Opinion
FULANI EMASCULATION NOW COMPLETE Doubting Thomas’s now Shamed.
Published
5 years agoon
By
adminFULANI EMASCULATION NOW COMPLETE
Doubting Thomas’s now Shamed.
But we shall rise and Triumph Willy Nilly
The strategy is fool proof yet every project invites its own risks. The master strategist is a master risk evaluator but these people are not. It is clear that those who conceived this project, designed its key elements and planned its implementation somehow failed to design risk management into the mix. This is my evaluation of the Project design and plans to hand over Nigeria to Fulani Nations of Africa. To dominate a people, seize their wealth and enslave them, take full control of political power, get all arms under your control, deny all else of access to any form of weapons, take control of major income organs, deny all else of access to funds. Finally move in surreptitiously and take over physical space. This is what has been going on since 2015.
PHASE 1
FULANI TAKE OVER ALL 3 ORGANS OF GOVERNMENT
Today, all three arms of Government; Executive, Legislative and Judicial have been appropriated by the Fulani Nation. President, Chief of Staff, Senate president, Chief Justice of the Federation, Deputy Speaker House of representatives. It has always been said that he who controls political power controls everything in the Republic. That is what the Fulani have done.
PHASE 2
FULANI TAKES OVER ALL ARMS BEARING ORGANS OF SECURITY
Next, they moved to put all arms under Fulani control. Chief of Army Staff, Chief of Navy Staff, Inspector General of police, Director general of Department of State Security (DSS), National Security Adviser, (NSA), Minister of Defense, Commander of NSCDC, Chairman of NDLEA, all Intelligence services military and civilian. Director NIA, Director Military Intelligence, Director Naval Intelligence, Director Air Force Intelligence, Immigration, Prisons and so on. These are the organs licensed to bear arms. And just like Aristotle observed centuries ago: “Those who have command of the arms in a Country are masters of the State, and have it in their power to make what revolutions they please.”
PHASE 3
NIGERIANS EXCEPT FULANI HEERDSMEN ORDERED TO SURRENDER ARMS
Still not fully comfortable with the capacity of other Nigerians to offer resistance, in February 2018, Nigeria Police Force which feigned ignorance of the uAK47 bearing Fulani terrorists and would not challenge them suddenly announced, through Police spokesman, Jimoh Moshood, plans by the Inspector General of Police to order surrender of both licensed and unlicensed guns from the citizens of Nigeria within 21 days. This was targeted at Vigilante groups, Neighborhood watches and people who obtained licensed guns for personal protection. Evidently, the Fulani herdsmen were exempted from this order as they openly and brazenly carried AK47 weapons in full view of the Police unchallenged. Again, that Philosopher, Aristotle saw this before our time: “Both Oligarch and tyrant mistrust the people and therefore deprive them of their arms.”
PHASE 4
TAKE OVER ALL FUNDS AND DEPRIVE OTHERS OF ACCESS TO MONEY.
The four highest revenue earners of Government were put in the hands of Fulani Muslims from the North. NNPC accounts for 76% of federal revenue, 40% of overall gross Domestic Product and 98% of export earnings is put under Mele Kyari, Fulani from Borno. Federal Inland Revenue Service which generated, at a time, 5.3 trillion Naira under Babatunde Fowler, a Yoruba, was taken and handed over to Mohammed Nami in 2019, also Muslim from the North. Government was patient enough for Fowler to introduce the template and blueprint of the successful Lagos tax initiative. In addition, Fowler brought all the Tax payer register, their key information, their business secrets and customers to the Federal umbrella, thinking perhaps he would be there in forever. The Nigeria Ports Authority whose revenue in 2017 was about 1 trillion Naira and one of the highest 4 is domesticated under a young lady, Hadiza Bala Usman, also Muslim Fulani. The Nigeria Customs Service, yielded a revenue of 1.5 trillion naira was also given to Rtd. Col. Hameed Ali, Muslim Fulani. But that is not all. The big spenders are also Fulani controlled: Defense, Finance, Education, Justice, FCT, Agriculture, Police Affairs, Aviation, Communication, Power, Water Resources, and Humanitarian Affairs. Following key federal agencies too: EFCC, ICPC, NFIU, NNPC, PTDF, DPR, PPRA, PEF, NPA, NIMASA, NDIC, SEC, NAICOM, FMBN, FHA, NHIS, NPHDA, UBEC, TETFUND, SMEDAN, NYSC, BOA, DBN, BPE, NTA, NEDC, FERMA, PENCOM, NITDA, NCC, NEMA, FAAN, NAMA, NIMET, NIRSAL, NIMC and Sovereign Wealth Fund.
