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Killings, violence sponsored by opponents of govt — Opadokun

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Killings, violence sponsored by opponents of govt — Opadokun

At my installation as the Grand Patron of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in Offa, Kwara State, I stated and I reiterate that the current wave of killings and violence in the country is not accidental. It is deliberately schemed and sponsored by opponents of the government. A former North-West governor once disclosed how bandits were contacted and used during the 2014/2015 political period. After achieving their purpose, they expected the violence to stop, but it did not. We have seen this pattern before. With the 2027 election approaching, the government must urgently restore peace, because the credibility of any election depends on a secure and governable country where citizens can freely cast their votes.”Opadokun

•How failure to address Sharia law, politicians’ use of armed thugs backfired

*No nation can shoot its way to peace

By Clifford Ndujihe, Politics Editor

Chief Ayo Opadokin, a lawyer and former assistant director of the Unity Party of Nigeria, UPN, in the Second Republic, was in the trenches during the battle against military rule that birthed the current democratic dispensation as national publicity secretary of the National Democratic Coalition, NADECO. In this interview, he spoke on the state of the nation, raging war against insecurity, the way forward for the country and why he wrote a new book: The Gun Hegemony.

What inspired you to write The Gun Hegemony? 

After I was arrested by the military and whisked off to Abuja where I spent 33 months at DSS headquartered  and later taken to Kano Central Prison where I spent 16 months, I made up my mind during my detention that I would write two books. The first was my Prison Memoirs that was presented at MUSON Centre in year 2000.

Second, I was convinced that except for the power of the gun i could not have been so captured and hounded by people of mean reputation who do not mean well for our society and had arrested our growth and development.

Here is me, who is defending the rights of the ordinary man being captured like a felon. I thought that the gun was the major factor in the matter. I, therefore, decided that I was going to deal with the matter of the gun-those who wield it, those who are in custody of it, that is the Army.

So, The Gun Hegemony was inspired by a seeming race to return to the state where might is right, brutish and nasty as well as a deep concern about normalisation of violence as a tool of power globally and particularly in fragile democracies like Nigeria. 

After several decades of civic engagement, I have observed how the dominance of armed force, whether by the state, non-state actor or criminal networks has displaced dialogue, justice, and moral authority. 

This book attempts to interrogate that dangerous trajectory and provoke a serious national and global conversation. 

I am also concerned with the seeming lasting negative effect prolonged military dictatorship has had and still holds on Nigeria’s political space. The fact that the military organogram where power flows from the commander-in-chief downward has become normalised with virtual total contempt and disrespect for the popular will of the public has become too worrisome to ignore.

What central argument does the book make?  

The central argument is that when societies surrender moral authority and democratic accountability to the logic of the gun, they inevitably undermine their own stability. The Gun Hegemony argues that unchecked militarisation of politics, security, and even civic life erodes institutions, deepens fear, and weakens citizenship. Sustainable peace cannot be built on coercion alone; it must rest on justice, inclusion and accountable governance. 

The kinetic power of the gun has led to virtual state of lawlessness today in Nigeria, suggesting that our national security architecture must be reconfigured for effect. 

Is the book focused only on Nigeria?

While Nigeria provides a compelling and urgent case study, the book is deliberately global in outlook. Nigeria has the largest population of black people globally and has to get it right so that she can respond to her manifest destiny in providing leadership to the black race. 

I draw parallels from Africa, the Middle East, and parts of the Western world where gun dominance-whether through military might, proxy wars or internal repression-has reshaped societies. Nigeria’s experience, however, vividly illustrates how the failure to control violence can threaten national and regional cohesion. 

The book presents the historical discovery of the gun in human existence  and implications. Without the gun, perhaps, there would have been no geographical space called Nigeria. The book looks at who discovered the gun, its transformation and significant influence.

On argument that strong military force is necessary in today’s security climate

Security is essential, but force without accountability becomes oppression. The book does not argue against legitimate security forces; rather, it warns against the elevation of force above law, ethics, and civilian oversight. History teaches us that when the gun becomes the final arbiter, even those who wield it eventually lose control.

 Who should read The Gun Hegemony? 

This book is for policymakers, security professionals, scholars, civil society actors, faith leaders, and young people who care about the future of democracy and peace. It is also for ordinary citizens who want to understand why violence persists and how societies can reclaim authority from fear and force. 

