Wednesday, November 12, 2025

OGBE-IJOH: THE DILAPIDATED HEADQUARTERS OF WARRI SOUTH-WEST_ A kingdom in Ruins, A People in Waiting_ The Cry of a Forgotten Kingdom"

,- When Neglect Becomes a Language of Governance 

– Delta’s Forgotten Sons and Daughters

From the banks of the mighty River Warri rises a cry soaked in anguish -- the voice of Ogbe-Ijoh, the proud but forsaken headquarters of Warri South-West Local Government Area. Once the administrative heart of this rich region, Ogbe-Ijoh now stands like a stately palm tree stripped of its fronds -- a landmark no longer admired, but pitied. Our streets, once busy with the steps of traders, workers, and students, have become perilous channels of mud and crater-sized potholes. The entry roads resemble the cracked skin of a snake in dry season. Public spaces are ghosts of their former selves; there is no sign that this kingdom houses the nerve centre of a local government.  

For decades, the people of this kingdom have stood shoulder-to-shoulder with successive administrations in Delta State, offering unwavering loyalty, helping stabilise the political climate, and contributing richly to the economy. Yet, our loyalty has been met not with the handshake of partnership, but with the cold shoulder of neglect. It is a cruel irony that while we keep faith, the government turns its face away. The air here tastes of abandonment; it is as though Ogbe-Ijoh has been erased from the state’s map of meaningful development. This present administration, since its inception, has not birthed, commissioned, or completed a single project within our territory.  

A walk through Ogbe-Ijoh today is a descent into a gallery of decay. The Skill Acquisition Centre, once promised as a cradle of empowerment, stands silent and hollow -- a carcass of bare walls bleaching under the merciless sun. The Internal Road Project has been abandoned to weeds and stagnant pools that breed mosquitoes and sickness. The Technical College’s roof yawns with rusted holes, allowing rain to pour into classrooms -- drowning not just books but the dreams of young artisans. The High Court and Customary Court sit like tombs where justice is meant to live, their once purposeful corridors now home to cobwebs and dust. The General Hospital, which should be a sanctuary of hope, is now a warehouse of broken beds and lifeless equipment. Even the Grammar School stares at the world through shattered windows, and the JAMB Centre -- meant to open doors for the future -- has itself been locked away by neglect. Each neglected building is a mocking reminder of promises made and abandoned halfway.  

Beyond collapsing walls, the spirit of exclusion cuts deeper still. Our youths --  vibrant, educated, and determined to make a difference -- have been frozen out of appointments, employments, and empowerment schemes. While other communities within Delta State dine generously at the table of political inclusion, Ogbe-Ijoh’s people are left waiting at the door, told neither to sit nor to leave. Government opportunities float past us like well-provisioned ships, yet we remain stranded on the shore with empty hands. It is an insult that a headquarters of a local government is treated as the orphan of the state.  

And yet, in the spirit of peace, Ogbe-Ijoh has never lifted its hands to violence. We have endured, like the patient farmer watching the horizon for rain that never comes. For too long, the government’s response has been silence, as if by ignoring us the problem will vanish. But Your Excellency, indifference cannot build a house; it only invites the wind to scatter the roof. We do not seek destruction; we seek inclusion before the rising tide of frustration sweeps away the calm waters of patience.  

We are not asking for charity. We are demanding justice. Justice means revisiting every abandoned project and breathing life back into them. Justice means mending our roads so that traders, workers, and schoolchildren can move without fear of accidents. Justice means restoring our schools as spaces of inspiration, not places of shame. Justice means sending skilled hands to repair our hospitals so that no mother loses a child because there was no functional bed, and no patient dies simply because the oxygen tank has rusted shut. Justice means ensuring Ogbe-Ijoh youths are no longer spectating at the edges of opportunity but are seated where decisions are made.  

Your Excellency, Ogbe-Ijoh is woven into Delta’s story, and to erase us from development is to weaken the whole state’s fabric. Our exclusion is a scar on the conscience of governance. The urgency is clear: act now, not tomorrow. Every new day of inaction allows neglect to deepen its roots. Delta State cannot thrive while keeping its own headquarters in shadow.  

Let our place among the developed communities of Delta be restored. Let our roads speak of progress, not abandonment. Let our schools hum with learning, not decay. Let our politics reflect that Ogbe-Ijoh, too, is a firstborn of this state. For only when this kingdom rises from the mud of neglect will Delta truly stand on unshakable ground.  
EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO --  Writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State
08134853570

The Silent Epidemic: Youth Mortality and the Global Mental Health Crisis_By William Z. Bozimo

Across continents, youth mortality is rising, not from wars or pandemics, but from mental despair, social neglect, and the invisible battles of the mind. They are born in the era of technology, artificial intelligence, connectivity, and boundless promise, yet many of them are dying in silence. The Global Burden of Disease 2025 report paints a very chilling picture. Among people aged 15–29, deaths from suicide, drug use, and self-harm have exceeded the number of road traffic accidents in several regions. 

This is the new epidemic of the century, one that infects not only the body, but the soul. A crisis of the mind in a connected world is a contradiction of retrogression. Never before have young people been so connected, yet so alone. Across African cities and around the world, the whispers are getting louder. Counsellors report the rising cases of student suicides, while churches and mosques are quietly setting up “listening corners” for youths in distress. 

This era of social media has offered platforms for expression but also pits self-worth against algorithms and filtered illusions. Loneliness, lack of self-esteem, cyberbullying, and the pressure to “perform happiness” have created what psychologists call “the illusion of belonging.” In most wealthy nations, anxiety and depression are now the leading causes of disability. In the passageways of our hospitals and classrooms, one truth still echoes: the youths are dying because the world is not listening to them enough.