PHASE 5:
PHYSICAL OCCUPATION: OKADA LOCUSTS FROM THE NORTH
Importation of foreign Fulani into Southern and Middle Belt regions started rather surreptitiously. Thousands of Fulani youth, scrawny looking, scantily clothed invaded most State Capitals of the South and Middle belt, starting from Lagos. They came in trailers, loaded with brand new motorcycles cal
led “Okada.” Some observant people wondered aloud, how they got these shiny brand-new motorbikes, who paid for them, who sent them down South and who received, camped, housed and fed them. They asked “Is this not be part of a grand Boko Haram agenda?” Not a few suspected them as injected sleeper cells in our urban areas, ready and programmed to press their weapons into action to cause pandemonium, injure and kill in order to dominate and take over local space. Our Governors went about their activities in politics and stealing without distraction, yet the number of these invading troops kept swelling.
PHASE 6:
PHYSICAL OCCUPATION: INJECTION INTO FOREST RESERVES
Under the pretext of Cow herding, they started full scale occupation of forest reserves, importing their family from across all Fulani Nations of West Africa, building their signature straw huts all around and constructing their traditional organs of administration. They brought their wives, their children and their armory of AK47 and ammunition. Still Governors grumbled but wanted a second term and so, feigned ignorance.
GOOD STRATEGY, POOR TACTICS.
Those who conceived and implemented this ‘Take-Over’ strategy failed to take risk management into their project plan. They injected these peasants, equipped them with guns and forgot to sustain them with regular allowances. So, prematurely and before full implementation of mass space occupation, these warriors poured into highways, started to rob passengers for survival before graduating to kidnapping. Now they found this more lucrative than any allowance thus transformed into autonomous agents. They had now acquired enormous power, been introduced to lucrative human trade and become blackmail entrepreneurs. Some with the power of their guns also moved to seize ancestral land and since ‘body no be wood,’ added raping of farmers wives and daughters.
Finally people came alive, started to pay attention and now complained. Abuja ignored them, local Political leaders including Governors and legislators stayed mute, traditional rulers cringed and froze up, but some socio-political leaders raised alarms.
The Presidency, finally, through a Yoruba minion, Femi Adesina warned: “Ancestral attachment? You can only have ancestral attachment when you are alive. If you are dead, how does the attachment matter?” He warned farmers to give up their homeland to stay alive. Vanguard of July 15 2018 reported this along with many other newspapers.
TOO LITTLE TOO LATE.
You have to admire Chinua Achebe for his creative metaphors even when you don’t, his sentiments. Achebe captured our carelessness thus: “People say that if you find water rising up to your ankle, that is the time to do something about it, not when it is around your neck.” Well, the water had gone up beyond our neck before some of our leaders woke up to do something, it had gone up to our nostrils. I don’t know where it is now as we appear to be drowning.
OF 1,123 FULANI CELLS INSERTED DEEP INTO YORUBA FORESTS
On May 25 2019, Yoruba Council of Elders sounded a loud, disturbing and chilling beagle to the Yoruba Nation. 1,123 Fulani sleeper cells had been identified by a University of Ife investigation group commissioned sequel to the kidnap of Professor Yinka Adegbehingbe of the University of Ife by Fulani herdsmen. Security fault lines created by organized Fulani structures inserted into the Yoruba homeland by forces unidentified yet suspected to be highly structured, financed and organized at very high level. These Fulani cells are distributed in groups of at least 15 to 20 complete with women, arms, and other appurtenances of long-term occupation and are now strategically positioned in reserves created by Chief Obafemi Awolowo for Agricultural developments aka Western Nigeria Development Corporation (WNDC) now abandoned. The report suggested options to begin preparations to strengthen the home base, evaluate scope, assess risks, design strategies and craft appropriate tactics to respond to this new security threat. Political leadership especially Governors of the South West States were given this report yet continued in their state of relaxed slumber in insulated dream of safety with security votes safe in their personal accounts in reliable Banks. In a statement by Retired Col. Agbede, key leader of this assignment on behalf of the Council: “As Yoruba elders and leaders in our own rights, we owe it a duty to speak up.
