Author: Our Correspondent

  • Buhari Set to commission Itakpe Warri rail line on Tuesday

    Buhari Set to commission Itakpe Warri rail line on Tuesday

    President Muhammadu Buhari will on Tuesday September 29 commission the Warri Itakpe rail line for commercial and persenger use.

    A statement signed by the Permanent Secretary ministry of transpart, Magdalena Ajani stated that the commissioning ceremony will take place at th Goodluck Jonathan, Railway Complex, Agbor, (Owa –Oyibu), Delta State by 11.00am

    The Honourable Minister of Transportation, Rt. Hon. Rotimi Amaechi, CON, and The Honourable Minister of State for Transportation, Sen. Gbemisola Saraki are listed as host of the event.

    Announcer:
    Dr. Magdalene Ajani
    Permanent Secretary
    Federal Ministry of Transportation, Abuja

  • Nigeria Won’t Break. It’d Evolve. Here’s How

    Nigeria Won’t Break. It’d Evolve. Here’s How


    By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.

    Nigeria will be 60 years old as a formally independent country next Thursday, but the divisibility and tiresomely endless feuding that have emerged as some of its defining features since its forced birth more than a century ago show no sign of abating.

    The immobilizing factiousness of the past five years have particularly conduced to the growing sentiment that Nigeria won’t be around much longer. Opinion leaders of major ethnic groups are plotting exit strategies from the Nigerian union.

    But as much as I respect the rights of any people to dissociate from a toxic Nigerian union that seems to hold everybody back, I think that news of Nigeria’s imminent dismemberment is greatly exaggerated.

    What I foresee happening—bits of which are actually already manifest—is that Nigeria would use its current ethnographic resources to evolve into a completely different country. And here’s my admittedly imperfect ethnographic forecast of an evolved Nigeria.

    Let me begin from northern Nigeria, Lugardian northern Nigeria, that is. Home to more than half of Nigeria’s over 500 ethnic groups, northern Nigeria is Nigeria’s most diverse region. Even the two major ethnic groups from Southern Nigeria are represented in the North.

    There are Yoruba people who are native to Kwara and Kogi states and there are Igbo people—of the Ezza, Izzi and Effium sub-group, who are also found in Ebonyi State—who are native to at least four of Benue State’s 23 local governments. That makes northern Nigeria the microcosm of Nigeria.

    But I prognosticate that an evolved northern Nigeria would be monolingual with a few holdouts. The Hausa language already predominates in 16 of northern Nigeria’s 19 states. Only Benue, Kogi and Kwara states have so far resisted the linguistic hegemony of the Hausa language.

    Every subsequent generation in the 16 Hausaphone northern Nigerian states internalizes the logic and desirability of Hausa-inflected linguistic uniformity and a corresponding abandonment of the plethora of native languages that dot the region’s linguistic map.

    Even Fulfulde (as the language Fulani people speak is called) is dying in such northeastern states as Adamawa, Taraba, Gombe and Bauchi, and the resistance to Hausa in Kanuri-speaking Borno and Yobe weakens every generation.

    The relentless march of the Hausa language in Northern Nigeria will ensure that a somewhat unified mega identity, riven only by religion, would emerge, and memories of previous ethnic and linguistic identities would recede or disappear—in the same way that many Hausa-speaking communities in northwest Nigeria have no memory that their distant ancestors were not Hausa-speaking people.

    So two dominant identities would emerge from northern Nigeria: Hausaphone Muslim northerners and Hausaphone Christian northerners. The Tiv, Idoma, Igede, Igbo, etc. people of Benue State who have historically resisted the Hausa language would share more in common with the emergent ethnic alchemies of southern Nigeria than they would with Hausaphone northern Christians.

    The Yoruba-speaking people of Kwara and Kogi states would also fit more easily with their kith in the Southwest, with Ilorin Emirate being a holdout even though its sociolinguistic and geographic singularities would not permit its seamless fusion into the Hausaphone northern Muslim identity.