In low and middle-income countries, particularly across Africa and South Asia, these conditions are often undiagnosed, untreated, and even dismissed and tagged as a symptom of either weakness or witchcraft. Most Schools focus on grades, not grief. Healthcare systems mostly prioritise curative care, rather than prevention. Families struggling with economic hardship, often misread distress as rebellion. This neglect bleeds into mortality data such as self-harm, drug abuse, and preventable conditions like anaemia or maternal complications. 

In Nigeria, advocacy networks like the Mentally Aware Nigeria Initiative (MANI) and She Writes Woman are reframing mental health as a right, not a luxury, calling for policy integration into primary healthcare, all schools' curriculum, and workplace wellness. Ghana’s Mental Health Authority reforms and Kenya’s 2025 Youth Wellbeing Bill mark a slow but hopeful change. The solutions will not come from psychiatrists alone but also from health care workers, religious leaders, communities, teachers, and parents who are ready to help the youngsters.

Governments should also treat mental health like infrastructure, something to be built, funded, and maintained. Schools should ensure that emotional literacy is as vital as mathematics. Faith institutions, workplaces, and media platforms should amplify hope, not hierarchy. Also, nations should invest in digital mental health tools like teletherapy, helplines, and AI-driven crisis monitoring systems that will bring care through cell phone to the community to help resolve this crisis. In safeguarding their minds, we just might save our collective future.

To heal this generation, we must learn to sit with their pain, not silence it. We should replace judgment with empathy, and remind every young person that their existence is not an accident, but a gift.

✍🏽 William Z. Bozimo
Veteran Journalist | Columnist | National Memory Keeper

PAP Begins Second Phase Distribution of Laptops to Amnesty Scholarship Beneficiaries to Enhance Learning and Research

PRESS RELEASE

The Presidential Amnesty Programme has commenced the second phase of the distribution of laptops to its scholarship beneficiaries who were deployed for the 2024/2025 academic year to universities within Nigeria.

The exercise, which followed the directive of the PAP Administrator, Dr Dennis Otuaro, is aimed at enhancing learning and research by the students in their various institutions.

The first phase of the distribution was carried out between April and May, 2025, and over 663 final year scholarship beneficiaries received the mobile computing device.
During that exercise, the PAP also diligently undertook a physical verification and orientation programme for the beneficiaries in the resumption list for the 2024/2025 academic session.

Speaking on the second phase of the distribution, Otuaro reiterated that his decision was informed by the usefulness of laptop to academic pursuit and overall success.

He also stated that the gesture was in fulfillment of his promise to the scholarship beneficiaries during his tour of partnering universities in 2024.

Otuaro expressed the hope that the mobile computing device would greatly support learning and research by the students and also help them achieve academic excellence.
He urged them to make good use of it and justify the Federal Government's huge investment in their education.

The PAP boss also advised them to take their studies seriously and avoid acts capable of jeopardizing their academic pursuits and bright futures.

He said the PAP would continue to support the beneficiaries of the scholarship scheme to achieve academic excellence.

He restated his leadership's unwavering commitment to implementing the programme's objectives for the socio-economic advancement of the Niger Delta in line with the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu.

Otuaro further expressed profound appreciation to the President for supporting the PAP wholeheartedly, stressing that it shows his sincere love for the region and his strong desire to close the human capital development gap in the area.

He urged the youths and people of the region to return the President’s  gesture by giving his administration the expected support in all areas.

He assured the President of his leadership's unwavering commitment to complementing the renewed hope agenda in the Niger Delta by consolidating on the programme's achievements.
Signed:
Mr Igoniko Oduma
Special Assistant on Media to the Administrator, Presidential Amnesty Programme

11/11/2025.

Monday, November 10, 2025

The Meeting point of Margaret Ekotoro, Margaret Ekpo and Margaret Thatcher_By: Dr. Enewaridideke Ekanpou

This is a benighted generation of distractions. In this generation' too many things strive to govern our minds from the social media and cause a stray from the culturally ideal path. In this generation we are daily indoctrinated and radicalised to antagonise our indigenious cultures, be swiftly swept away and drawn into the whirlpool of acculturation that leaves us confused and culturally rootless. 

Daily invaded by ferocious wind of cultural confusion and  rootlessness, reflections must must be cast upon the lives of Margaret Ekpo, Margaret Thatcher and Rev. Mother Margaret Ekotoro whose achievements could chart a course for this benighted generation bedevilled with distractions away from the values, ideals and ethos that guarantee  steady sail in a turbulent river.

No Margaret has ever come to this earth and left without a trail of reverations of their impactful recognition, striking such notes of stridency by which society feels morally assaulted and obligated to build immortal structures for them in varied forms. Their impactful radiance in their varied chosen careers always forces the world to create structures to immortalise their achievements even after their departure. Historically, Margaret Ekpo, of Cross river and Abia States, Margaret Ekotoro of Delta and Bayelsa States and Margaret Thatcher of Great Britain have slipped into this identified groove associated with the notable 'Margaret' in Nigeria and Britain. In all their different careers these three 'Margarets' struck achievements notes of stridency that are identical. Differently, they all impactfully made indelible marks during their days on earth and the society recognised these indelible marks in immortal language that lends itself to easy use by every generation as a guide to the right path.

Margaret Ekpo was historically distinguished  by her political and activist engagements taken on to protect the fundamental rights of Nigerian women. Born  27 July 1914 in Creek Town in Cross River State of Southern Nigeria with some roots in Abia State of Eastern Nigeria, she died 21 September 2006. A pioneering advocate of feminism and a human rights activist, she was a member of the National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons, the first woman to be elected into the Eastern Regional House of Assembly among the countable female politicians  in Nigeria at that time; the founder of the Market Women Association in Aba in 1946, Ekpo was remarkable in her contributions to the growth of Nigeria during the colonial days and after Nigeria's independence in 1960. She fought the colonial over draconian policies targeted at Nigerians. She advocated for the economic and political rights of women until voting rights were granted women. 