There are 1,123 cells belonging to armed herdsmen located across Yoruba Nation. The cells are well organized and they appear to network with each other as the cells may not be known except that there has been increase in their organizational skills.” When Governors ignored the peoples’ complaints and following consistent Fulani aggression, some communities consulted their age-old Pantheons and took local action. SEPTEMBER 20, sango 2018- THUNDER AT IJARE- THE SANGO OLUKOSO ACTION Within their limited capacity, and without support from the State or Local Governments, some communities tried to defend their territories. Thirty-six cows were reportedly struck dead late one Saturday by thunder bolt on top of a sacred hill at Ijare town in Ifedore Local Government Area of Ondo State. The dreadful hill known as ‘Oke Owa’ was located on the outskirts of the sleepy community. Speaking with reporters, the Olujare of Ijare, who spoke through his second in command, Chief Wemimo Olaniran, the Sapetu of Ijare, called it an act of God. The Sapetu said the herdsmen had been destroying their farmland for a very long time which had led to confrontation on many occasions. He told reporters it came as a surprise that the Gods came into the matter so suddenly. His words: ”We were there this morning and we saw about 36 cows dead apart from the one inside the bush. It has happened and there is nothing we can do, we regard it as the act of God which nobody can query.’ The Sapetu said triumphantly. The invaders ran away from Ijare, never to terrorise our community again.
All these were precursors to the establishment of AMOTEKUN, an outfit the Federal Government insisted must not operate without the Police and must never carry weapons. The question left to ask now is: Is AMOTEKUN up to this task? If not, what else? Surely the ijare model may not work universally across the huge landscape of Oduduwa especially against sophisticated weaponry. Or Will the ‘Igboho’ template hold for long? Think about it.
-FRANCIS OJO
You may like
-
Nigeria, Palestine strengthen bilateral relations, consular cooperation
-
Turkey President Erdogan declares support for Nigeria in fight against terrorism
-
Nigeria’s foreign reserves rise to $46bn — highest in eight years
-
Nigeria back to global economic spotlight – Shettima
-
Nigeria’s job-creation strategy anchored on macroeconomic reform, private-sector growth — Yusuf Tuggar
-
Good morning! Nigerian Newspapers Headlines: IMF raises Nigeria’s 2026 growth forecast to 4.4%, cites FG’s reforms
Opinion
Monday Lines 1| Ibadan Is Oyo | Lasisi Olagunju
Published
3 weeks agoon
January 19, 2026By
admin
On Monday, 25 March, 1946, Chief I. B. Akinyele, Chief James Ladejo Ogunsola, Messrs D. T. Akinbiyi and E. A. Sanda, the very cream of the Ibadan educated elite, met behind closed doors with Oyo town delegates at the secretariat in Ibadan. One of them got home that day and wrote in his diary that they “could reach no agreement because we (Ibadan) flatly refused to pay one penny towards the Alaafin’s salary.”
Yet, some 84 years earlier (1862), the same Ibadan went to war against friends, family, and acquaintances in support of Alaafin. Ibadan destroyed Ijaiye because its ruler, Kurunmi, was rude and unruly to the Alaafin. He had to die because he refused to recognise the king whose father made him Aare, and who made Oluyole Basorun of Ibadan.
Ibadan of 1862 served Oyo and its Alaafin; that of 1946 damned them. Between the first stance and the second, what changed or what caused the change? The tongue. The body. Disposition. Reciprocal respect. My Christian friend pointed at a verse in the Bible: “And the king answered the people roughly. In a blustering manner, gave them hard words and severe menaces…” Then it was “To your tent, O Israel!”
