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Inflation: Nigerians groan as hardship bites

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As double-digit inflation persists in the country, Nigerians, especially the middle class, have called for immediate remedies, lamenting that indeed, the situation has rendered them poorer as indicated by the latest World Bank Nigeria Development Update report.

The report, which was made public last Tuesday, had revealed that rising inflation pushed an estimated seven million Nigerians below the poverty line in 2020 alone.

Although Nigeria’s headline inflation retreated for the second time in May, dropping from 18.12 per cent reported in April to 17.93 per cent, Nigerians in the middle class segment insisted that the high cost of living has become almost unbearable for them, adding that they were getting poorer by the day.

As such, some economists and allied professionals have charged the government to retool its policies towards jumpstarting industrialisation, saying only active production could save the country’s economy from total collapse.

A primary school teacher in Igando area of Lagos State, Mrs. Victoria Osagie, lamented that the current economic situation has drastically affected her saving capacity, adding that it has become difficult for her to meet her basic needs.

“The current state of the country is not palatable. Workers are unable to save, because the income is not corresponding with the astronomic high prices of items. So, it makes it so difficult to cope in the country now.

“Feeding in Nigeria today is not easy as food, which is a basic need, has become a luxury. Prices of foodstuffs are now triple the prices they were before and they increase daily without control.

“You go to the market with a substantial amount of money, but you end up asking yourself what you bought because your shopping bag appears to be empty. This is after walking round the market to see where you can get fair prices,” Osagie said.

Another school teacher, Esther Amondy, said she was in severe pains, which were not caused by any sickness, but by the galloping increase in food prices in the country.

Her words: “Alarming cannot describe what is happening to me and many families around me. You will buy something today and two days later, the price of the same item has gone up significantly. Countries experience inflation, but what we are experiencing is beyond inflation. I have had to cut out fish/meat from our diet because a single fish now costs N1, 200. With five mouths to feed, how long will one fish last? Salaries and income remains static yet beans went from N900 to N2,600 when we are not at war. Since we have to eat, the portion of food everyone eats has been drastically reduced and we now eat just to put something in the stomach and not to assuage hunger. Salary finishes by the first week and it is only God that is sustaining us.

“Have you seen the price of pepper, spaghetti, noodles and garri? Garri that used to be regarded as poor man’s food is now gold; a crate of eggs costs almost N2000 and average loaf of bread goes for about N500. One single bell pepper now sells for N200. Five litres of groundnut oil is now over N5000, as for palm oil, anything you see, you take it like that.

“But the most amazing increase has come from frozen foods like chicken, turkey, fish and the likes. A kilo of chicken and turkey is now almost N2,500 and no matter how you cut it, you can never get up to 10 pieces. Even fruits I used to buy for my children have galloped out of reach. These are things that are grown and produced here, yet we can’t afford them. Does this government want us to drop dead before they know we are suffering?

“I have had to stop buying diapers for my last child because diapers have become luxury; I now use cloth napkins. The most painful for me is his food. The prices doubled and I had to abandon them; now he joins us to eat our rice, beans and garri because I can’t kill myself. I have tried.”

A freight forwarder at the Nigerian Aviation Handling Company (NAHCO), Murtala Mohammed International Airport, Lagos, Mr. Abayomi Idowu, described the present situation as unfortunate, saying: “The family economy is shrinking because the income generated is being used to buy items at exorbitant prices. Workers’ salaries have remained the same but prices of items keep increasing, which means that we now buy fewer items with the same money. As a matter of fact, the situation is causing rancour among couples,” he said.

For Elton Irioke, a private sector worker, there were too many things contending for attention even with poor economic power.

“Nigeria as a country needs serious divine intervention now. The worst is that we are the architects of our problem. Imagine that a set of sachet water, which we used to buy at N1,000, now sells for N1,200 and a sachet that hitherto sold for N5 and later became N10, now sells for N20, while four sachets sell for N50. Also, the price of bottled water has risen from N50 to N70 and N100, depending on location,” he said.

According to a meat seller at a meat market along LASU-Isheri road (Odo Eran), Kehinde Owoyemi, a cow that hitherto sold for N200,000 now goes for between N350,000 and N400,000, while that of N150,000 now sells for N300,000 or N550,000.

“A lot of customers often complain that the price of meat is high, but I tell them it is not our making, as the insecurity across the country is responsible. Anytime we go to the market, we come back with whatever we can afford. It is only God that will help us,” he said.