Full voting rights comfortably came the way of women in Western and Eastern Nigeria in 1954 and 1959 following Ekpo's potent advocacy. In the 1940s she questioned and put up potent protest against the British colonial government over the treatment meted out to indigenous medical staff. She awakened women to fight for their political and economic rights. Ekpo also fought the colonial government over the 1949 Enugu Colliery strike which resulted in the killing of twenty miners. Alongside Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, she vigorously sensitised women to be integrally part of Nigeria's independence struggle under the auspices of Nigerian Women's Union. In recognition of Ekpo's pioneering advocacy for women's political and economic rights aligned with Nigeria's struggle for independence, President Olusegun Obasanjo named the airport in Calabar Margaret Ekpo International Airport as an immortal monument for her in 2001. At the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, one can find Margaret Ekpo Convocation Hall.The Margaret Ekpo Convocation Hall at UNN is a conscious step to recognise and  immortalise Ekpo. Ekpo left behind indelible imprints of patriotic contributions to national  growth.
Unarguably, in Margaret Thatcher one can also see notable national achievements, a pattern, a groove, the Margarets notably slip into during and after their retirement from earth. Margaret Hilda Thatcher was born 13 October 1925 but departed this world on 8 April 2013. From 1979 to  1990, Thatcher was the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom; from 1975 to 1990, she was the Leader of the Conservative Party. She was Europe's first woman prime minister, Britain's longest serving prime minister since 1827, credited  with three conservative terms through electoral victory. From statism to liberalism, Thatcher boldly moved the British economy with vision. A role model for Prime Minister Liz Truss, Thatcher was the most celebrated  British political leader after Winston Churchill. 

Thatcher was a notable prime minister. As prime minister, she took on policy implementation in a manner characterised 'Thatcherism'.Probably fuelled by her approach to policy-implementation, a Soviet journalist's characterisation of Thatcher was an 'Iron Lady'. Thatcher was remarkably impactful in her policy-implementation approaches while in power. She has been immortalised by her impactful approach to governance in the United Kingdom. True to the performance roots and groove associated with the Margarets, Thatcher left behind indelible imprints of performance.

Remarkable continuum of commendable performance historically characterises those who bear Margaret. As if in continuation of the remarkable performance  spree and groove of the 'Margarets', Rev. Mother Margaret Eyorozide Ekotoro strikes one as another Margaret of notable indelible imprints of achievements. Born 1 October 1926 in Kalafiogbene/Adekagbene in Bomadi Local Government Area, Ekotoro had roots that made her an indigene of both Delta and Bayelsa States in the South-South zone of Nigeria. She was a distinguished devotee of God, a Rev. Mother  in the Christ Divine and Gospel Mission (CDGM) church in Elohim City Zion, Kalafiogbene. She was a radiant example of forgiveness and meekness in her godliness. She was a professional tailor who specialised in 'garment-sewing' for various denominations of churches that use garments in their church services. She sewed church garments with amazing accuracy without measurement. She only ran her eyes over the physique of her customers without a measuring tape and produced excellent garments for them. She was a global tailor to whom thousands of people trooped from different parts of the African subregion.

 Majorly, Rev. Mother Ekotoro's teeming customers came from Ghana, Togo, Gambia, Cameroon, South Africa, Mali, Niger, Burkina-Faso, Senegal and Democratic Republic of Congo. In Nigeria she was nicknamed the home of church garments because of her distinguishable professional touch to garment-making.

Rev. Mother Ekotoro was a professional tailor,  yet without training and apprenticeship. It was a natural endowment even Ekotoro could not fathom. The professional and religious radiance which Ekotoro enjoyed like  Ekpo and Thatcher, her counterparts/contemporaries whose radiance was felt in the political, economic and activist spheres, her story deserves nuanced narration traced from the obscure beginning to the period of radiance. In this nuanced tracing of her radiance in her chosen careers, the risk of repetition of some of her details would not be avoided, as this would produce more clarity and exactitude.

Ekotoro was known for her radiant professionalism in garment-sewing and evangelism-consolidated move to awaken people to the path of godliness. She did these two things with amazing devotion. She also believed in religious ecumenism. Her ecumenism was one centred on the need for churches to embrace one another without notes of deliberate denigration targeted at the other to win  cheap membership and popularity.

Pondering on the radiance of Ekotoro in her noiseless evangelism, ecumenism and professional tailoring engagement, I wake up daily with the knowledge that  there are doves of peace and meekness in every century. The dove of peace and meekness in Akugbene-Mein Kingdom is dead. Rev. Mother Ekotoro is the dove of peace and meekness. She died on 14 March 2025 and will be home for final burial rites on 27 November 2025. 

With historical roots buried in Ogbotobo in Bayelsa State and Kalafiogbene/Adekagbene, Esanma, Akugbene, Ayakoromo and Okoloba in Delta State, Rev. Ekotoro was a great historical figure in Nigeria. Ekotoro is the great woman who died nobly and taught the world how to die nobly without the piercing claws and talons of death. Historically, she is the only woman by whose death even DEATH was too discombobulated, stunned, mystified and scared to claim responsibility because DEATH was apparently embarrassed and pushed to the altitude  devoid of the famed arrogance to multilate and silence the prey.

Chronicles gathered after her death  reveal interesting details . Ewekere, the celebrated beauty queen of her time, from Ayabotu Family in Ayakoromo married Mr Mienye of Akugbene and gave birth to miss Ayepreotukefiye. Ayepreotukefiye married Mr Okunbiri of Kalafiogbene. It was a marital union between Mr Okunbiri and Ayepreotukefiye  which gave birth to Angosin, Dauebinemune, Margaret Eyorozide and Agnes in a family of four as siblings, though only Mr Angosin was of a different father by name Yekuwe. Margaret Eyorozide was the third child in her family of four siblings which now has Mrs Agnes Money as the only surviving sister. Rev. Mother  Ekotoro was a widely  known devotee of God of the CDGM faith in Elohim City Zion, Kalafiogbene/Adekagbene.