    The people of what has been called Kwara North—the Baatonu and Boko people of Baruten and Kaiama local governments and the Nupe people of Pategi and Edu local governments— who are culturally more similar to other Muslim northerners than they are to the Yoruba-speaking parts of Kwara State would easily meld well into the Hausaphone Muslim identity. Both the Igala and the Ebira of Kogi have cultural and linguistic kith in southern Nigeria and are easily amenable to Hausaphone Muslim/Christian identities.

    The former Eastern and Midwestern Nigeria are already witnessing the incipience of an alchemic ethnic fusion of disparate groups enabled largely by the enormous creolization of Nigerian Pidgin English and the Pentecostalization of the Christianity of the regions.

    By creolization, I mean the transformation of Nigerian Pidgin English from an anarchic, emergency contact language for episodic encounters to a stable, rule-governed, self-sufficient native language that millions of people speak and identify with on an emotional and cultural level such as is the case with the Krio of Sierra Leone.

    The creolization of Nigerian Pidgin English seems unstoppable and appears primed to play the role Hausa is playing in northern Nigeria as an ethnographic glue to coalesce otherwise historically disparate people. The shared Christian identity of the people of the regions, which is now increasingly Pentecostal Christianity, would accentuate this process.

    As anyone who pays attention to Edo State would testify, the new identity formation among southern Nigerian minorities is already killing Islam in Edo North where it has existed for decades. There is a mass Christianization of Muslims in northern Edo, and this would only intensify in the coming generations.

    As I’ve shown previously, Islam is a strong building block for identity formation in Northern Nigeria, so that “Hausa” and “Muslim” have become misleadingly synonymous in the Nigerian popular imagination. That is why people of northern Edo used to be erroneously called “Bendel Hausa” even though they speak an Edoid language that is almost mutually intelligible with the Bini language.

    The association of Islam with Hausa—or, to use the trendiest hyphenated identity formation, Hausa-Fulani—is leading to its repudiation in even historically Muslim polities in southern Nigeria such as Yorubaland. Stories of Yoruba Imams who aren’t allowed to lead prayers in the North and of the distrust of the authenticity of the Islam of Yoruba people by Hausa Muslims help to solidify resistance to Islam. Today, overtly Muslim Yoruba people are seen as by non-Muslim Yoruba as perfidious toadies of the Muslim North.

    If this attitude persists—and I don’t see any reason why it wouldn’t—it means southern Nigeria would become wholly Christian a few generations from now.

    It is not clear to me now if Pidgin English in the former Western Nigeria would be creolized like it is becoming among southern minorities because of the social prestige of the Yoruba language and the numerical power of its native speaker base, but there are already signs that this is happening among the Igbo people.

    The Igbo language is the only Nigerian language with millions of native speakers which is nonetheless classified as an “endangered language” because of the tendency toward what Professor Chukuwma Azuonye has called “the fetishization of English” among the Igbo, including code-mixing and code switching, assimilation of Pidgin English into the Igbo language, among other factors he identified in his article titled “Igbo as an Endangered Language.”

    I have a personal encounter with this. In 2000 when news filtered through that there were retaliatory mass slaughters of northerners in the southeast, the editor-in-chief of Weekly Trust where I worked requested that I travel there to cover it.

    He said I could easily pass for an Igbo man and that my linguistic handicap in the Igbo language wouldn’t be an issue since Igbo people actually revere their kith who are monolingual in English. What he said turned out to be accurate. Throughout the five days I traveled all over the region, not once was I suspected to be anything but an Igbo.

    I got along with a mixture of Pidgin English, Standard English, and a strategic sprinkling of “nna” and other popular Igbo intensifiers in my speech. In fact, when I was returning to Kaduna, someone in Onitsha actually asked why I was going to “where they are killing our people.” “Nna, na my business,” I said.

    In other words, generations from now, the fissiparity that drives Nigeria’s current ethnic tensions will dissipate and the fresh contradictions of an evolved Nigeria would frustrate its dismemberment.

    For instance, Hausaphone northern Christians, who are a huge chunk, would be invested in a united Nigeria for their self-survival. Although they would share linguistic affinities with the Hausaphone Muslim North, their apprehensions about religious domination would connect them to a creolized Christian South.