Iya Basit, a frozen foods trader in Isolo market, noted that traders were not finding the situation funny, saying she has been recording low patronage.

“In the past, I used to sell at least five cartons of fish in a day, different types of fishes. But now, if I finish selling two, that’s a good day. People are no longer buying and immediately they hear the price, they walk away, but I can only sell what I buy. Nobody is even asking for chicken and turkey again. Everyday, the price of frozen foods is going up with no end in sight; I don’t understand what is going on. I know the government is eating free food so they don’t know what is happening. But please help us tell them that we are dying here and people cannot afford to eat again,” she groaned.

A businessman who has his shop in Ifon-Osun community in Osun State, Mr. Friday Ugwueze, also lamented that, “I have been surviving by the grace of God.”

He disclosed that he no longer goes to distant markets to buy things because of hike in transport fare, adding that he has been reducing the quality of the food he eats just to cope with the situation.

Also speaking, a trader at Sasa area of Osogbo, the state capital, EmmyLee Agbor, said he has been experiencing low sales as a result of the state of the economy.

“How will customers buy the clothes I sell when they even complain of not eating three square meals in a day? Things are really difficult for the masses. I urge government to be human for once and do the needful. That is what we elected them to do, to cater for our welfare. They have failed us,” he decried.

A civil servant, Mrs. Odedeyi Mariam, said that it has been difficult to cater for her children and other family members.

She said: “Everything now is too tough. Pepper grinding is now N100 from N50. Transportation has increased by 100 per cent. My salary is not up to N300 per day. To and fro my workplace is N200 per day making it N1000 per week. We are living by the mercy of God,” she said.

RESIDENTS in Anambra State also recounted similar tales of woe. To a civil servant, Mr. Kenneth Uche, inflation has destroyed the totality of man in the past three years.

“Inflation has affected the psychological, emotional and physical being of man. For instance, a painter of garri cost between N300 to N400 before but now sells for N1,400. You cannot get enough foodstuffs to feed your family; you just manage the little you can afford. You eat what is available and not what you want. Life has become tough for families in this country,” he lamented.

For a businesswoman, who identified herself simply as Charity, what was used to sustain a family of four for one month in the last two years cannot last for two weeks now.

“Foodstuff like rice, tomatoes, yam, garri and even meat and fish have become very expensive since the past two years. You don’t talk about transport fare, which is also rising on a daily basis. The cost of fuel, gas and kerosine is high for the household to buy these days. A 12kg gas cylinder that normally cost N3,200 now costs N5,000. In Anambra State, fuel sells between N170 and N175 per litre but NNPC sells at N160 per litre. Nothing is easy for people in Nigeria today,” she said.

For Mr. Nduka Obi, a trader, the suffering he is going through now is the worst in his life as a Nigerian.

“Where do I start from? To travel from one town to another is not easy nowadays, as Awka to Onitsha takes N300; Awka to Enugu N500 while Awka to Owerri costs N2,000. This is double what people paid two years ago,” he noted.

IN Cross River State, a teacher who works in one of the private schools in Calabar, Sandra Edet, said the time was very tough for every worker in Nigeria given the meagre nature of the minimum wage.

According to her, food staples like garri, beans, rice and yam that were known to be for the common man are now for the rich.

“The money that you take to the market, it is as if somebody stole it from you after buying few things; the price of everything has gone up. For example, the tomato paste that we used to buy at N180, N150 or N170, I bought it two days ago at N300. Beans that we used to buy at N70, N80, N100 now sells for N150 not to talk of rice, vegetable oil and many more. It is still that same amount of money you are receiving as salary that you are still going to the market with and the rich people who do not feel it when prices of things are increasing on a daily basis buy things in the same market with you. We are really in trying times,” she said.

She appealed to the Federal Government to tweak its economic policies to enable salary earners and other small income earners to feed their families adequately.

“We are crying to the government of Nigeria. They talk about building of railways and all that. Yes, those infrastructures are good, but they need to look at what will benefit the common man in terms of stomach infrastructure before thinking of building social amenities. They should look at policies that are not favourable to us and create new ones. I don’t think that will take anything from them,” she said.

Another civil servant, who simply gave her name as Asuquo, lamented that a family of four where the mother and father are working could not eat three square meals any longer.

“I was talking to my colleague in the office and I told him that it is no more enjoyable to go to the market because of the high cost of items. That is the truth. Your families are there; the children are there to be taken care of. You have to send them to school, clothe them and shelter them. How do you manage with the little that is not even enough to feed the family,” she queried.

