I'll keep praying for God's forgiveness for voting against this man in 2023 cos of the tribal sentiment for Igbo Presidency.
Look at how brilliant he sounds. Not only that, Tinubu and governance are like 5 & 6, and this is one of the things he has that Peter Obi will never dream of having.
I confidently say that Tinubu is not just the most performing govt we have ever had in this country since Nigeria was created, but the most brilliant leader that has ever led this country... You doubt me? Argue with your keyboards.
Lies detected 🤗🤗
2010: “Not only that I will never leave APGA, we will die with APGA.” — PitObi
2026: “I didn’t say I will never leave APGA; I only told Ojukwu I would never leave APGA as long as you are alive.” — PitObi
Abeg which church does Agulu lying fraud worship? 👀
HAVE YOU NOTICED THAT UNLIKE PREVIOUS ADMINISTRATIONS TINUBU DOESN'T SWEET-TALK US?
Whether abroad or here, you'll notice that so many governments like to exaggerate things.
Many of them use false data and information just to be able to control the narrative.
Even during the days of President Jonathan, if you'll remember that Minister Labaran Makau and Olisa Metuh would fabricate different narratives just to cover up administrative errors.
The days of Lai Mohammed were the most explosive when it comes to this 😂.
Oga was made just the way his name sounds.
Kai 🤔.
Oga Lai finished work.
But if you'll notice, this government doesn't come out to try to defend errors.
They only present facts and even acknowledge when things are not going right and they'll tell us why.
They try to share hope and their plan instead of propaganda.
They even use live videos and pictures of their operations to assure us .
Especially the military, economic and international/diplomatic operations.
Infact they're actually not communicating their efforts and accomplishments enough.
Most times I get my information on what is happening in this government especially in the areas of the economy from international media and rating bodies.
And when I check or wait to confirm this from the government, they'll never talk about it.
When you look at the body language of the government officials, they are not living large.
They're working like people in a corporate organization, like a bank.
They're dutiful and everyone is doing his job and trying to have proofs for the salary they're reviewing.
Look at Wike.
Eventhough he lives like an emperor but you see him working hard to deliver.
Look at others like...
Blanca
Keyamo
Umahi
And the rest how they're operating.
You hardly hear stories of where they're throwing parties or living large.
All you see are their works.
This is a major shift from the usual culture of previous administrations where government officials only displayed riches.
All of these give me hope that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu is leading us to the right direction.
If he could change the work ethic around Aso Rock, then this country is changing.
On Today's Headlines:
Liquidity expansion, investor confidence, digital access, and stronger reserves define today's #TheHeadlines as Nigeria's financial system prepares for a ₦1.53tn liquidity injection, foreign investors commit $3.23bn to bonds, FreeTV expands access to information and entertainment, and external reserves gain over $1bn in June.
Good morning!
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Midweek Headlines;
Energy infrastructure, economic inclusion, institutional support, and urban development shape today's #TheHeadlines as Nigeria advances gas-powered industrialization, expands financial support for small-scale traders, reinforces the welfare of judicial officers, and accelerates the delivery of affordable housing.
Nigeria is on the right path!
GOV OBIANO DEBUNKED PETER OBI LIES OF LEAVING MONEY BEHIND.
He left debt of contractors unpaid to the tune of #185 billion but claimed he left #79 billion.
I woke up thinking about the WAEC conversation that dominated X and other platforms all weekend.
For me, this is not abstract politics. It is personal history.
While some people, like a former governor of Anambra turned presidential candidate, built reputations around inflated WAEC examination outcomes and a culture where “special centres” and malpractice became part of the national education conversation that it took a serious threat by WAEC before they were closed under a new administration in Anambra, many of us were direct beneficiaries of a different model: investment in real schools, better classrooms, stronger public education, and the payment of SSCE fees by the then Governor of Lagos State, now President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
I, O’tega Ogra, and many others across the private and public sectors, including leaders now serving in politics and governance (including two strong women currently the APC Deputy Governorship candidate of Lagos State and APC Surulere I LSHA Candidate), came through a Lagos education system that did not simply chase headlines. It expanded access. It reduced the burden on parents. It built actual education infrastructure as legacy. It gave ordinary students a fairer chance. Lagos’ payment of WAEC fees under Governor Tinubu was publicly reported as far back as 2004, when ₦214 million (about 10% of its average monthly IGR by that year) was released for students’ examination fees. (NOTE: As Governor, he started paying these fees in 2000 for all students regardless of state of origin or tribe)
That is the difference between gaming outcomes and building systems that outlive you.
