies, and anti-corruption bodies from partisan capture.
Fourth, the cultivation of democratic citizenship through the replacement of patron-client relations with programmatic politics centered upon policy performance, social rights, and public accountability.
Only through these transformations can political competition become linked to developmental outcomes rather than contests over rent redistribution.
Conclusion: June 12 and the Future Political Settlement of Nigeria
Thirty-three years after the annulment of the June 12 election, the structural questions that generated that crisis remain embedded within the political economy of the Nigerian state. The transition from military authoritarianism to electoral democracy transformed the institutional form of politics but left many of the underlying logics of rentier governance intact.
Yet Nigeria now appears to be entering a potentially transformative phase. The contraction of traditional distributive mechanisms, the expansion of fiscal reforms, and the reconfiguration of elite coalitions suggest increasing strain within the existing political settlement.
The 2027 presidential election should therefore be understood as more than a competition for executive office. It represents a struggle over the future architecture of state power, the organization of elite authority, and the institutional foundations of governance in a post-rentier context.
The enduring significance of June 12 lies precisely in this insight: democracy is inseparable from the political economy within which it is embedded. The central question confronting Nigeria is not merely who governs after 2027 but whether the Nigerian state can successfully transition from a rent-dependent distributive order toward a developmental, fiscally accountable, and institutionally resilient democratic state capable of translating political competition into broad-based socioeconomic transformation and substantive democratic citizenship.
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KfW Development Bank becomes an ATIDI Shareholder, Enhances German Investment Opportunities in Africa
The German development bank KfW acting on behalf of and for the account of the Federal Republic of Germany has become the latest shareholder in the African Trade & Investment Development Insurance (ATIDI). KfW becomes the 13th Institutional shareholder in Africa’s premier development insurer, further strengthening the organization’s capital base and its capacity to support trade and investment across the continent.
The official signing of the subscription agreement between the two organizations is being marked on the occasion of a meeting held today in Nairobi between ATIDI’s CEO and the German Federal Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development, Reem Alabali Radovan. The new shareholding underscores Germany’s commitment to strengthening its economic partnership with Africa and to supporting African institutions that facilitate trade and investment across the continent.
Speaking at the signing ceremony, ATIDI CEO Manuel Moses said, “This milestone is iconic in many ways. First, it elevates our already dynamic bond with KfW and creates more opportunities for German investors looking to engage in Africa. It is also a recognition of ATIDI’s earned status as Africa’s top development insurer and the acknowledgement of the soundness of our business. Last, it underscores the power of partnerships in a global context increasingly marked by volatility and uncertainty. ATIDI will spare no effort to make this partnership a successful one.”

KfW invested USD 32 million to become a D2-class shareholder of ATIDI, a status dedicated to Export Credit Agencies and Non-African Public Entities. Of this amount, USD 18.4 million are funded from BMZ budget resources, with the remaining USD 13.6 million coming from KfW’s own resources. As such, it will assume the obligations and benefits related to its new shareholding status, including representation in ATIDI Governance and decision-making structures and equally participating towards improving German trade and investments in Africa in alignment with the G20 Compact with Africa (CwA 2.0).
KfW’s subscription in ATIDI is the culmination of a dynamic partnership between the two organizations. On behalf of the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), KfW has supported several countries’ membership in ATIDI with over USD100 million financing, thus strengthening the organization’s capital base and expanding its ability to mitigate risk and mobilize private investment across African markets. The new equity participation adds a direct shareholding to this long‑standing cooperation.
“Today we reconfirm our long-standing strategic partnership with ATIDI. Together, we intend to further enhance business opportunities for European and German investors in Africa to create prosperity and development for mutual benefit. Our membership is executed on behalf of the Federal Republic of Germany. It is only the latest culmination of a successful cooperation that has enabled the ATIDI membership of several African states and has created innovative insurance solutions to attract foreign investment on the continent.” Said Christiane Laibach, Member of the Executive Board, KfW.
Established in 1948, KfW is Germany’s state-owned promotional and development bank and a key implementing partner of BMZ in international financial cooperation. It provides financing for projects in critical sectors including sustainability, infrastructure, renewable energy and small business growth in developing countries. Its shareholding in ATIDI is expected to stimulate up to $500 million in trade and investment between German companies and African markets.
Over the past 25 years, ATIDI has grown to become Africa’s premier provider of development insurance and one of its highest rated financial organizations. It leverages its partnerships with leading multilaterals and regional bodies – including the African Union, the World Bank Group, COMESA, the European Investment Bank (EIB), the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD) – to offer innovative credit and investment insurance products that foster sustainable and transformational growth across the continent.
Beyond capital, this partnership represents a powerful bridge between European financial expertise and Africa’s rapidly expanding investment landscape. By combining KfW’s global development finance experience with ATIDI’s deep regional risk intelligence and market presence, the collaboration will help unlock new pathways for investment in strategic sectors thus supporting sustainable growth, strengthening trade corridors and enabling investors to participate more confidently in Africa’s long-term economic transformation.
Note to editors:
About ATIDI
ATIDI was founded in 2001 by African States to cover trade and investment risks of companies doing business in Africa. The organization notably provides Political Risk, Credit Insurance and Surety Insurance. Since inception, ATIDI has supported USD93 billion worth of investments and cross border trade into Africa. It is rated A/Stable by Standard & Poor’s and A2/Stable by Moody’s, which reflects the organization’s robust financial position and strong risk management practices. In recognition of its growing impact, ATIDI was named the Development Finance Institution (DFI) of the Year at the 2025 African Banker Awards.
About Kfw
KfW Group, founded in 1948, is the German promotional bank and one of the world’s leading promotional banks. It is 80% owned by the Federal Government and 20% by the federal states.
KfW Development Bank carries out Financial Cooperation (FC) projects with developing countries and emerging economies on behalf of the German Federal Government, especially the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ). The experts at KfW’s head office in Frankfurt am Main and more than 60 international offices cooperate with partners all over the world. The promotional financing strengthens economic perspectives, improves the infrastructure, combats poverty and hunger and protects the climate and the environment as well as peace and security – in a common interest. KfW Development Bank is a competent and strategic adviser for current development policy issues.
For further information, please contact:
Mike Omuodo | Media Fast PR| Tel: +254 736 014 596| Email: mike.omuodo@mediafast.co.ke |
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