 Routinely, death always chooses to prey on any person admired but it was different in Ekotoro's case. Ekotoro was not chosen by death; it was she who chose death when she saw that her earthly mission was over. Like Nostradamus and Jesus Christ in their varied psychic exposures, she knew her time and simply  beckoned on death to transport her to her new home without the characteristic claws and talons painfully dug into one's body until the last breath goes. Alas, it was death who cried   bitterly at being humiliated when she left the world proudly without pains and tears on her own terms of departure from the living world.

Sainthood anywhere is usually celebrated and it comes in different forms. Sainthood  is not a publicity drama ideated; it is earned through sojourn on earth, particularly when the earthly engagements are over at death with  noble notes and echoes. This is the time keen observers, archivists, archaeologists and investigative writers begin to unfold the survey plan on the departed. Even the departed did not know the life led was rooted in sainthood until it is revealed after death based on the remarkable imprints while on earth.

The whole world knows true sainthood comes after death. Interestingly, archival and archaeological excavations reveal late Rev. Mother  Ekotoro is a saint who left this world on 14 March 2025 without any remembered resentment held against anyone over man-made injuries unjustly inflicted on her by benighted mortals. Ekotoro had a philosophy of forgiveness and forgetfulness bordering on instantly forgiving the offender, followed by deletion of the whole episode from the mind. Her philosophy of forgiveness and forgetfulness was always acted out without words. When deliberately injured by benighted mortals, she swallowed the injurious pill calmly and meekly and showed by her deeds that she had long forgiven the offender without telling the offender openly your sins had been forgiven. Wordlessly, the heart was the home of  Ekotoro's meek philosophy of forgiveness and forgetfulness.
The dream of the christian world is to approximate the standard of Jesus Christ in ideal-pursuit. In mere mortals one can hardly find the behavioural landmarks of Jesus Christ. In Ekotoro one can find the behavioural landmarks of Jesus Christ. She was an embodiment of unfailing forgiveness and meekness who bore verbal  injuries occasionally inflicted on her by benighted mortals without resentment held against the offenders. Her unfailing forgiving spirit was always wordlessly communicated, only showing in her resentment-free interactions with people who have deliberately stung her like bees.Her story of forgiveness and meekness was always told in pragmatic terms through malice-free interactions with the offenders after the injuries had been malevolently inflicted on her.

Remarkable devotion to God was a characterisation of Ekotoro's life on earth. She devotedly worked for God until she attained the respectable position of Rev. MOTHER in the Christ Divine and Gospel Mission (CDGM) church. Until her death, she did not miss any CDGM congregation. Every year she journeyed as a pilgrim to the Holy Land at Elohim City Zion of CDGM church in Kalafiogbene to renew her annual prayerful vow with God for the protection of her entire family.

The story of Rev. Mother Ekotoro is a story of beautiful children given birth to every two years. Ekotoro had eleven  children through marriage to Mr Alhaji Ekotoro Oruserikeme of Ezebiri town  -  Mrs Evelyn Bekere Kemasuode,  Chief John, Mrs Queen Makaraba, Bishop Boro, Comrade Seaman, Hon. Monday, Mrs Lucky Layefa Ekanpou and Mrs Happy Truston Gbenekama. Out of the eleven children she had, three journeyed to the underworld before her while she left behind eight children at death.

The earthly journey of Ekotoro was a memorable one.  All through her earthly life she did not have a single  quarrel with any of her children or any other person outside her family. She was an embodiment of meekness as often preached by Jesus Christ. Her entire life was governed by meekness and this explained why she was always at peace with everyone without malice however the level of deliberate provocation.

The story of Ekotoro cannot be told without a spotlight on her tireless spirit of hardwork.She engaged varied occupations that ranged from  supply and sale of drums to ogogoro gin and Akoro wood business. The Akoro wood business  took her to Ijebu-ode and other cities in Western Nigeria. After all these occupations , Ekotoro took up tailoring as her main engagement. 

With no prior training and apprenticeship,  Ekotoro suddenly decided to become a tailor after buying a machine. Rather miraculously, she became an excellent tailor without apprenticeship, specialising  in the 'making' of church garments. Her tailoring was restricted to  making of church garments ; this was borne out of her desire to contribute meaningfully to  the growth of Christianity on the CDGM platform and be on a favourable path with God. 

The life of Ekotoro was a study in godliness. She was a very godly woman who embraced christianity with enthusiasm. Her godliness inspired her to devote her tailoring to church 'garment-making' because she did not want any secular distractions from doing the work of God. Even at 99 she was still a master of her machine that gave her economic stability and joy. All the  personal achievements of Ekotoro were built from her tailoring profession. Until her death,  Margaret Ekotoro could still  pass the thread through the eye of the needle in her machine without being aided by a pair of glasses. She had a better vision than the eagle until death came at 99.

Characteristically, all typical Ijaw people  like music.  Ekotoro was a great lover of Ijaw music who enjoyed good music. A constantly  blaring music from her prized gramophone  inspired in her hardwork and indefatigability when at work. Music was a special delicacy she enjoyed both day and night. Specifically, she enjoyed the musical masterpieces of King Robert Ebizimor, Bestman Doupere, Field Marshall Echo Toikumo and Hon. Agbeotu Teiyeibo. 

 Ijaw highlife music always held Ekotoro spellbound. In Ekotoro's love of Ijaw highlife music one can find a glaring bias.  King Robert Ebizimor's music always held her spellbound  much more than any other Ijaw musician and gave her the unfailing energy and inspiration to engage her machine both day and night without distraction. 

There was always something amazing about Ekotoro whenever she was at work with her machine and  gramophone. Buried in instrumentally and lyrically striking songs from her prized gramophone and her restless leg-driven machine,  Ekotoro momentarily saw herself in another Heaven on earth where she knew no distraction. For her, machine and music constituted the dugout canoe that transported her to a rosy world of soothing sounds.