What do you hope the launch on January 15 will achieve beyond book sales?

 The launch is meant to be more than a literary event. I hope it becomes a platform for sober reflection and policy dialogue among leaders, diplomats, intellectuals, and citizens about how we can reverse the culture of violence and rebuild trust Institutions. If the book stimulates honest debate and interest for others to write and influences thought, then it has served its purpose. 

What message would you like Nigerians to take away from this book?

My message is simple but urgent: No nation can shoot its way to peace. True security comes from justice, equity, and respect for human dignity. If we allow the gun dominate our politics and our conscience, we mortgage the future of coming generations.  

On the origins of prevailing insecurity in Nigeria

When in 2001/2002 when Boko Haram started; and when Governor Sani Yerima of Zamfara State established Sharia Law, we campaigned against it vigorously. Section 10 of the Nigerian Constitution stipulates that Nigeria is a secular state, establishing Sharia Law means you are adopting another constitution. It was an illegality that ought to be nipped in the bud but President Okuseguj Obasanjo said then that it was a political Sharia that would soo. fizzle out. 

However, 11 other states joined Zamfara to make it 12 across the country. Because they encouraged this illegality for their political shenanigans it festered. They pumped money into the hands of these characters who are jobless, and abandoned them after using them for elections. 

When the DSS arrested their leaders twice, Obasanjo was prevailed or blackmailed into accepting the false and ridiculous notion that the DSS officers who worked for the arrest were Christians, and so they were released. When they became so large and started breaking into Police, Air force, and military barracks some said it was due to lack of actionable intelligence. The DSS leadership said it was not true, they had intelligence and arrested the terrorists but those arrested were freed. 

Again, you to look at the Nigerian security situation from two dimensions-local and international. The entire Sahelian region-Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Chad, etc don’t have much green pastures any longer. They are looking for green pastures; because they have their kith and kin leading Nigeria severally, they were drawn into Nigeria. And all they have been doing is to see how they could establish themselves-attack natives on their land, eliminate them and take over possession. Destroy their farms, when they complain, shoot them. Otherwise, what does a herdsman need an Ak-47 rifle for? And it has been encouraged for political purposes. This is part of the impact of the gun.

However, for the first time, there is somebody in power,  President Bola Tinubu, who was not sponsored by the military. He is doing his utmost but the prolonged years of military dictatorship in Nigeria and what it established cannot be wished away over night. 

With the current dynamics of what the government is doing, having understood  that you need a combination of both kinetic and non+kinetic power to establish some credible security structure in the country, I hope it will start bearing fruit when Nigerians start having quality and cheap food on their table, and employment is available for majority of the people.

In the true of sense of it, none of  all the predecessors of Tinubu can claim to have better  economic and financial experts as he does. He is in a position to transform the national economy to lift a significant number of people out of poverty because our people have really suffered and are still undergoing terrific level of poverty, agony that are miserable, undesirable and intolerable. I wish that efforts being made will yield dividends

On the killings rising instead of abating in spite of the efforts

At my installation as the grand patron of the Christian Association of Nigeria, CAN, at Offa, Kwara State, I said and reiterate that the current phase of killings and violence are not accidental. They are deliberately schemed and sponsored by the opponents of the government.

A former governor of a state in the  North-West told us what they did with bandits in 2014/2015, disclosed how they got in touch with the bandits and so on. After using them you want them to return to the dry place they came from. They refused and went into the forests.

But the former governor was in the same party with President Tinubu then…

You can only tell how violence will start and how it will end. They achieved their purpose then.

Remember that candidate Buhari in 2011 said if he did not win blood would flow and blood flowed. Several thousands of people were killed. What happened, was he brought to book? was he asked to answer any question? 

 2027 election is approaching. With this kind of violence do you think we’ll have an election?

Well, I hope the government should be in a position to rectify or do whatever it can because the credibility of such election rests on the fact that they make the country governable, peaceful for people to be able to go and cast their votes.

What is your advice to Nigerians as we head towards the election? 

My advice is that having been dominated by military dictators for such a prolonged period with their somersaulting economic policies that had ravaged Nigeria, stunted our growth and made us an underdeveloped country the process of undoing what they have done cannot come overnight. 