On Sunday, 3 February, 2008, twelve out of the then seventeen members of Oyo State Council of Obas and Chiefs visited the Alaafin in Oyo. They said they were there “to solidarise and pay traditional respect to our permanent chairman.” From that visit came a ten-point resolution which was published as an advertorial on page 27 of the Nigerian Tribune of 5 February, 2008. The title of that advert is: ‘Oyo obas back Alaafin for permanent chairmanship of Council of Obas and Chiefs.’ The fifth of the resolutions is the shortest and most categorical: The obas declared that in Oyo State, “remove the Alaafin, and all other obas are equal.”
The obas who signed that statement were the Eleruwa of Eruwa, Olugbon of Orile Igbon, Okere of Saki, Aseyin of Iseyin, Iba of Kisi, Onpetu of Ijeru, Onjo of Okeho, Sabi Ganna of Iganna, Aresaadu of Iresaadu, Onilalupon of Lalupon, Onijaye of Ijaye and Olu of Igboora.
Now, read that list again – and this is where I am going: In the Saturday Tribune of January 17, 2026 (two days ago), an advert celebrating the reconstitution of the obas’ council with the Olubadan as rotational chairman was signed by six of those who signed the 2008 advert which celebrated Alaafin’s permanent chairmanship. These are: Eleruwa of Eruwa, Olu of Igboora, Olugbon of Orile-Igbon, Onpetu of Ijeru, Okere of Saki and Aseyin of Iseyin.
Yesterday’s “permanence” becomes today’s “rotation,” each wrapped in the rhetoric of unity, justice, and tradition. We see obas who were with Oyo in 2008 shifting allegiance to Ibadan in 2026. What this suggests is not moral collapse but the old, unembarrassed truth about power: it obeys seasons. Our obas, like politicians, have read too much of Geoffrey Chaucer. They move in steps that suggest that time, when it shifts, rearranges loyalties as effortlessly as it rearranges hierarchies.
Friendship and politics define statuses and hierarchies. Governor Rashidi Ladoja in 2004 decentralised the council of obas into zones and directed each paramount oba to preside over their area. His decision was based on the fact and logic that there was no throne of Oyo State for the kings to fight over. I agree with that reasoning, and, in fact I do not think any council anywhere is necessary as conclave of obas. However, last week, Oba Rashidi Ladoja assumed office as chairman of an undecentralised council of obas. What has changed?
Ladoja’s successor, Governor Adebayo Alao-Akala in 2007, made Alaafin permanent chairman. The Olubadan and Soun of Ogbomoso kicked and would have nothing to do with that arrangement. The governor ignored them. He said he was following the law. But the same Alao-Akala, on his way out of government in May 2011, used the House of Assembly to reverse that decision. Because his friendship with the Alaafin had expired, he made the position rotational in the following order: 1. Olubadan; 2. Soun of Ogbomoso; 3. Alaafin of Oyo. Check the Nigerian Tribune of 3 May, 2011, page 4.
Were all these about history, or about that fluid thing called change? What was obviously at play there was (and is) politics; and in politics, nothing is constant; not truth, not friendship. What exists is interest. “There is no fellowship inviolate, No faith is kept, when kingship is concerned,” says Second Century BC Roman poet, Ennius. Obas, institutions and palaces that took a position in 2008, are this year taking a directly opposing stand. What changed? Is it about the person of the last Alaafin and the persona of the incumbent?
In his caustic response to last week’s inauguration of Oyo State Council of Obas, Alaafin Akeem Owoade referred to himself as “superior head of Yorubaland.” Did he have to write that? And, what does it mean? Whatever that claim was meant to achieve has attracted negative vibes from every corner of Yorubaland. I read resentment and resistance even when its author knows it is a plastic claim. In the old understanding of the world, the ancients spoke of two ruling forces: Love, which binds; and Strife, which sunders. The palace, no less than the cosmos, is governed by this uneasy pair. The oba in Yorubaland reigns within the contradiction. The crown draws devotion even as it breeds resentment. It commands reverence when it is humble and just in its royalty; it invites resistance when haughty and proud.