Ekotoro was an enthusiastic lover of Ijaw music. People who know Ekotoro know that  machine and music meant many things to her. Machine and music virtually meant the whole world to Ekotoro whenever she found herself in the world of twosome communication between her and the two stationary objects, producing results that enlivened her economically, socially, culturally, morally, philosophically and psychologically.

One notable thing about Ekotoro was that it was an objectionable void for her whenever she could not find machine and music around her. Without the blaring music from her gramophone and the whirring or weaving noise from the machine around her, coupled with her programmed religious activities in the CDGM church, Rev.  Ekotoro's life was incomplete. For Ekotoro, her prized gramophone and machine occupied an inseparable space in her life journey.

The whole world appears to have agreed that  Ekotoro was an amazing devotee of God whose interactions with people had the aroma of pragmatic Christianity. She practised what the Bible preached. Ekotoro's earthly journey was patterned upon biblical principles  - biblical principles the whole world agreed she never deviated from one second while on earth.

 There are people on earth who are intuitive. Ekotoro must be an intuitive person  -  indeed, a psychic! Intuitively aware of her prepared departure, she didn't go to bed at her usual time  at night on 14 March 2025 because she knew she would be found dead by her children in the morning, which could be an inconvenience. She did not want to take her children unawares at death. She ate her meal with relish, drank  a bottle of coke and water and watched an interesting movie of her choice to the end. When all these activities were over, she dashed to the white house with agility to  ease herself. Back from the white house, she sat nobly and happily on her bed and told her daughter, Mrs Happy Truston Gbenekama , that it was time for her to die. Rev. Mother Ekotoro communicated that she wouldn't like to take her last breath right  inside the house and cause inconvenience. Her daughter understood this and rushed her  to a nearby hospital.  Ekotoro smiled and took her last breath before the hospital. At the hospital the medical doctor confirmed  she had died one minute ago before the hospital. 

Ekotoro is no more on earth. At death Rev. Mother Ekotoro's last smile was radiant on her face as she lay spreadeagled on the hospital bed. Ekotoro died nobly because she did not want to take her children unawares at death. For her children and grandchildren to wake up in the morning and find her dead in her sleeping bed was what Ekotoro clairvoyantly avoided when she chose to die nobly without the piercing claws and talons of death. At death  Ekotoro told the world how to die nobly without inconvenience to the living.

A phenomenally, God-fearing, forgiving and meek woman has departed this world of benighted people. For a forgiving and meek woman who walked on the monotheistic path; for a forgiving and meek woman who loved her children and humanity with passion; for a forgiving and meek woman who died heroically without troubling her children by telling death to come upon her because she was ready; for a forgiving and meek woman who smiled before death and left a memorable smile on her face at death, signalling the fact that at death she was not sad but full of happiness and smile because the journey ended meaningfully; for a forgiving and meek woman who led a STAINLESSLY saintly and motherly life on earth, let the celebratory bells ring loudly for her on 27 November 2025 at Kalafiogbene/Adekagbene with her prized secular songs of King Robert Ebizimor, Field Marshall Echo Toikumo, Hon. Agbeotu Teiyeibo, Bestman Doupere and moving religious songs from the CDGM church at Elohim City Zion. 

Many things happen when somebody dies and these things are determined by the life and age of the deceased. Many are the dead that have journeyed to the underworld, sometimes lukewarmly  celebrated, but this pioneer of noble death,   Rev. Mother Ekotoro, is different. No dead deserves a better celebration than  Ekotoro who will feel more ennobled at death where her philosophy and ideals become the moral pair of compass for this generation and beyond, particularly in Ogbotobo, Ayakoromo, Esanma, Okoloba, Akugbene and Kalafiogbene/Adekagbene communities where her true historical roots of origin lie buried in varying degrees. Home  Ekotoro has gone at last without any medical doctor's overly dramatic, puny resuscitation mutilations on the untainted healthy body with which she came  into this world.

Margaret Ekpo, Margaret Thatcher and Margaret Ekotoro are intertwined by the story of longevity and notable achievements in their chosen careers. Ekpo died at the age of 92; Thatcher died at the age of 87 and Ekotoro died at the age of 99. Of the three achiever 'Margarets', Ekotoro's sojourn on earth was the longest. By implication, Ekpo, Ekotoro and Thatcher are not only driven together historically by their distinguished careers but also by their ages of sojourn on earth which cannot be categorised as untimely departures from the earth.

Celebration is the the word for the three Margarets. Margaret Ekpo and Margaret Thatcher were celebrated in their time of departure. Memorably celebrated as Ekpo and Thatcher were when they left the world, Margaret Ekotoro must be most memorably  celebrated on 27 November 2025 because she is  the oldest Margaret now dead. Let the whole world gather in Kalafiogbene to celebrate Ekotoro on the said date as a historical mark of last respect as it was done to her contemporaries like Ekpo and Thatcher.

Dr. Ekanpou writes from Akparemogbene, Delta State

Featured Article: When Hashtags Become Hymns of Hope_By William Z. Bozimo

The streets may seem a bit quiet now, but the internet is always abuzz with endless chants. From EndSARS to End Bad Governance, young Nigerians have learned the rhythm of resistance, and the melody of change. The use of social media has now become the new parliament where hashtags, reels, and blogs shape public conscience faster than manifestos.

Every post is a whisper, and every protest, a verse. Someday, when the history books are rewritten, they will say that the youths of this era not only trend, but they also transformed. For in the choir of hope, even hashtags can sound like hymns. Once upon a time, human outcry was measured in footsteps, chants that echoed through mega city squares, and with hands that held up all kinds of banners and posters against the wind.

Today, revolution is now marked out in hashtags, and the new battlefields are digital platforms where fearlessness is taken to another level. They no longer use only placards or public address systems; instead, they build their own megaphones out of mobile phones. In the heart of Nigeria’s digital uprising in recent times such as the EndSARS movement was a defining moment in the nation's history as people cried in distress yet charged with hope. 