A trader, who identified herself as Mrs. Esther, said she has lost her customers who could not afford to pay back their credits even after collecting their salaries.

“Did you see that man and his wife with one child that just left here? They have been my customers for years. When I told them the new price of beans, did you see how the woman asked the man that they should leave? That is what we face every day.

“Some of my customers who are civil servants or salary earners collect things on credit and once they are paid salary, I get my money. But now, it is no more that way. They keep hiding from me because the salary cannot cover their needs anymore. At the end of the day, they couldn’t pay their credits.

“This is telling on us market women and men because we are losing our customers and they are not buying as they used to. Imagine someone that buys half bags of rice, garri and beans now buying in cups. We really need the government to help us get out of this terrible experience. We don’t know what is happening,” she said.

TO Mr. Ari Adamu, a civil servant in Lafia, Nasarawa State, present economic reality is harsh and cruel. He explained that as a civil servant who has not enjoyed any promotion allowance since 2011, he and his family members were not just sad but also suffering.

Mr. Hassan Lawal also said he was employed as a fresh graduate by the state government as a teacher in 2009, but has never enjoyed any promotion benefit since then.

He lamented that he now has a wife and three children to cater for with his meager salary.

“What we are going through at the moment given the rise in prices of food items, school fees, rent and other bills gets me into worry and I ask myself whether it is better to work with the state government or be a farmer,” he said.

Mrs. Hasana Ibrahim, a staff of Lafia local Council, who poured out her heart, said: “Life has become unbearable because the small money that come to our hands is like nothing. Do you know the bill AEDC sends to me every month? They send N12,000 estimated bill. My monthly salary is N50,000. I have a wife and three children. We are altogether five, living with 50,000 in a month. We used to buy a mudu of beans at N250 but now that same mudu costs N1000. The prices of everything are on the rise everyday and my salary is stagnant.”

CIVIL servants in Benue State and other middle class residents in the state also had similar stories to tell.

A private primary school teacher in the state, Josephine Achilekaa, who happens to be a widow, told The Guardian that she earns N20,000 per month, lamenting that she was no longer able to care for her two children, who are still in nursery classes.

“My husband died and left me behind with two kids and I have been trying to train them in school. But with the current trend of inflation, I have not been finding it easy. I wish that government at all levels would explore possible measures to cut down the high cost of living for us the poor citizens,”Achilekaa said.

Another junior worker with the Benue State Civil Service, Jonah Asemena, said he gets N45,000 as salary monthly, lamenting that the money was not enough to feed his family alone not to talk of paying the school fees of his three children.

“Government should make education free for all children in the primary and junior secondary schools to lessen the burden of inflation on families in the middle class category,” he suggested.

A dealer in textile materials in Makurdi Modern Market, Joseph Okeleke, said he has been witnessing low patronage since the beginning of this year, explaining that many his customers had told him that they no longer had money to buy clothes.

Okeleke said the development has forced him to delve into food sales at his shop to make ends meet. He called on the government to adopt urgent measures to assuage the sufferings of the people.

WORKERS in the middle class cadre in Ekiti State also lamented what they described as “crazy and prohibitive “ prices of goods and services.

The workers said that apart from the fact that prices of goods and services were high, they have also remained unstable and unpredictable, thus making planning difficult.

Many residents, who spoke with The Guardian in Ado Ekiti, also urged the government to intervene to prevent negative consequences on the citizens.

Mr. Raphael Ogbonnaiye, a civil servant residing in the state capital, said: “It has affected my family very negatively. A mudu of beans that sold for N450 now sells for above N1000, while prices of other foodstuffs have tripled. It has affected every sphere of the lives of an average family.

“I used to pay my children’s fees immediately after schools resume. But this time, my wife and I had to borrow money before we could pay the school fees. We no longer think of a balanced diet; we are more concerned about what to eat to sustain ourselves.

“If this trend continues, people may be dying of hardship. What is more, the salaries and allowances we depend on have been cut down because the government could not sustain the payment of minimum wage.”

For Mr. Alebiosu Ogundana, a civil servant at the state civil service, the situation in the state needs urgent intervention from the government.

“Our market women and men through their various associations are killing the middle class with crazy prices of goods, particularly foodstuffs. Comparatively, prices of goods and services appear to be cheaper in our neighbouring states.