Shakespeare, in Richard III, speaks about kings’ “outward honour” and “inward toil.” In Hamlet, he says “The king is a thing…Of nothing.” In Henry V, he says the “king is but a man, as I am” and therefore prone to errors courtiers make. No two kings are the same; no two reigns score the same marks. There are definitely differences in engagement between the last Alaafin and this new one. Alaafin Adeyemi III went out to make quality friends and read good books; his successor, so far, appears distant and aloof. I am interested in who, among obas and commoners, are his friends. I am eager to know the books he reads. His handlers should help him to succeed by telling him to look more forward than backwards. A lot of 19th century data which he romanticises are no longer valid. For instance, Ibadan of the past saw itself as part of Oyo; today’s Ibadan sees Oyo as part of its inheritance. Read Professor Bolanle Awe in her ‘The Ajele System: A Study of Ibadan Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century’ (1964). Mama reminds everyone who argues with history that “the direct heirs of the Old Oyo empire…regrouped themselves in three main centres at Oyo, Ijaye and Ibadan.” So, Ibadan is Oyo while today’s Oyo is not necessarily Ibadan.
People who understand the dynamics of power and history would insist that Ibadan’s defiance in 1946 and its earlier zeal in 1862 are not contradictions so much as timestamps. We see and feel Ibadan challenging Oyo, even feeling insulted by suggestions of being subjects of Alaafin. Authority once defended as sacred becomes, under a new alignment of interests, negotiable. This Oyo has everything a father has, except age. It has a history of leadership. But has Oyo provided the right leadership in the last one year? You remember what King Sunny Ade sings should be done to Egungun that dances for twenty years and remains in poverty? You throw away its mask and costume and promote Gelede. That is why institutions today act selectively; and actors remember the past strategically. What appears as amnesia or inconsistency is cold calculation. The past is not denied; it is merely edited.
Every Alaafin since 1830 has had to contend with the Ibadan factor. Ibadan is pro-Oyo but it won’t accept suggestions of Alaafin and Oyo overlordship. And that is because the founders of Ibadan were shareholders of Oyo, both the old and the new. In particular, they see in Oyo and its monarchy partners, not lords. Indeed, Ibadan never believed/believes there was (is) a king anywhere for them to worship. Professors I. A. Akinjogbin and E. A. Ayandele say the early Ibadan “prided themselves as a group who had nothing but contempt for the crowns.” Indeed, in July 1936 when the city wanted its Baale to become known and called ‘Olubadan’, its leaders made it clear that what they wanted was the change in title; they did not want an oba who would rob them of their republican freedom. Is that not the reason for its very unique lack of royal or ruling houses? Read Toyin Falola’s ‘Ibadan’, pages 681 and 682.
The new Alaafin has no excuse for making cheap and expensive mistakes. His heritage is goodly and his court is not lacking in quality men and women. When he was made oba a year ago (January 2025), Professor Toyin Falola, easily Africa’s preeminent historian and Yoruba patriot, wrote a long piece of advice for the man chosen as our Alaafin. The title of that piece is: ‘Alaafin Owoade and Yorùbá Renaissance.’ It was primarily written for the new king to read. If he read it, I am not sure many of today’s challenges would spring and hang on his nascent reign. Every paragraph of the essay is gold, every line golden. If he read it last year, he should read it again and make it his operations manual. Take these: “He must learn history. I can reveal to the new Alaafin that his immediate predecessor took time to understand history. Alaafin Adeyemi’s power of retentive memory was second to none. He had a memory arsenal covering almost 500 years…
“Alaafin Owoade must know history…The new Alaafin must not engage in historical revisionism as his counterparts now do. Rewriting history is dangerous, as in saying the Benin Empire owes little to Ile-Ife and Oranmiyan. Conflating Ugbo with Igbo is a wrong-footed interpretation of the past. He needs not to dabble into issues of superiority around who the superior king was in the past. Oyo and Ile-Ife are constant in the people’s history because they represented the seats of economic and political power and the spiritual rallying point of the Yorùbá people. Let him explore the consensus around historical prestige: the foundation of prominent Yorùbá ancestors and the creation of a glorious history.”
So far, it would appear that Alaafin Owoade has not benefited from the nuggets in the Falola advice. He should go back to it. He should also go out to make quality friends among his brother obas. He needs them. If there are people he needs to beg, he should beg them. Nothing is damaged (yet) beyond repairs. Like flights of planes, every reign has tough beginnings. In tension and turbulence, the expertise of the pilot makes a lot of difference. If the Alaafin refuses to spread his eyes first, no guest will sit on the mat he spreads, no matter how beautiful.