It was not just about police brutality alone, but also the human spirit weary of waiting for dignity to be delivered as charity. And the vociferation of a generation fed up with unfavourable repeated negative patterns with no change in sight. All they wanted was to reclaim their right to breathe, live, and be heard. For decades, Nigerian youths have been told to wait for jobs, for justice, and for recognition, but waiting has become an impairment. 

So they turned to the only space still uncolonized by bureaucracy which is the internet. Amidst all the stories, reels, tweets, memes, and even viral trends, they discovered that solidarity could be built from pixels, and a single voice joined by thousands, and even millions of loyal followers could also become an anthem. Social media has now become the new forum for public opinion; Imperfect but powerful.

Every tweet is now a motion filed, and every hashtag is a manifesto; while a live stream is a testimony. There are no gatekeepers or political sponsors, only one pursuit. For the first time in years, Nigerian youth are beginning to speak in unison across faiths, tribes, and continents. Their mutual language is anguish and their joint mission is to achieve positive change. We hope that someday, justice and fairness like rain, will return to this part of the earth. 
Hashtags cannot heal the sick in hospitals or feed hungry children in classrooms. Retweets do not repair roads or reform institutions. So the next chapter of this great awakening must be written offline, and in ballot boxes and boardrooms. 

Since this digital era gave the youth a voice, the next step is to provide them with a mechanism, because true change is not just measured in trends alone, but in real-life transformation. God bless all the young and vibrant men and women trying to make our country Nigeria great. All your efforts will not be in vain. Thank you.

✍🏽 William Z. Bozimo
Veteran Journalist | Columnist | National Memory Keeper

Delta 2026 Budget will Determine Ijaw Votes, as the ljaws Warm up to Endorse Governor Sheriff Oborevwori for 2027_Mulade

Ahead of the 2027 governorship election and the proposed endorsement of governor Sheriff Oborevwori as the sole candidate by Delta Ijaws, a prominent Ijaw leader, peace and development advocate, Comrade (Chief) Mulade Sheriff, PhD, has declared that Ijaw votes would be determined by projects allocated and adequately funded in the 2026 budget.

The renowned human and environmental rights activist made the declaration at a press briefing after an expanded stakeholders meeting in Warri on behalf of Ijaw Ethnic Nationality in the state.

According to the Ibe Sorimowei of the ancient Gbaramatu Kingdom, the adequate inclusion and funding of projects in the riverine areas will serve as critical consideration for political support, and riverine communities predominantly occupied by the Ijaws and Itsekiri ethnic nationalities.

While he commended the infrastructural development stride by governor Oborevwori in the upland areas, Mulade however lamented the absence of such infrastructural revolution in the riverine areas of the state despite the population density and huge revenue contributions to the state as host to multinational oil and gas companies.

He said, "I want to sincerely  appreciate His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori, for the infrastructural development, which I described as infrastructural revolution in the state, particularly in the upland,  and your proposed commissioning of the reconstructed Odimodi-Ogulagha road earlier constructed by SPDC in the 1980's for their operational convenience and community residents.

"It is imperative to state that some Ijaw communities such as Ogulagha, Torugbene, Oporoza, Akugbene, Ojobo etc. are more densely populated than some local government headquarters in the upland, but they are deliberately deprived of development because of the so-called claim of terrain challenges. 

"These communities host multinational oil and gas companies contributing immensely to the state revenue, but without any significant projects," he lamented.

The Ibe-Sorimowei who reminded the governor of how the Ijaws adopted, supported and stood by him all through the election season, also gave the assurance of massive Ijaw votes come 2027, but one that must be backed by the governor's commitment to development through massive projects inclusion for the area.

"We (the Ijaws) have created a conducive atmosphere to boost oil and gas production, making Delta the richest state; support security, douse restiveness and support economic stability. It is time for the governor to reciprocate through the 2026 budget with tangible legacy projects," he asserted.

Speaking further he said, "Your Excellency, permit me to draw your attention to some expected critical projects that must be considered for the Delta Ijaw nation: the Ayakoromo bridge, Omadino-Okerenkoko-Kokodiagbene-Escravos road, Aladja-Ogbe-Ijoh Road, Ojobo-Torugbene road, among others.

"Build a first class Health Centre/General Hospital in riverine community,  particularly at Ogulagha Town, to compensate the people for their huge contributions to the state revenue.

On education, he appealed that, "It is worthy of note that every ethnic group in Delta State hosts state university except the Ijaws and the Itsekiris. I want to strongly and sincerely appeal to His Excellency, Rt Hon Sheriff Oborevwori once again, to consider the upgrading of the Delta State Maritime Polytechnic, Burutu, which is a moribund polytechnic, to a campus of the Delta State University, Abraka. This will position the state to explore the blue economy opportunities. Equally too, the state government should, without delay, build a campus of Dennis Osadebe University at Koko to give sense of belonging to the Itsekiris with a special focus on agriculture for Deltans.

"The above mentioned projects constitutes significant live-wire for the Delta Ijaw, and will translate into votes come 2027. We can assure His Excellency, Rt Hon Sheriff Oborevwori, of 100 percent of the entire Ijaw votes come 2027.
"The consideration of revolutionary projects in the riverine areas in the 2026 budget will give a sense of belonging to the people for their huge contributions. Moreover, your commitment to development will write your name in gold, not just seeking their votes during elections."

TOMPOLO:: THE PATH THAT LEADS MANY TO TOMORROW: - The Heart of Endless Kindness: The Voice that Wakes Sleeping Hope -

Tompolo is not just a name.  
It is a living sound that dances through the air,  
like the call of a morning bird  
announcing that darkness has lost its hold.  
His name rolls through villages and cities  
like a gentle wind that carries the scent of fresh rain.  
It lands in the ear and settles in the heart,  
planting seeds of courage in those who have forgotten how to dream.  
  