That’s why the pain and agony that people are going through becomes very worrisome but perhaps a necessity. You cannot eat an omelette without breaking an egg. I just hope that all the efforts that have been made of which the government is telling us that the time for reaping the benefits of the agony has come, is right.

 I take a shot at one or two things that President Bola Tinubu has succeeded in doing in recent times. 

He took a shot at fiscal federalism with these tax reforms. 

Those who have benefited from the lopsided disaggregated multiple tax regimes don’t want this new tax reforms and they are fighting tooth and nail to prevent its emergence but it has started.

When we look at the charts of tax contribution to the gross domestic product Nigeria is one of the least in the world. Most Nigerians don’t pay tax. The ones who pay tax are  government workers from their lean resources. Many rich people don’t pay tax.

As a lawyer, what is your take on the forgery controversy trailing the tax laws?

 My view is that once a law is passed and assented to by the president it becomes law. True, people can raise  objection, and the National Assembly is attending to it. 

So, let the National Assembly attend to it. if the National Assembly whose responsibility it is to discuss the bill go through and say what we sent to you is not what you are operating then they can decide, they have their powers to take the necessary action. So, let the appropriate body of the state handle it when they fail to act it is then we can handle those who are charged with that responsibility in the Constitution.

What is the way forward for the country to get fiscal federalism and then begin to operate a egalitarian society?

The efforts by the National Assembly to amend the Constitution are good enough. I believe that sooner or later Nigerians must sit down to respond to the national question.

Nigerians as a people and as a country must sit down to respond to one twin question. 

First,  yes we were forced into co-habitation by the colonialists with their power, yes this is an heterogeneous society of over  350 ethnic nationalities with different languages, religion, culture, tradition, artefacts, folklores, etc. We secured our independence on a federal constitution, we didn’t seek for a change of that federal constitution.  The military and politicians in uniform on January 15, 1966 overthrew the democratically elected government of Nigeria, suspended and abrogated that negotiated constitution and substituted for it their military unitarised and centralised governance in Nigeria. 

That is the cause of our problem. Until we return to it to the federal constitution we are just chasing shadows.

Have Nigerians ever answered the question whether they want to belong to Nigeria?  We have not been asked and that is why up to today everyone first of all  wants to be a member of his ethnic nationality. 

Nigeria is a country. Perhaps giving the prolonged years of our relationship,  may be we say can yes we want to be together. If we say yes, the second question is how you are going to relate to be together in the country.  On what terms, what is the modus operandi, the rule of engagement that will bind us? 

These are to be packaged together in a federal constitution.

The post Killings, violence sponsored by opponents of govt — Opadokun appeared first on Vanguard News.


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Court shifts legal battle over APC Delta South ticket over INEC’s absence

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The legal battle for the 2027 election ticket of the All Progressives Congress, APC, for Delta South Senatorial seat was on Monday shifted again by the Federal High Court in Abuja due to the absence of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC.

At Monday’s proceedings, when the suit instituted by a former Chairman of the Delta State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission, DESOPADEC, Prince Micheal Diden, was to be heard, Justice Mohammed Umar, put it off till Wednesday, to enable the electoral body appear in court to present its own position.

It would be recalled that this is the third time INEC would be absent in court. The commission has also not filed any process in respect of the matter.

During the proceedings, Bankole Joel Akomolafe, SAN, appeared for the plaintiff, while Lukman Fagbemi, SAN, announced appearance for Senator Joel Onowakpo and Habeeb Lawal stood for the APC.

Lead counsel to the plaintiff, told the judge that he had filed his reply to the two sets of statements of defense of Senator Onowakpo and APC and that he had served same on them as 1st and 2nd defendants.

Akomolafe however, noted that the electoral body was still not in court despite the service of the originating summons on it to enable it file its defense.

The senior lawyer said that in view of the critical importance of INEC to the suit, he would concede to an adjournment till Wednesday to allow the electoral body be in court.

He also announced to the court that the two video recordings on the conduct of the primary election would be played in the open court to enable the court arrive at a just conclusion.

Based on the agreement of lawyers Justice Umar, shifted the hearing till July 8, with an order that a fresh hearing date should be communicated to the INEC.