Nigeria's Pricepally plans expansion as food inflation jumps again

 

“My family and I are surviving by the grace of God. My family now devises other income ventures to augment what we are getting from the government because our salaries can no longer meet our needs. There should be palliatives for Nigerians. Government can no longer fold its hands and pretend that all is well. If the trend is allowed to continue, it may lead to many negative consequences,” he said.

On her part, Mrs. Ojo Christiana, who works at Ikere local council, said: “We are living in a perilous time. In my home we are in serious debt because our salaries have been used to secure loans that we used to do developmental projects. The government does not help matters because of the backlog of salaries being owed workers at the state local governments.

“We have devised means to skip some meals. We no longer think of a balanced diet in my family. We are more concerned about how we will not starve or go to bed hungry. Our government must begin to redistribute wealth. There is inequality in the country; some people have more than they really need in their lifetime while others live perpetually below poverty lines.”

IN Owerri, Imo State, a retired News Manager with the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), Nnorom Emecheta, blamed the poverty situation in Nigeria on bad governance.

Nnorom said: “Poverty situation in Nigeria is a function of bad governance created by the present All Progressives Congress (APC) administration. Nigeria has a robust economy, yet youth unemployment is growing by the day. There is hunger and poverty in the land and these negative tendencies are responsible for insecurity that Nigeria is experiencing today. The largest population of Nigeria is poor and hungry and unable to attend to their economic needs. It is worrisome that those in the rural areas are facing poverty and hardship. That is why the World Bank is releasing these figures.”

Also speaking in the same vein, a lecturer at a higher institution in the state, Kelechi Ohaji, said: “The cost of inflation in Imo State is terrible. A bag of pure water in Imo is N250, food stuff prices are very high. The problem is high. Workers are being owed. Owners of private schools in Imo want to increase fees. The problem is enormous. I agree with the World Bank’s submission.”

CHARTING the way out of the current economic woes in the country, Godwin Owoh, a professor of Applied Economics, said government at all levels must get involved in activities with “strong cashflow” and do away with the mentality that government cannot do business.

He said it was ironic that state governors, who preside over inefficient bureaucracies, manage flourishing businesses before or after their tenures.

Also speaking, Dr. Austen Nwaze, who teaches entrepreneurship at the Pan-Atlantic University, said rising unemployment signals an impending danger if nothing was done to address rising insecurity, which he blamed for the current de-industrialisation.

He said the herders/farmers conflict must be tackled head-on to encourage farmers to return to the fields and save the impending famine, which would worsen poverty and social tension.

Nwaze said employment would naturally reach a crisis level if farming, which employs over 60 per cent of the population, were not operational.

“The solution to poverty is simple. Let us get people to work. But how can people work in an insecure environment? Our politics is very volatile, so foreign investors are not willing to come. Even domestic investors are not expanding because of fear of insecurity,” he noted.

David Adonri, a financial expert and Vice Chairman of Highcap Securities Limited, said: “There is no quick fix to reducing poverty. Time is required to correct the politico-socio-economic imbalances and abnormalities that cause poverty. First is the need to identify all the microscopic and major factors responsible for poverty in Nigeria and carefully address them.

“Starting from social factors, overpopulation can readily be fingered. Nigeria has excess liquidity of people generated from excessive birth rates and the unbridled influx of aliens. This has escalated the huge reserve army of the unemployed.

“As it stands, the heavyweight of Nigeria’s idle and consuming population has severely outstretched the country’s capacity to enjoy socioe-conomic stability. Worse still is that it is growing at an astronomical rate that will sooner than later precipitate the dreaded Malthusian doomsday. Urgent population control is needed as a practical measure to reduce poverty in Nigeria. Another social hindrance to the reduction of poverty is the pervasive nationwide insecurity. If curtailed, an enabling social environment will be created for peace and progress.”

Adonri also corroborated that poverty could be combatted through appropriate economic policies centered on production.

“The role of money, though important, is only to facilitate the allocation of wealth and exchange of goods and services among people,” he noted, stressing that access to goods and services was basic to addressing poverty.

“Considering the peculiarities of the Nigerian situation and being the poverty capital of the world, applying contemporary macro-economic measures deployed by advanced economies will only worsen the already bad situation.

After careful study of the Nigerian economic situation, it is obvious that the challenges are foundational. They cannot be corrected overnight or at a fell swoop. Nigeria lacks a good foundation for production. This has robbed te country of the capacity to create adequate wealth and generate the productive employment needed to move the teeming masses out of poverty,” he said.

He warned that no country with the population size of Nigeria could run an import-dependent economy and conquer poverty. Thus, he called for the acquisition of production technologies to speedily facilitate job creation.