He is a wide river,  
one that never runs dry,  
flowing with goodness and compassion.  
His current crosses shores and forests,  
feeding lands that he has never walked,  
quenching the thirst of souls  
that have never seen his smile.  
Every drop of his giving  
is like cool water to a weary traveler,  
bringing life where there once was dust and silence.  

Tompolo does not build castles of stone,  
nor towers of glass.  
Instead, he builds people.  
He lifts the weak from the ground,  
sets them on firm feet  
and teaches them to walk with pride.  
He places hope in their hands like a small seed,  
and patiently waters it  
until it grows into a tree  
with branches that give shade and fruit to many.  
He knows that the greatest buildings  
are not made of bricks,  
but of human hearts made strong.  
In politics, Tompolo stands like a mountain,  
high and steady,  
resisting the storms of selfishness and greed.  
He gives voice to the voiceless,  
weight to the unheard.  
Those who feel small  
find courage in his presence.  
Those who walk in fear  
find safety in his shadow.  
When he speaks,  
his words are like golden keys,  
unlocking doors that others thought were closed forever.  
  
In culture, he is like an old storyteller  
who knows the songs of yesterday  
but sings them with the beauty of today.  
He keeps traditions alive,  
as a farmer keeps seeds for the next planting season.  
He blends the wisdom of ancestors  
with the dreams of modern youth,  
creating a colorful sky  
where the past and the future meet like a rainbow after the rain.  

Spiritually, his voice is the soft call of morning light,  
the whisper that reaches the broken-hearted  
and tells them, “Rise again.”
He walks into rooms heavy with sorrow  
and fills them with peace as gentle as a mother’s hand.  
Where sadness sits,  
he plants joy.  
Where fear hides,  
he hangs the lamp of courage.  

Tompolo shakes the ground  
where laziness has been sleeping for years.  
He knocks on the doors of forgotten dreams  
and wakes them from their long rest.  
To the youth, his words are flames  
lighting a path of possibility.  
To the old, his presence is a tree  
under which they can rest and remember  
that goodness still lives in the world.  

Many leaders speak,  
but Tompolo acts.  
He turns hunger into laughter,  
fear into faith,  
and loneliness into family.  
In his hands,  
a tear becomes a smile,  
a closed door becomes an open gate,  
and a lost road becomes a bright highway  
leading to tomorrow.  
 
In the Niger Delta,  
his name is carried like a prayer on the wind.  
It falls from the lips of widows and fishermen  
with the same sweetness as rain on dry land.  
Children sing it,  
elders bless it,  
and travelers take it with them  
to places far beyond the creeks.  
For kindness has no borders,  
and Tompolo’s light  
shines without asking where a person comes from.  

If kindness were a throne,  
he would sit on it.  
If mercy were a crown,  
his head would shine brighter than gold.  
If giving were a religion,  
his heart would be the holy temple  
where all are welcome,  
day and night.  

He is close to a saint of good deeds,  
yet greater than saints in his reach.  
His battles are not fought with swords,  
but are won in the quiet victories of changed lives.  
He is a giant whose height is measured  
by the number of hands he has lifted  
out of darkness into light.  

Tompolo is a movement of the heart,  
a wind that carries blessings across waters,  
a song that will not end,  
no matter how many seasons pass.  
He is the shining torch in the deep night,  
the bridge over troubled rivers,  
the drumbeat that calls people to unity.  
Even when the sun has gone to sleep,  
his light will continue to glow,  
guiding many to the tomorrow they never thought would come.  
EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State

Capt. Gbenebide Monday Congratulates Torububou 1, the Ebenanaowei of Ogulagha Kingdom on 20Th Coronation Anniversary

In commemoration of the 20th Coronation Anniversary, Hon. Capt. Monday Gbenebide, has joined friends, family, business associates and well wishers all over the globe to felicitate as well as congratulate the good people of the ancient Ogulagha kingdom in Burutu Local Government Area of Delta State, as HRM. Capt. King Joseph l. Timiyan (JP) PhD, Agbonu, Torububou 1, the Ebenanaowei of Ogulagha Kingdom and Chairman Delta State ljaw Traditional Rulers Council marks two Impactful decades on the throne.

In a congratulatory message released on Monday in Warri, Capt. Gbenebide who is an illustrious brother ln-law to the first class monarch, described the Ebenanaowei of Ogulagha kingdom as a man of peace with impeccable character who has attracted meaningful development to the kingdom in the past twenty years on the throne.
According to him, said:
" I extended heartfelt congratulations to HRM. Capt. King Joseph l. Timiyan (JP) PhD, Agbonu, Torububou 1, the Ebenanaowei of Ogulagha Kingdom on the occasion of your 20th coronation anniversary celebration.

" On this auspicious occasion of your coronation anniversary, l extend my warmest wishes for continued good health, strength and many more years of Impactful service to your subjects.
" May your reign continue to be blessed with peace, love, unity, joy and prosperity. Congratulations your royal majesty," the statement added.

Sunday, November 9, 2025

WHEN THE MEN WITH GUNS BECOME THE GOVERNMENT GUESTS-The Hyena Learned to Use a Spoon-

It was a hot afternoon,  
and the sky looked tired,  
its face painted with red dust.  
A man without a crown stepped into a “peace meeting.”  
But his hands did not carry peace.  
In one hand was an AK-47  
in the other, a sharp rocket,  
as if they were wedding gifts.  
His guards stood tall like iron poles,  
the government men grinned like actors on a big stage, 
for who dares frown at the landlord of fear?  

Nigeria is a house with no doors,  
its windows always open to thieves,  
its gates guarded by men who sleep on pillows stuffed with corruption.  
The bandit shook hands with the leaders,  
and their pens danced happily,  
writing agreements on paper that smelled of blood.  
The lunch table was covered with shining plates,  
but what they truly served was fear  
seasoned with betrayal.  
The elders said:  
“When the hunter dines with the hyena, the goats will never sleep in peace.  
 For in the heart of the feast, there is no difference between the eater and the eaten.”  