    More than that, though, Nigeria has generated an enormous repertoire of collective national identity symbols that the upcoming generations, who won’t be moored to the same identities as us, would find hard to throw away.

    Of course, as the example of Somalia shows, nations don’t endure merely because of the similarities and shared memories of the people that constitute it. That was why Steve Goodier once said, “We don’t get harmony when everybody sings the same note. Only notes that are different can harmonize. The same is true with people.” Read more at

  • UN at 75 holds lots of hope and hopelessness.

    UN at 75 holds lots of hope and hopelessness.

    By Owei Lakemfa


    The United Nations, UN, commenced activities marking its 75th Anniversary on Monday, September 21, buoyed with floods of mainly congratulatory speeches in a world drenched in increasing despair and cynicism. Its predecessor, the League of Nations had been born on June 28, 1919 under the Versailles Peace Treaty which ended World War I. Thirteen of the 15 parts of the Treaty, punished defeated Germany.
    The Treaty forced the disarmament of Germany, imposed on it heavy reparations, seized some of its territories and gave them to Poland, Czechoslovakia and Belgium.

    They also confiscated (instead of granting independence) to Germany’s colonies in China, the Pacific and Africa. These included Togo, Cameroun, Namibia and Tanganyika( Now part of Tanzania) and Botswana.
    However, the League of Nations was consumed in the hellfire-like flames of the second European conflagration in 22 years which the conquerors styled the Second World War. In truth, it was not the world that was at war; rather, the Europeans with their American cousins who had conquered the world as colonialists were settling their final scores in a bestial war in which they dragged the rest of humanity.


    We in Africa fought on both sides of that war as objects of our various colonial masters and some of the hottest battles took place in colonies like Myanmar (The Burma War). Some of the fiercest battles were fought in North Africa where the Germans led by the colourful “Desert Fox”, Field Marshall Erwin Rommel, locked horns with the British led by Field Marshall Bernard Law Montgomery.


    After the Second World War in 1945, some countries met to sign the UN Charter in San Francisco, United States, based on the principles of equality, human rights for all, peace, security and development in a shared world. Ironically, for the first time in its history, the UN could not gather in New York this year for its annual General Assembly due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

    The Immediate Past President of the Assembly, Tijjani Muhammad-Bande of Nigeria explained that: “World leaders cannot come to New York because they cannot come simply as individuals. A President doesn’t travel alone, leaders don’t travel alone” and it is impossible to bring large delegations to New York. World leaders were, therefore, enjoined to make pre-recorded video speeches for virtual meetings based on the theme: ‘The Future We Want, the UN We Need: Reaffirming our Collective Commitment to Multilateralism’.


    The UN is about nations uniting for universal good, but to borrow a phrase the Nigerian Presidency used for a former president, American President Donald Trump rather than work for global unity, is playing the role of ‘Divider-in-Chief’.

    On Monday, Trump failed to deliver the expected American video speech; Vice President Mike Pence did not, neither did Secretary of State Michael Pompeo nor the US ambassador to the UN, Kelly Craft.

    Rather, Pompeo and Craft chose that day to hold a press conference attacking Iran, announcing new sanctions and generally putting the world on notice that America is ready for war. Iran dismissed the American address.


    The acting Deputy United States ambassador, Cherith Norman Chalet had to address the ceremony live from UN headquarters. However, the next day when the American COVID-19 deaths topped 200,000, Trump sent an address pronouncing China guilty of having “unleashed this plague onto the world” and asking that it be punished.


    Some countries in their speeches verbally attacked the US. Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, denounced “the world of hegemony, the world of imperialism” declaring that: “Venezuela supports a multipolar world, a renewed UN system, a system that knows how to enforce international law and protect the people of the world.”

    In his speech, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla said: “It seems that (the US) is at war with the planet… and its inhabitants”.


    Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan , whose country assumed the UN General Assembly Presidency, lamented that 820 million people in the world are hungry, 170 million people are in urgent need of aid and protection, while more than 70 million people had to flee their homes due to conflicts and oppression.

    He argued that: “Despite the ideals that have been set out, the United Nations system can neither prevent conflicts nor end those that have already begun.”