He continued: “It starts with the development of a sound technical and scientific education as the most primary infrastructure. After this is the development of the engineering infrastructure made up of the metallurgical, tools and machine industries as secondary infrastructure. Next is leveraging the primary and secondary infrastructure to develop tertiary infrastructure made up of the electric power, energy, chemical and ICT industries. These three classes of infrastructure constitute the heavy industrial base of a production-centred economy.”

He warned that the various intervention funds “recklessly deployed by the CBN” could not reduce poverty, stressing that the knee-jerk measures were wasteful.

“A time-bound strategy to take Nigeria through the various stages of the industrial revolution, from first to the current fourth, can make the country conquer poverty,” he added.

Corroborating Adonri’s position, Dr. Femi Saibu, a developmental economist at the University of Lagos, said massive industrialisation through large-scale manufacturing that could take off thousands of people from the labour market was capable of curbing the rising poverty.

He charged the government to partner with the private sector in achieving the much-needed industrialisation.

 Culled from the Guardian Nigeria

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Enugu Revenue Leader Details Tax Plans, Commits to Responsible Fund Management

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In a bid to address rising public concerns and social media speculations about taxation in Enugu State, the Executive Chairman of the Enugu State Internal Revenue Service (ESIRS), Emmanuel Nnamani, has provided clarifications on the government’s tax policies. During a press briefing in Enugu, Nnamani dismissed what he described as “false and misleading claims” and reassured residents that the government’s fiscal operations are firmly rooted in law, transparency, and public good.

Clarifying Misinformation and Affirming Legality

Nnamani opened the session by stressing that no taxes or levies in Enugu State are imposed outside the provisions of the law. “Taxes and revenues in Enugu State remain within the limits of the law. We do not impose any levies outside what the law permits,” he stated, pointing to the Personal Income Tax Act (as amended) as the guiding legal framework.

He explained that the ESIRS collects personal income tax through two lawful means: Pay-As-You-Earn (PAYE) for those in formal employment, and Direct Assessment for informal sector workers. While compliance among salaried workers has been largely smooth, the agency sometimes employs legal enforcement mechanisms to ensure compliance among self-employed individuals.

Formalising the Informal Sector

A key challenge, he noted, has been bringing the informal sector—especially market traders and transport operators—into the formal tax net. Upon assuming office, his administration discovered that an overwhelming 99% of informal sector actors were not remitting taxes to the state, largely due to the disruptive influence of non-state actors engaged in illegal collections.

In response, the government introduced a consolidated ₦36,000 annual levy for market traders. This amount, payable between January and March, covers all relevant state-level charges, including those by the Enugu State Waste Management Agency (ESWAMA), Enugu State Structures for Signage and Advertisement Agency (ENSSAA), storage fees, and business premises levies. “Once this amount is paid between January and March, the trader owes nothing else for that year,” Nnamani clarified. Traders who fail to pay by March 31 are subject to enforcement.

For street vendors operating outside structured markets, an annual levy of ₦30,000 applies, with ESWAMA charges handled separately. Transport operators such as Okada riders, Keke drivers, minibuses, tankers, and trucks pay via a daily ticketing system.

A Human-Faced Approach to Enforcement

Although the law allows for a 10% penalty on unpaid tax and an interest charge tied to the Central Bank’s Monetary Policy Rate of 27.5%, Nnamani disclosed that the state has adopted a softer, pro-business approach. Instead of the full punitive charges, a flat ₦3,000 penalty is applied in most informal sector cases to promote ease of doing business and encourage voluntary compliance.

Taxation and the Cost of Rent

Addressing growing concerns over rising rent, Nnamani rejected claims linking the trend to state tax policies. He described the issue as a national challenge influenced by supply and demand, rather than fiscal policy.

Citing personal experiences dating back to 2015, he observed that a shift in private development preference – from rental apartments to gated residential estates – has contributed to the housing squeeze. “If we had more high-rise buildings, rent would drop,” he noted. The state government, he added, is taking proactive steps through the Ministry of Housing and Housing Development Corporation to build mass housing and student hostels near institutions like ESUT and IMT, freeing up central city housing and helping moderate rents.

Technology, Transparency, and Trust

In line with its commitment to transparency and digital innovation, the ESIRS has launched a tax calculator on its official portal – www.irs.en.gov.ng – allowing residents to compute their taxes with ease and clarity. “This is about transparency and giving our people confidence,” he said, inviting residents to compare Enugu’s tools with those in more advanced states like Lagos.