He also needs to know (or remember) that power attracts, but it also repels. This is why allegiance cannot be ordered into existence; it must be patiently won. It is also why sovereignty carries its own burden, captured in the timeless lament of the dramatist: uneasy lies the head that wears a crown. For the Alaafin to remain tall, he must woo Ibadan and other Yoruba towns with friendship; he cannot summon their loyalty by proclamation.
(Published in the Nigerian Tribune on Monday, 19 January, 2026
Opinion
PDP and the Ekiti Question: A Party at the Crossroads
Published
3 weeks agoon
January 15, 2026By
admin
The judgment of the Federal High Court nullifying the last PDP governorship primary in Ekiti should be more than a legal setback. it should serve as a loud warning.
The PDP is on the edge of losing Ekiti, not because it lacks popular support, but because it has failed, repeatedly, to build and deploy an effective internal crisis-resolution mechanism.
For a party that prides itself on experience and structure, it is troubling that internal disagreements are allowed to fester until they are settled by the courts. This is not strength; it is institutional weakness.
If this trend continues, history will not be kind to those currently entrusted with leadership of the party in the South West. They will be remembered, not for rebuilding the PDP, but for presiding over avoidable damage to its fortunes.
The reality is simple. If a fresh primary is conducted and Dr Wole Oluyede emerges again, there is no guarantee that supporters of Funsho Ayeni will fully mobilise for him. The reverse is also true. A divided PDP cannot win a governorship election in Ekiti, no matter how unpopular the ruling party may be.
This is why the party must think beyond ego and faction. PDP leaders should urgently explore a consensus option that prioritises unity, stability, and electability.
The party must resolve to embrace a candidate that has displayed clear examples of restraint, loyalty, and a willingness to sacrifice personal ambition for the survival of the party. The PDP needs a natural unifying force at a time when the PDP needs healing, not further strain.
Ekiti is too important to be lost on the altar of unresolved internal conflicts. The PDP must choose unity now, or risk collective regret tomorrow.
Opinion
OGUN WEST AND THE POLITICS OF 2027: TIME FOR A COLLECTIVE RESET
Published
3 months agoon
November 19, 2025By
admin
As a long-standing stakeholder in Ogun State’s political evolution, actively involved since the second-term bid of Otunba Gbenga Daniel in 2005–2006 and deeply committed to the Ogun West struggle since 2011, I find it necessary, even urgent, to lend my voice to the ongoing political conversation shaping our collective future.
To my fellow advocates of the Ogun West agenda, I pose a sincere question: Can we confidently say that our current approach is yielding the results we desire? If we are candid with ourselves, the answer forces a sober reflection.
We must pause and interrogate our journey with clear, unblinking honesty:
• Why has our collective aspiration remained elusive?
• Has our struggle been reduced unfairly to the size of one’s pocket?
• How do we restrategize to give our dream a stronger footing?
• Is our present approach the finest representation of our capacity?
• How do we unify our political actors without silencing legitimate voices?
• While aiming for the governorship, are we also grooming our best minds for national leadership; Senate President, Deputy Senate President, Speaker of the House?
• Why do we remain divided when unity remains our strongest tool?
Our struggle must remain free from personal gain. The moment personal interests take control, the core of our agitation becomes compromised. Our political leaders and traditional institutions owe us the fairness to create a level playing field for every son and daughter with capacity. Thankfully, most of these actors remain under one political umbrella, a situation that makes harmony easily achievable.
Fragmentation weakens us. Disunity destroys the leverage we need at critical political moments. To be taken seriously, we must present a solid, unbroken front free from internal sabotage, petty rivalries, and external manipulation.
I recall the Ijebu Agenda toward the 2019 election. It grew as a movement driven by collective purpose. Ogun Easterners rallied behind it with remarkable cohesion irrespective of their political party affiliation. When Prince Dapo Abiodun emerged as the APC candidate, stakeholders including traditional institutions aligned with ease. A premature endorsement of any aspirant would have created avoidable resistance.
This remains a crucial lesson for Ogun West: the movement must take prominence over individuals.