    In reference to the UN Security Council, he argued that: “A Council with a structure that leaves the fate of seven billion people at the mercy of five countries is not fair, and it is not sustainable either… The world is greater than five.”


    Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari agrees, saying: “The demand for the reform of the United Nations Security Council is just and a place for Africa in the very strategic organ of the organisation is long overdue.”

    South African President Cyril Ramaphosa and Eygpt concurred, with the latter demanding two permanent seats for Africa with full powers, including the Veto.


    The European Union, EU, said its commitment is preserving and strengthening multilateral relations with its partners across the globe, with the United Nations at its core. The UN General Assembly President Volkan Bozkir, focused on the body’s achievements which he said includes arms control to prevent nuclear conflict, peacekeeping and electoral assistance.


    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told members: “It is now time to mobilise your resources, strengthen your efforts and show unprecedented political will and leadership, to ensure the future we want and the United Nations we need”.

    The President of the UN Economic and Social Council, ECOSOC, Munir Akram, said humanity is drifting towards erosion of structures that have been built to preserve peace and promote prosperity, and risking a “tragedy of epic proportions for all mankind”.

    He called for a reversal.
    Chinese President Xi Jinping’s focus was on COVID-19 which has infected at least 31 million persons and killing about one million. The pandemic, he said, is a grave test for the entire world. Russian President Vladimir Putin supported China on the issue that the world puts up a united fight against COVID-19. President Emmanuel Macron of France said: “The world today cannot be reduced to the rivalry between China and the United States, irrespective of the global weight of these great powers.”


    One of the most touching speeches came from Lebanon, the fractious, economically devastated, fire-ravaged but proud country. Its President, Michel Aoun, said despite all its suffering, Lebanon stands for multilateralism. This is in contrast to Trump’s insistence on unilateralism. He had told the UN: “Only when you take care of your own citizens, will you find a true basis for cooperation.”


    The UN depends on multilateralism, so the American insistence on unilateralism including exiting the UNESCO, defunding the WHO, rejecting the Paris Climate Change Agreement and repudiating the Iran international nuclear deal, is a grave threat to its existence.

  • Air Force to conduct aerial display to mark Nigeria’s 60th independence

    Air Force to conduct aerial display to mark Nigeria’s 60th independence


    The Nigerian Air Force has announced that it would be conducting an aerial display as part of activities to mark the 60th Anniversary of the nation’s independence.

    A statement by Air Force spokesman IBIKUNLE DARAMOLA said, the aerial display would take place at the Eagle Square, Abuja on Thursday, 1 October 2020.

    It noted that rehearsals for the event, were already in top gear and would involve military aircraft flying at low level.

    He urged members of the public not to panic but go about their normal activities.

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  • UK to seize $39 million from James Ibori lawyer

    UK to seize $39 million from James Ibori lawyer

    The United Kingdom authorities on Thursday moved to seize more than $39 million from a convicted lawyer who it said helped James Ibori laundered government funds.

    Ibori, a former governor of Delta State for eight years, was convicted by a UK court in 2012 after pleading guilty to fraud and money laundering. He was extradited from the United Arab Emirates to Britain in 2011 and was convicted in 2012 and jailed for 13 years.

    Bhadresh Gohil, who helped him siphoned money was also convicted in 2010 on a 13-count charge of money laundering and was sentenced to 10 years in prison. 

    The judge who convicted Gohil described him as the “architect” of the scheme, adding that “it’s said the real villains are in Nigeria, but this fraud required special expertise and you lent yourself to it.”

    The lawyer helped Ibori to buy assets such as an English country house and a $20 million private jet – although police caught up with the men before the jet was delivered.

    Reuters reported that Gohil, a former partner at a London law firm, masterminded the operation in which about 37 million dollars was stolen from Delta State through the charging of fake consultancy fees in connection with the sales of its stakes in a telecoms company, V-Mobile.

    The lead prosecutor in the case against Gohil, Jonathan Kinnear, laid out before the judge at London’s Southwark Crown Court on Thursday what he said was the lawyer’s criminal benefit.

    A case for the confiscation of 117.7 million pounds was opened against Ibori in the same court in January. The judge is yet to make any pronouncement in that case.