Understanding the Cost of Development

Responding to concerns that Enugu has become one of Nigeria’s most expensive states, Nnamani acknowledged the perception but clarified that the temporary inflation is largely demand-driven. With Enugu undertaking widespread infrastructural renewal – including smart schools, primary health centres, and hospitality infrastructure – the surge in construction activity has led to increased demand for building materials like granite and rods, which are sourced from other states.

“Once these projects are completed, demand will drop, and prices will stabilise,” he assured. He emphasised that the projects are visible testaments to what taxpayers’ money can achieve when properly managed.

A Call for Mutual Understanding and Civic Partnership

More than a tax clarification, Nnamani’s address served as a reminder of the symbiotic relationship between citizens and government. He appealed for public understanding, noting that when citizens fulfil their tax obligations, the government can, in turn, provide essential services and infrastructure that uplift everyone.

His message was clear: responsible taxation, managed transparently and invested wisely, is the bedrock of sustainable development. From roads to schools and healthcare to housing, Enugu State is demonstrating how taxpayers’ money, when efficiently deployed, can improve lives and build the future.

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The Leadership Deficit: Why African Governance Lacks Philosophical Grounding

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Leadership across nations is shaped not only by policies but by the quality of the individuals at the helm. History has shown that the most transformative leaders often draw from deep wells of ethical, philosophical, and strategic thought. Yet, in many African countries—and Nigeria in particular—there appears to be a crisis in the kind of men elevated to govern. This deficit is not merely political; it is intellectual, philosophical, and deeply structural.

There is a compelling correlation between the absence of foundational wisdom and the type of leaders Nigeria consistently produces. Compared to their counterparts in other parts of the world, Nigerian leaders often appear fundamentally unprepared to govern societies in ways that foster justice, progress, or stability.

Consider the Middle East—nations like the UAE and Qatar—where governance is often rooted in Islamic principles. While these societies are not without flaws, their leaders have harnessed religious teachings as frameworks for nation-building, modern infrastructure, and citizen welfare. Ironically, many of Nigeria’s military and political leaders also profess Islam, yet the application of its ethical standards in public governance is nearly non-existent. This raises a troubling question: is the practice of religion in African politics largely symbolic, devoid of actionable moral guidance?

Take China as another case study. In the last four decades, China’s leadership has lifted over 800 million people out of poverty—an unprecedented feat in human history. While authoritarian in structure, China’s model demonstrates a deep philosophical commitment to collective progress, discipline, and strategic long-term planning. In Western democracies, especially post-World War II, leaders often emerged with strong academic backgrounds in philosophy, economics, or history—disciplines that sharpen the mind and cultivate vision.

In stark contrast, African leaders—particularly in Nigeria—are more often preoccupied with short-term political survival than long-term national transformation. Their legacy is frequently one of mismanagement, unsustainable debt, and structural decay. Nigeria, for example, has accumulated foreign loans that could take generations to repay, yet there is little visible infrastructure or social development to justify such liabilities. Inflation erodes wages, and basic public services remain in collapse. This cycle repeats because those in power often lack not just technical competence, but the moral and intellectual depth to lead a modern nation.

At the heart of the crisis is a lack of philosophical inquiry. Philosophy teaches reasoning, ethics, and the nature of justice—skills that are essential for public leadership. Nigerian leaders, by and large, are disconnected from such traditions. Many have never seriously engaged with political theory, ethical discourse, or economic philosophy. Without this grounding, leadership becomes a matter of brute power, not enlightened governance.

The crisis of leadership in Africa is not solely one of corruption or bad policy—it is one of intellectual emptiness. Until African nations, especially Nigeria, begin to value and cultivate leaders who are intellectually rigorous and philosophically grounded, the continent will remain caught in cycles of poverty and poor governance. True leadership requires more than charisma or military rank—it demands the wisdom to govern a society with justice, vision, and moral clarity. Without this, the future remains perilously fragile.

♦ Dominic Ikeogu is a social and political commentator based in Minneapolis, USA.

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ADC & 2027: Is this alliance strong enough to dismantle APC & defeat Tinubu?

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It will not be easy to defeat Tinubu and the APC

Let me emphatically state without any ambiguity that for the opposition to make President Tinubu lose grip of Aso Rock in 2027 and force him to the status of a “former president” is a herculean task that requires more than defeating him in polling booths. Anyone who has followed President Tinubu’s political success from Lagos to Abuja will agree that he is a master of Nigerian politics. Therefore, to take power away from him, the opposition members must understand that the hurdle facing them is not child’s play but a huge political combat.