Ejele, a former Chairman of Sapele Local Government Area of Delta State commenced the legal battle against the 1st defendant’s (Senator Joel Onowakpo) declaration as winner of the APC’s primary election in the Delta South Senatorial District, held on May 18, 2026.

The plaintiff in the suit marked: FHC/ ABJ/CS/1094/2026 is claiming that he secured the highest number of votes cast at the primary election and should be declared candidate of the APC for the Delta South Senatorial District election, slated for January next year.

He is among others asking the court to declare him winner of the May 18, Direct Primary election conducted for the selection of the APC’s candidate for the 2027 senatorial election in the district, on grounds that he scored the highest votes cast at the poll.

In the Writ of Summons filed on his behalf by his team of lawyers led by Mr Bankole Joel Akomolafe, SAN, the plaintiff accused the 1st defendant of manipulation and announcement of forged and fake results.

Diden in the statement of claim stated that the National Working Committee of the APC who organised the aforesaid Primary Election announced the established procedures for the announcement of the result of the said election; that the collation and announcement of results would be conducted exclusively in an official briefing at Abuja after the submission of all results.

He averred that contrary to the instructions the 1st defendant immediately ran to various media to pronounce himself the winner of the APC Direct Primary Election for the Delta South Senatorial District, Delta State held on Monday, May 18, 2026, thereby allegedly misinforming the public and particularly members of the Senatorial District of the Plaintiff.

“The 1st Defendant connived and colluded with his cohorts to write forged results where he falsely declare himself the winner of the election, he did not only publish the forged results of the 8 Local Government Areas under the Delta South Senatorial District, Delta State in the various media, he also recorded his cohorts publicly declaring the false result in a video that has gone viral to mislead the people contrary to what actually transpired on the day of election where the plaintiff defeated the 1st Defendant with a wide margin”, he claimed.

Plaintiff further averred that the 1st Defendant made the aforesaid representations fraudulently in that he knew they were false or were reckless, not caring that they were true or false notwithstanding the monitoring of the 3rd Defendant officials at the election.

“Contrary to the above declaration of the false results announced by the 1st Defendant in the viral video pleaded above, the Plaintiff through his agents in all the wards of the 8 Local Government Areas within the Delta South Senatorial District, Delta State have the authentic results of each ward intact in which the Plaintiff defeated the 1st Defendant with a wide margin scoring 96,893 (Ninety Six Thousand, Eight Hundred and Ninety Three) votes as against the 1st Defendant’s 31,918(Thirty One Thousand, Nine Hundred and Eighteen) votes respectively”, he said.

The plaintiff added that sequel to the above unequivocal and overwhelming victory he won at the poll the “leaders, stakeholders, elders, women, youths and registered members of the APC in the Senatorial District wrote a formal petition to the party’s national headquarters to denounce and reject the fraudulent declaration of the 1st Defendant as the winner of the election”.

He added that his lawyers had written a similar complaint “about the desperate manipulation and the announcement of fake results of Monday, May 18, 2026 election by the 1st Defendant to the National Chairman of the 2nd Defendant.

“The Plaintiff avers that the 1st Defendant by his actions has not only embarrassed all the contestants of the election but has also cast aspersion on the entire election process, unless this Honourable Court grants the reliefs of the Plaintiff and put the record straight for all observers”.

Among reliefs he is seeking from the court are; a declaration that the Plaintiff being the aspirant who scored the highest number of valid votes cast at the APC Primary Election for the Delta South Senatorial District, Delta State held on Monday, May 18, 2026 and having satisfied the requirements of the Constitution, Electoral Act, 2026 and the APC’s Direct Primaries Guidelines and Procedures, be declared the winner and he should be declared as the Candidate of the APC in the 2027 general elections of Delta South Senatorial District, Delta State in Nigeria.

He is also seeking an order directing the APC to immediately forward his name to INEC as the APC’s candidate for Delta South Senatorial District in the 2027 general elections.

Diden is also praying for an order directing INEC to accept and/or receive his name from the APC as the party’s candidate in the 2017 senatorial election in Delta South Senatorial District.




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Why Peter Obi cannot become Nigeria’s president — Segalink

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Social commentator and human rights activist, Segun Awosanya, popularly known as Segalink, has said the presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), Peter Obi, lacks the qualities required to lead Nigeria, arguing that his politics is divisive and driven by what he described as an online “mob.”