Examination malpractice weakens a country. It produces certificates without competence, rankings without reality, and applause without substance. WAEC itself continues to treat malpractice as a serious threat to the credibility of education, with recent sanctions and withheld results showing how deep the problem remains nationally.
I know why I am a firm supporter, believer, and follower of our President and my leader, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu @officialABAT
His historical antecedents, his clarity of vision, and his consistent belief in expanding opportunity are not new. They did not start in Abuja. They were tested in Lagos. Many of us are living proof.
President Tinubu’s politics has always been about opening doors: for the poor child whose parents could not afford exam fees, for the young person who needed a functioning public school, for the talented Nigerian who only needed government to remove one barrier.
That is why, when we speak of Renewed Hope, some of us are not speaking from slogans. We are speaking from memory. We have seen the model before. We benefited from it. We know what it can do when scaled nationally. And we are seeing the building blocks of sustainable progress being laid for the entire country now by President Tinubu himself.
The debate should not be about who can manufacture the best statistics. It should be about who has the record, courage, and vision to build systems that give every Nigerian child a real chance for the long term prosperity of our dear nation.
For me, that answer has always been clear. It is the Jagaban himself. Asiwaju of Nigeria. Barkindo. Dike Si Mba Anambra and the Omeziri Igbo 1, His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR.
#TheTigerWillTellYouSomething
O'tega
[Newsletter 📩] — June 15, 2026.
Nigeria’s Foreign Reserves Hit 17-Year High at $50.11 Billion 🇳🇬
…Stay informed with the latest developments shaping Nigeria’s economic future.
For the first time on such a scale in Nigeria, hundreds of Nigerian Army personnel, widows of fallen heroes, and injured soldiers are set to benefit from a massive 1,550-unit post-service housing scheme taking shape in Jibi along the Abuja-Niger State boundary.
According to the Managing Director of the Federal Housing Authority, the estate is the largest military post-service housing scheme ever undertaken in Nigeria, reflecting the FG’s commitment to improving the welfare of soldiers and their families.
Details of Proposed Constitutional Amendments for the Establishment of State Police and Federal Police
1. Establishment of Federal Police and State Police (New Section 214)
• Two distinct police bodies are constitutionally established:
• (a) the Federal Police
• (b) State Police (one per State, established by State law)
The National Assembly must pass an Act prescribing:
• Structure, organisation, administration, and powers of the Federal Police
• Framework and guidelines for the establishment of State Police
• State Police cannot commence operational policing until:
• Established by a Law of the State House of Assembly, and
• Certified as meeting national minimum standards (prescribed by an Act of the National Assembly)
• Transitional provision: Until a State Police becomes operational, the Federal Police continues all policing functions in that State. After commencement, the Federal Police handles federal policing functions and may provide assistance to the State Police.
2. Responsibilities and Non-Interference (Section 214)
Federal Police is responsible for:
• Maintenance of public security, public order, and security of persons/property throughout the Federation (to the extent provided by the Constitution or National Assembly Act).
• Similar functions within a State to the extent the State has legislative power under the Constitution.
Key safeguard against federal overreach (Section 214(6)):
The Federal Police shall not interfere with State Police operations or a State’s internal security affairs except in these limited cases:
• To contain serious threats where there is a complete breakdown of law and order and the State Police is unable to respond.
• When the Governor requests intervention.
• When a State Police is unable to function due to administrative, financial, or other problems.
Any such intervention requires prior approval by the National Police Council.
Federal Capital Territory (FCT): Fully under the jurisdiction and operational control of the Federal Police.
3. Leadership and Command (New Section 215)
• Federal Police: Headed by the Inspector-General of Police (IGP).
• Appointed by the President on the advice of the National Police Council, from serving members of the Federal Police.
• Subject to confirmation by the National Assembly.
• The IGP has command over the entire Federal Police, including contingents in States.
• The President (or authorised Minister) may give lawful directions on public safety and order; the IGP must comply.
• State Police: Headed by a Commissioner of Police (CP).
• Appointed by the Governor on the advice of the National Police Council, from serving members of the State Police.
• Subject to confirmation by the State House of Assembly.
• The Governor (or authorised Commissioner) may give lawful directions on public safety and order; the CP must comply.
• If the CP believes a direction is unlawful or contradicts general policing standards, the matter can be referred to the National Police Council (whose decision is final).