But yes, of course, the alliance of ADC without any doubt is very capable of defeating President Tinubu and sending APC out of Aso Rock, but caution must not be thrown to the wind – members of the party must be self-examining, honest, holistic, and critical in taking decisions without sentiments.

Why Peter Obi is the best choice for the ADC alliance

In all fairness, there are notable political heavyweights in this alliance, but if a square peg must be put in a square hole, considering records and national acceptance, Obi currently is the most popular accepted politician in Nigeria and should be the choice of ADC.

We must say it as it is, Obi is not a perfect human being, but in the annals of Nigerian politics, no one, dead or alive,/has the kind of political records he has, and this has endeared him to the hearts of millions of Nigerians. He is just real and different. Whether he is in a public service or in a private business, Obi has remained who he is: humane, caring, humble, civil, considerate, fair, and incorruptible.

In 2023, many did not give him any chance when he left PDP to join Labour Party, but for his character, competence, and transparency, etc. Nigerians not only followed him as a man of honour, but they also spent their money in his campaign throughout the country. It was a generally held view by the majority that he defeated President Tinubu in 2023, allegedly.

If Obi is not part of this political alignment, the best way I would describe the coalition would be an “old wine in a new bottle”, because the new bottle cannot make the old wine taste differently. There is no one in the alliance that we do not know his/her history and political antecedents. WHILE many of them are desperadoes and manipulators, and the reason we do not have Nigeria Airways and constant electricity, etc., many owe Nigerians an explanation of those stealing our gold, etc., in Zamfara State.

What I dread about the coalition

My fear is that I am constantly seeing the hands of Esau but hearing the voice of Jacob in the alliance. I say so because I have seen mischievous steps selfishly played out that are politically suicidal to the alliance and that will not be good for the interests of all Nigerians.

If Nigerians were to choose who will be the candidate of ADC, I am pretty sure that Obi would have an easy ride, but here only party agents will, and that is where the danger lies. Obi, we all know, is not ready to bribe anyone to vote for him because he sees politics as a service to the people and not a business. Owing to this reason, many say he is stingy, and I was in total shock and disappointed the day I saw Barr. Kenneth Okonkwo reprimanded Obi on national television for the same reason. But it is what it is, and I will leave that for another day. Obi is not a desperate politician, and this is one of the things that has differentiated him from others and why we Nigerians really want him.

I am frightened that Obi may be schemed out as the ADC presidential candidate. But let me re-echo this as a warning. If Mr. Peter Obi does not emerge as the candidate of the coalition or is forced to walk out of the alliance, the coalition becomes toothless, what late veteran football commentator Ernest Okonkwo would have described as “beautiful nonsense”. It will make the participation of ADC in 2027 a mere political exercise that will end in futility as long as the presidential election is concerned. And if, for any reason, Obi agrees to be a running mate to anyone, I will withdraw my support from him and give it to President Tinubu.

Mr. Peter Obi, Sir, you are not ready to buy the agents, and many of the agents seem not ready to vote for you either because of your kind of politics of “I will not give shi shi”. Games are already on. Are you ready for this coalition? Did you consider very well, and the coalition was not a trap for you, Sir? Because members of the alliance know that you are the most acceptable Nigerian politician currently and the only person the majority of Nigerians want. They are consciously aware that without you, they cannot defeat APC and President Tinubu, hence the ploy with the alliance. Furthermore, they know you will not try to influence the conscience of any party agent to vote for you during the primary; therefore, they will take advantage of that and influence the agents against you. Please, Sir, if you feel what I suspect, kindly withdraw from the alliance even before the primary. You are the hope of millions of Nigerians, and anywhere you go, we are sincerely willing to follow you.

Why the coalition should be encouraged

Irrespective of my expressed fear, the coalition is a good one. But let me re-emphasize that the mission of ADC members to wrestle power out of the hands of Mr. President in 2027 is like one going into a lion’s den to take its meat. It will not be easy. To get this accomplished, members of the party must make sacrifices and be willing to do away with selfishness. Mr. President is a man who knows how to compensate and care for those supporting him, like he has done to Nyesom Wike, the FCT Minister.