Awosanya made the remarks during an interview on Vanguard’s Politics Hub, where he spoke on the state of the nation, the 2027 general election and Obi’s presidential ambition.

Describing the former Anambra State governor, Segalink said Obi had built his political appeal around public anger rather than national leadership.

“It is obvious to the blind and audible to the deaf, that somebody who is playing to the gallery, who postures as one thing and is actually another should be revealed for who they are,” he said.

“As far as I’m concerned, Peter Obi is just a leader of the mob, somebody who is surfing the wave of the angry people… to demonize people and blackmail people in order to gain attention to themselves, and then bully themselves into political power.”

Responding to a question on whether his criticism stemmed from his perceived disagreement with Obi’s supporters, Awosanya dismissed the suggestion, saying he had no personal conflict with the Obidient movement.

“There’s no friction between me and anybody. I don’t even recognize them as anything. I’m focused on what I’m doing,” he said.

He alleged that members of the Obidient movement attempted to hijack the #EndSARS protests for political purposes.

“If you look at the antecedent of the Obidient group, they were one of the cancerous nodes within the EndSARS advocacy… they wanted to use the movement for their own game. And when they failed, they demonised everybody within the system,” he claimed.

Awosanya also explained why he had previously spoken positively about Obi before becoming one of his critics.

“When I commended Peter Obi, I commended him because he was at the time speaking to issues that border on vulnerable individuals in the country,” he said, adding that his earlier comments were “not promotion” but an observation.

He, however, maintained that Obi was unfit for the presidency because of what he described as his divisive political record.

“When I eventually conclude that he cannot be president is because of his divisiveness… He brought Christians against Catholics when he was governor, and he did a lot of things that he’s preaching against today. Evidence are there,” Awosanya said.

He further argued that widespread narratives on social media should not be mistaken for facts, adding, “The fact that the lie is viral doesn’t make it the truth.”


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Gov Adeleke, Osun APC renew dispute over security after IGP’s fact-finding visit

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Osun State Governor, Ademola Adeleke and the All Progressives Congress, APC, have renewed their exchange over security and policing in the state.

The latest disagreement is coming after the recent fact-finding visit of the Inspector-General of Police, Olatunji Disu, to the state ahead of the August 15 governorship election.

In a statement issued on Monday by his spokesperson, Olawale Rasheed, Governor Adeleke, who said residents expected impartial policing before, during and after the election, urged the police to implement measures that would guarantee fairness and public confidence.

The governor commended the Inspector-General’s visit, saying it provided an opportunity for all political parties and community stakeholders to present their positions on the security situation in the state.

According to Adeleke, “the discussions during the visit should guide the immediate implementation of agreed measures aimed at ensuring non-partisan law enforcement across Osun State.

“We appreciate the visit of the Inspector General of Police and that of the Deputy Inspector General a week earlier. The facts are out in the public domain. The IGP has heard and read from both parties.”

Adeleke added that the Commissioner of Police in Osun should remain impartial in the investigation and prosecution of cases of political violence adding that such an approach was necessary to sustain public confidence in the police.

“We seek the arrest of any law breaker irrespective of their political affiliation. Those who commit crimes should be arrested and prosecuted. We harbour no thugs in Government House or anywhere,” he stated.

The governor also called on security agencies to provide a secure environment for voters, adding that killings and attacks were not conducive to the exercise of democratic rights. He pledged his administration’s continued support for security agencies while insisting that the government sought only fair, impartial policing.

Meanwhile, the Osun APC said the Inspector-General’s remarks during his visit supported its earlier allegation that individuals accused of criminal activities were being sheltered within the Osun Government House.

In a statement signed by the party’s Director of Media and Information, Kola Olabisi, the APC claimed that the Inspector-General had directed the Osun State Commissioner of Police, Ibrahim Gotan, to professionally address the allegation.

The opposition party alleged that, “any police action should extend beyond the Government House if investigations required it. Suspected political hoodlums had been shielded from arrest.”

The APC also criticised comments previously made by Osun State Commissioner for Information, Kolapo Alimi, describing his response to the Inspector-General’s remarks as “misplaced” and a mere afterthought.

The party accused the state government of politicising security matters and insisted that law enforcement agencies should thoroughly investigate all allegations relating to political violence in the state.




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