4. Removal of Top Officers (New Section 216)
• IGP: Removed only by the President on the recommendation of the National Police Council for specified grounds (grave misconduct, breach of Police Act/Regulations/Code of Conduct, conviction for fraud/dishonesty, bankruptcy, or mental incapacity). Requires two-thirds majority approval of the National Assembly.
• State Commissioner of Police: Removed only by the Governor on the recommendation of the National Police Council for similar grounds. Requires two-thirds majority approval of the State House of Assembly.
5. Funding Support (New Section 216A)
The Federal Government shall provide grants or aids to State Police on the recommendation of the National Police Council, subject to approval by the National Assembly.
6. Oversight Bodies
National Police Council (restructured and renamed from the old Nigeria Police Council; new composition and expanded functions in Third Schedule):
• Broad membership including: Chairman (Presidential appointee confirmed by NA), Attorney-General of the Federation, serving senior Federal Police officer, Attorneys-General of all States, retired Commissioners of Police (one per geo-political zone), representatives of NHRC, Public Complaints Commission, NLC, NBA, NUJ, and Traditional Rulers’ Councils.
• Key functions: Appointment and discipline of Federal Police officers (except IGP); recommending State top officers (CP, DCP, ACP) to Governors based on State PSC lists; supervising Federal and State Police activities (within constitutional limits); setting standards for training, intelligence, forensics; assisting State Police on request.
State Police Service Commission (new body established for each State in Third Schedule, Part II):
• Composition: Chairman (appointed by Governor, confirmed by State HA), representatives of NHRC, Public Complaints Commission, NLC, NBA, NUJ, retired Assistant Commissioners of Police (one per senatorial district), and Traditional Rulers’ Council.
• Functions: Recommending three qualified candidates for CP/DCP/ACP to the National Police Council; appointment, discipline, and removal of State Police officers below the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Police; other functions as prescribed by Constitution or National Assembly Act.
7. Legislative Framework (Second Schedule – Concurrent Legislative List)
• National Assembly may make laws on: establishment/organisation/administration/powers/duties of Federal Police; powers/duties of State Police; national minimum standards for both; policing standards, inspection, certification, complaints mechanisms, criminal information systems, inter-governmental cooperation, federal intervention, use of force, firearms, grants, and accountability.
• State Houses of Assembly may make laws for the establishment, organisation, administration, funding, and oversight of their State Police — but must comply with the Constitution and valid National Assembly Acts.
• States may set higher standards than national minimums but not lower.
• National Assembly laws cannot give federal authorities routine command, deployment, appointment, promotion, transfer, discipline, or control over State Police personnel (except for explicitly authorised federal intervention).
8. Other Related Changes
• Updates to various constitutional provisions (e.g., Sections 34, 35, 39, 42, 84, 89, 129, 153) to replace references to “Nigeria Police Force” with appropriate “Police”, “Federal Police”, or “State Police” terminology.
• Exclusive Legislative List adjustments (e.g., light arms for policing purposes; fingerprints/biometrics/forensics shared with State Police; Federal Police listed separately).
• Consequential amendments to the Third Schedule for the new bodies and their compositions/powers.
“To our young people: Nigeria 🇳🇬 is your home and your future. Build here, code here, work here, and vote here. Every great nation was built by those who stayed to solve problems, not by those who abandoned ship.”
~ President Bola Tinubu Tells Young Nigerians
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu will deliver a national address on Friday, June 12, in commemoration of Democracy Day.
The speech is scheduled to air on the network of Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) and Radio Nigeria at 7:00 a.m.
All television and radio stations are requested to hook onto the NTA and Radio Nigeria network to carry the broadcast.
Bayo Onanuga
Special Adviser to the President
(Information & Strategy)
June 11, 2026
Fellow Nigerians
Today, we celebrate democracy and the enduring Nigerian spirit. For 27 unbroken years, since May 29, 1999, Nigerians have chosen their leaders through the ballot, witnessed peaceful transitions of power, and resolved disagreements in courtrooms and legislative chambers—not through violence. We have experienced the longest stretch of civilian rule in our history. Our democracy is not perfect, but it is ours, and we must continue to defend and strengthen it.
Your Midweek Headlines are Here..
Human capital investment, public health readiness, external sector strength, and industrial competitiveness shape today’s #TheHeadlines as Nigeria secures support for vocational education, enhances epidemic preparedness, records its highest foreign reserves in 17 years, and launches a $1bn trade adjustment fund.
Top of the morning🥂