    A confiscation order has already been given in another case connected to Ibori. In September 2019, Judge David Tomlinson at Southwark Crown Court ordered a former Goldman Sachs banker Ellias Nimoh Preko to pay £7.3m.

    Preko was sentenced to four and half years in prison in 2013 for his role in laundering $4m for Ibori.

    In a twist to Gohil’s case, he was paid £200, 000 by UK’s Crown Prosecution Services after winning a case the police for unlawful detention for 33 days between 20 November and 22 December 2015.

  • Flood cuts off Lokoja-Ajaokuta road, sacks more residents

    Flood cuts off Lokoja-Ajaokuta road, sacks more residents

    By Bobby Oshioke

    Flash floods from River Niger had cut off Lokoja -Ajaokuta road, which leads to the South -East and some South-South parts of the country.

    A correspondent of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) who visited the flooded parts of Lokoja on Thursday, reports that the flood had covered a section of the road at Ganaja village, thereby making it difficult for motorists coming to and fro to pass.

    Residents living at Ganaja village, Jingbe , Elete, and other adjoining communities had also been having a tough time driving through the flood for the past few days.

    As a result, the road had been experiencing heavy traffic gridlock, especially of trucks and passenger vehicles on interstate transport services.

    Unfortunately, articulated vehicles, luxury buses, and trucks carrying perishables had no alternative route to divert.

    Residents have had to resort to alternative longer routes to access their houses or go to work. Also, workers, staff, and students of the Ajaokuta Steel Company, Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria (Prime FM Station), and Salem University are hard hit by the development.

    It was observed that many shop owners, hotels, and places of work along the road had been forced to close down as a result of the flood.

    The deplorable condition of the road had further compounded the woes being experienced by motorists and commuters.

    Also, more residents of houses in Adankolo, Sarkin Noma, Galilee, Kpata, and other flood-prone areas in Lokoja were forced to flee their homes because of the flooding.

    The heavy downpour on Wednesday night resulted in to rise in water level in River Niger, a development that may further worsen the situation.


  • FG Unveils New National Policy On Science, Technology Education

    FG Unveils New National Policy On Science, Technology Education

    By Williams Anuku Abuja

    Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu has unveiled a new national policy on Science and Technology Education (S&TE) to propel hands on skills in science and technology among students.

    The policy redirection was a fall out of a recent meeting by the National Council on Education which recommended the review of the S&TE curricula.

    Adamu, represented by the Minister of State for Education, Emeka Nwajiuba, at the unveiling ceremony on Thursday, said given the critical importance of science and the acquisition of technical and vocational skills as tools for driving national growth and development, the absence of a road map has slowed down the pace of Nigeria quest for technological achievement.

    “This initiative underscores the passion and determination of the present administration of President Muhammadu Buhari to address the challenges facing the delivery of quality science and technical education in Nigeria, “he stated.

    In his remarks, Permanent Secretary of the Education Ministry, Sonny Echono, noted that observed gaps and poor synergy among stakeholders had hindered the optimal development of the sector.

    He said the new policy document was multi-sectoral in nature , as it has a holistic approach to leadership and life skills training for pupils, students, teachers and youths in and out of school.

    “The new national policy on science and technology education has both institutional and human capacity building linkages between schools and communities. It also includes provision of required facilities and equipment on a systematic and sustainable basis, “he noted.

  • Air chief Sadique Abubakar marries humanitarian affairs minister Sadiya Umar

    Air chief Sadique Abubakar marries humanitarian affairs minister Sadiya Umar

    By Bobby Oshioke

    Daybreak can confirm that the Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Sadique Baba Abubakar, has secretly married the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Hajiya Sadiya Umar Farouq.

    According to report by several sources the wedding Fatiha took place on last Friday, September 18, 2020, at the Maitama Juma’a Mosque in Abuja.

    “It is true that the chief of air staff and the humanitarian affairs minister have gotten married,” one of the sources said.

    “Very few people were invited to attend the wedding fatiha because the couple and those close to them didn’t want to publicize the issue,” he said.

    Another source said the two have been in love for some time.