Wike, who may become a victim of his own political arrogance, could be consumed by his overzealousness to be a president one day, and will go to any political extent to make sure that his launch is not taken away from his mouth. And there are many Wikes around Mr. President. The mistake someone like Atiku made was not ensuring that Wike was forced out of the PDP before he left. His continuous stay in PDP is not politically good for ADC’s coalition. I will not be surprised if PDP’s structures are used in supporting APC in 2027 at some point. Consequently, it is a requisite without option that members of the alliance tenaciously combine their resources and strength together for the battle ahead without betraying each other. They must proportionately be prepared to match Mr. President and APC strategy-to-strategy, propaganda-to-propaganda, intimidation-to-intimidation, and force-to-force, etc. That is the only way President Tinubu and the APC could be beaten to submission.

Long, incredible processes an election winner must go through, or else he /she will be declared the loser.

In Nigeria, it absurdly seems like even winning all polling booths in an election is not enough for one to be announced a winner by the electoral umpire INEC (Independent National Electoral Commission). Why? Because there appear to be three stages, the candidates must first struggle with and overcome.

Stage (1): The candidate, his/her political party, and their agents must first of all make sure that the ballot boxes are safely transported from the polling booths to their designated collation centres without being hijacked by thugs or hired hoodlums and swerved with manipulated and stuffed boxes.

Stage (2): They must equally make sure that at the collation centres, the real figures are correctly computed without alteration.

Stage (3) – INEC: Here, the party agents must be very vigilant and ensure that the real figures, deprived of Tippex and cancellation of digits, are actually submitted without extra zeros and numbers added or removed. This becomes crucial in view of what happened in 2023, where INEC’s IReV, for whatever reason, failed to transmit election results from polling booths. This issue must be addressed and avoided so as not to repeat itself.

Remember, once the INEC Chairman announces results and pronounces a winner, one can do nothing but go to court. But the danger is that those factors that induced the announcement of the wrong winner are more likely to also influence courts’ proceedings and sustain what should not be sustained as a final judgment.

Thus, to say that any election winner in Nigerian polling booths who is not well-connected could get announced as a loser by INEC unless a miracle happens, and the most powerful one with political strength and financial influence gets declared winner is a statement past experiences have supported. Whosoever is not willing or who does not have the capacity to go through the processes that influence the final outcome should not bother going into politics, at least for now. It is sad and a very terrible situation, but that is the fact.

If coalition members fail at this juncture to get the electoral system reformed, it is not a good one. And I wonder why they are silent on this crucial point. Though one does not need to be pessimistic, if they fail to ensure that their engineers certify that all BIVAS machines are in good condition before being taken to their various destinations and results transmitted from polling booths, it may not be abstract to say that the election may have already been won and lost even without votes being cast.

Why Obi needs the alliance

In a free and fair election, Obi will clearly defeat APC and President Tinubu with or without the coalition. But because Nigeria is a country where elections are neither free nor fair, considering the factors analyzed above and below, Obi needs the alliance as much as the alliance needs him to close the loophole witnessed in 2023.

On the day of the election, coalition members should make sure that voters’ votes are counted as cast, results transmitted as enshrined in the electoral act without flimsy excuses on any concocted technical hitch, and figures written on the official provided result sheets. They should have the capacity against any bullion van, armored cars, bulletproof jeeps, and other private cars moving around. They should be at the forefront to defend their party’s votes and mandates and mobilize their confidants and agents throughout the country. It is no longer enough to tell the masses to stand with empty hands and defend their votes against well-armed criminals illegally moving around polling booths and collation centres, changing figures, and altering results. Most importantly, they must have the capacity to make the INEC Chairman announce the original documented results and not manipulated figures with Tippex. Anything less will be the same story as it was in 2023.

Conclusion

My sincere message to ADC party agents is that, in their capacity to decide who becomes the presidential candidate of their party, lies the hope of millions of Nigerians for a functioning society. They must be critical and holistic because the choice they make will either take Nigeria out of the throes of death, shape the future we all will be proud of, or pave the way for the continuation of hunger, killings, criminality, hopelessness, and disaster.

We have chosen before based on religion, but it failed us. We have also chosen based on ethnicity, and it was a tragedy. We have equally made choices based on party even when we saw better choices, but our loyalties were rewarded with hunger, insecurity, terrorism, killing, rascality, corruption, sorrow, and tears. We cannot continue in the same direction anymore. We must get it right this time by choosing capacity, integrity, competence, tolerance and a person of honor. Peter Gregory Obi is that option. Choose wisely.

♦ Uzoma Ahamefule, a refined African traditionalist and a patriotic citizen writes from Vienna, Austria. WhatsApp: +436607369050; Email Contact Uzoma >>>>

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