Our struggle cannot shrink to the ambition of one person. The Ogun West cause carries a weight that requires broad-based support, deliberate strategy, and inclusive leadership. Any attempt to center the entire project on a single individual limits our options and weakens our bargaining strength. We must also not forget that most of our political actors have sizeable support base beyond our senatorial district. How do we take advantage of that?
Our focus should remain on strengthening institutions, deepening alliances, and articulating a vision that outlives personalities. Our power grows when unity leads the process.
If Ogun West truly seeks the support of Governor Dapo Abiodun, CON, ahead of 2027, our posture must reflect strategic engagement. Recent actions by a few supporters give the impression of confrontation before the race even begins. This approach creates unnecessary tension and offers no advantage.
We need a thoughtful, collaborative, politically grounded strategy, one that demonstrates maturity and commitment to the progress of Ogun State.
Our advocacy should rise on the strength of ideas, research, and clarity. Instead of inflamed rhetoric, we should:
• Present research-driven proposals.
• Engage in dialogue that elevates understanding.
• Contribute development blueprints aligned with the founding vision of Ogun State.
This positions Ogun West as a partner in progress and strengthens our image in the political landscape.
The All Progressives Congress (APC) has been fair to Ogun West. Recognition is necessary. From impactful bills and motions, to federal empowerment schemes and infrastructural strides, our region has benefited from purposeful representation at the federal level both at the legislative and executive arms of government.
We express sincere appreciation to Mr. President, His Excellency Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, whose support has amplified these developmental gains.
The competition among our federal lawmakers remains encouraging. A few individuals may attempt to sow discord, yet the wider picture shows lawmakers committed to employment facilitation, youth empowerment, and community upliftment. This form of competition drives progress and lifts communities.
To sustain this rise, collaboration must lead the way. Passion from one person cannot match the force of collective strategy. Unity, shared purpose, and mutual respect carry greater weight.
Let us build bridges that hold firm.
Let us elevate our collective voice through cooperation.
Ogun West is rising, and our actions will determine the strength and longevity of that rise.
Political support grows through trust, consistency, and loyalty. By cultivating respectful relationships with key stakeholders, especially Governor Abiodun, the leader of the party in the state, we create the foundation for long-term synergy and shared achievements.
Supporters have the right to canvass for their aspirants, provided such efforts do not silence others. Democracy grows through open dialogue.
Today, Ogun West boasts some of the most effective federal lawmakers in the country, from our Senator to our House of Representatives members supported during the 2023 elections by our amiable Governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun, CON. We also have an elegant and capable Deputy Governor whose poise and maturity uplift our region’s image.
Yet we must confront a critical question:
How do we bring all these leaders together without pushing one aside to lift another?
Governor Abiodun has demonstrated a style of leadership anchored on peace, development, and inclusive governance. If Ogun West intends to remain part of that vision, our strategy must align with his temperament and priorities. His support carries weight because of his role as party leader and his influence in the electoral process.
The future of the Ogun West project rests on strategic partnership. When we embrace this path, we strengthen our chances of winning support, deepening unity, and contributing meaningfully to the broader future of Ogun State.
Ogun 2027 presents a moment that demands wisdom, calm strategy, and shared purpose.
Thank you.
God Bless Ogun State.
God Bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Lateef Olusoji
Emilandu Compound, Imeko
Imeko Ward
Imeko Afon Local Government
Ogun State
Trending News
-
Privacy5 years agoSelf-imposed Oba vacates ‘palace’ after warnings by community
-
News5 years agoNollywood Actress Nkechi Blessing speaks on plastic surgery, big butts
-
Entertainment4 years agoDJ Dimple Nipple dropped by longtime boyfriend after claiming D’Prince allegedly demanded sex for roles
-
News5 years agoPlus size rocks: Ghanaian plus size dancer who can’t travel by air because of her size
-
Opinion5 years agoLeave our community, Imobi orders self-imposed Oba
-
News5 years agoHow CCTV ’caught’ Baba Ijesha molesting minor
-
Sports4 years agoMeet Ashleigh Plumptre, the ‘Oyinbo’ member of Nigeria Super Falcons [Video]
-
Entertainment4 years agoIni Edo welcomes first child through surrogacy, speaks on past miscarriages