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  • ‘I’m not down’ Oshiomhole breaks silence

    ‘I’m not down’ Oshiomhole breaks silence

    By Bobby Oshioke

    After his candidate Ize Iyamu of the APC sufferred humiliating defeat in the just concluded Edo governorship election, former national president of the APC Adams Oshiomhole says he is not down but grateful to God.

    Oshiomhole in a statement made available to Daybreak said he did his best.

    “You know in life, you work hard and leave God for the outcome, you do your best and trust God to bless your effort.

    “I feel good, I feel healthy thank God, I feel strong thank God. In life you win some and you lose some but life goes on. I want to thank everybody, I am sure a lot of people think comrade is down but I am not down. When God says you are not down, you are not down and I am not down.

    “I thank Edo people for all they did over the past two, three, four, six weeks, people under the rain under the sun, young ladies carrying babies on their back, I saw elderly women struggling to see my small face, and on election day I was moved to tears when I saw elderly women of 70 to 75 sitting down because the card readers were not working and they were not frustrated with that, they struck me with that. If at their age, they didn’t give up, why should I give up?

    “And I ask our people to have faith in our country, you cannot have faith in another country.

    “I have only have one passport and I am not about to apply for any other passport. This country, we must make it great, we must strengthen democracy, we must improve on it. No matter the outcome of an election or a particular edition of the process, have faith in God and have faith in our country. God bless you all.”

  • NDLEA ARRESTS TWO, IMPOUNDS 1503KGS OF ASSORTED DRUGS IN ZAMFARA

    NDLEA ARRESTS TWO, IMPOUNDS 1503KGS OF ASSORTED DRUGS IN ZAMFARA

    From Abba Kabara, Gusau.

    Zamfara state command of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has recently impounded 1503.044 kilograms of assorted illicit drugs and arrested two suspects in connection with the illegal possession of the items.


    The state commander of the agency Mr.  Gabriel Adamu Eigege who disclosed this to the press in Tsafe area command today, said the area command acting on intelligence information, had on 11th this Month, intercepted a Mercedes Benz truck with registration number “ANAMBRA XY 200 FGG along Gusau/Sokoto road.


    He disclosed that on inspection of the vehicle, a huge consignment of assorted illicit drugs were discovered concealed in various corners of the truck.


    Mr. Adamu explains that items discovered in the vehicle include 185kgs of Cannabis Sativa, 11.5kgs of Hypnox, 14kgs of Diazepam, 22.7kgs of Valinex-5, 310kgs of Exol-5, and 59.844kgs of Codeine Syrup amount to several millions of naira.


    He regrets that all the illicit and harmful items were targetted to be dispensed in Zamfara state and the youth were the target, larmenting that “if the huge load of the naverious drugs were allowed to infilterate into the society, it will surely disturb the peace of the state”


    The state Commander also disclosed that two suspects , (name withheld) were arrested in connection with the crime, and were still  being held pending the outcome of further investigation.


    He gives a sound of warning to all dangerous drug dealers to keep their distance from Zamfara state , “as my command would never allow such heartless persons to continue destroying the youth population in their greed to get rich”, he stressed.


    Speaking at the occasion, the state commissioner for security and home affiars Hon. Abubakar Muhammad Dauran, while commending the efforts of the agency, said the interception of the dangerous drugs was a great help to his ministry 


    He expressed the belief that these naferious drugs were the major driving source of most crimes in the state such as banditry, kidnapping, as he observes that once it is consumed, the person becomes hallucinated and rendered heartless, animalistic and can involve in any inhuman behaviour without remorse.


    He said the heroic action by the Tsafe zonal command led by Mr Halilu Hamidu can be rated as mother of all siezures as it is the one ever recorded since the creation of the state.


    In his response, the governor of the state who spoke through his commissioner for local government and chieftiancy affiars Hon. Yahaya Chado Gora also stressed that most of the crimes committed against humanity are orchestrated from the use of such drugs .


    He said the state government is particularly pleased with the siezures of such large size of such illicit drugs  by the Tsafe zonal command, giving assurance that his government will remain committed to assisting the state command, recalling that recently the government donated two new operational vehicles to boost its morale.