In Nigeria today,  
the hyena is everywhere, 
It now knows how to use a spoon.  
It smiles in photographs with governors,  
sits in air-conditioned rooms, 
with senators 
and eats steaming jollof rice with ministers.  
They laugh together over plates of meat,  
while widows drink tears  
and refugees chew dry crumbs.  

Here, banditry is no longer a crime , 
it is a business run by the bold and blessed.  
Better than selling petrol,  
almost holy like the offering bag in church.  
Everyone knows the price of a kidnapping,  
everyone knows the buyers sit inside government houses,  
wearing perfume instead of guilt.  

Villagers count their dead under the moonlight,  
while leaders count their profit under warm chandelier lamps.  
When guns are invited to meetings,  
the power of words becomes very small.  
The killers laugh wide for the camera,  
the government frowns behind closed doors,  
and the people kneel in dark corners,  
because God is now the last policeman.  

Nigeria, my Nigeria ...
the world watches like it’s a comedy movie with a very sad ending.  
Afghanistan nods like a brother in pain,  
Gaza sighs with tired lungs,  
Ukraine sends condolences.  
But our trophy of shame shines bright,  
because here, the hunter and the hyena eat from the same bowl.  

Nowhere is safe,  
for the hunters have sold their guns to hyenas.  
The hyenas wear parliamentary suits,  
smell of expensive perfume,  
and guard the sheep with fake smiles.  
The monster sleeps soundly in government houses,  
the bandits wear crowns of gold,  
and the people…  
wear only the black cloth of grief.  
And so the banquet continues.  
The killers toast their wine,  
the leaders nod in approval,  
and the ordinary people wait for rescue that never comes.  
Nigeria is a grand theatre,  
with stage lights shining on terror,  
its actors dressed in government suits,  
and the script written in blood.  
One day, the curtain will fall , 
and all the diners at the king’s table  
will see that the feast was cooked  
with the tears of the land.  

EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State

Just-ln: Enough of the Neglect, Oromoni Calls on Delta State Governor to End Marginalization of Ogbe-ljoh Warri Kingdom

Ogbe-Ijoh, Warri___ The leader of Ogbe-ljoh Political Front, Hon. Oromoni, has called on the Executive Governor of Delta State, His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori to urgently end the decades-long marginalization and neglect of Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Kingdom, the headquarters of Warri South-West Local Government Area, which has suffered severe infrastructural decay and government abandonment despite its strategic importance to the state.

Speaking to newsmen in Warri on Sunday on behalf of Ogbe-Ijoh Political Front, Oromoni lamented that since the inception of the present administration, no single project has been initiated, completed or commissioned in the kingdom. He described the situation as “a glaring case of exclusion and injustice” against a kingdom that has remained supportive of this administration and successive governments in Delta State.

“Ogbe-Ijoh is a local government headquarters, yet it bears no semblance of one. Our roads are now death traps, our schools are collapsing, our courts are non-functional, and our youths are left without opportunities. We cannot continue to be treated as second-class citizens in our own state,” Oromoni declared.

The statement highlighted several abandoned and decaying infrastructure across the kingdom, including:
The Ogbe-Ijoh Skill Acquisition Centre, Ogbe-Ijoh Internal Road Project, Ogbe-Ijoh Technical College, Ogbe-Ijoh, Mini Stadium, The Delta State High Court and Customary Court, Ogbe-Ijoh and Ogbe-Ijoh General Hospital, Ogbe-Ijoh Grammar School, and the JAMB Centre, Ogbe-Ijoh.
Hon. (Barr.) Jeffrey Pere Oromoni further condemned the complete exclusion of Ogbe-Ijoh youths from political appointments, employments and empowerment initiatives, despite the kingdom’s huge contribution to the state.
“Our people have shown patience and loyalty to the state government. Yet, we have nothing to show for it. This neglect must stop. We call on His Excellency to urgently intervene and ensure that Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Kingdom receives its fair share of development.” he said.
He urged the Governor to immediately revisit all abandoned projects and include Ogbe-Ijoh Warri Kingdom in the state’s developmental master plan and appoint qualified youths from the kingdom into meaningful positions of responsibility. He also pleaded that a flyover bridge and road project should be approved to link Ogbe-Ijoh with Naifor and Dosemor communities (popularly known as Warri corner) of Ogbe-Ijoh.
“We are not asking for favours — we are demanding fairness. Ogbe-Ijoh deserves the same level of development and attention given to other kingdoms and clans across Delta State,” Oromoni emphasized.

The statement concluded that the people of Ogbe-Ijoh remain committed to peace and development but will continue to speak out against injustice and neglect until their voices are heard and tangible action is taken.

Revealed: Why 115 DSS Officers Were Fired, Top Senior lnsiders Revealed

New information has emerged surrounding the dismissal of 115 officers from the Department of State Services (DSS), following internal investigations that found them guilty of actions capable of compromising the agency’s integrity.

According to multiple security sources who spoke to Sunday Punch, the officers were implicated in offences including fraud, indiscipline, certificate forgery, and leaking classified information.

A senior insider revealed,
 “Some of them even leaked official information, which is a serious offence.” Others were found to have submitted forged academic credentials, including birth certificates, fake foreign degrees, and even certificates from religious institutions, as part of their employment records.

Another official added,

 “These are bad eggs. Some used forged birth certificates to gain employment. Others attended schools in Benin Republic for only a few months and presented the certificates as degrees. Some even submitted mosque certificates as degree equivalents.”

On Tuesday, the DSS announced the dismissals on its account, sharing photos and dismissal dates of the personnel involved, while warning the public to avoid any official dealings with them. This move marks a notable shift in transparency, as disciplinary measures within the agency were rarely made public before.

The announcement came three weeks after the arrest of two former officers, Barry Donald and Victor Godwin, accused of impersonating DSS personnel to defraud unsuspecting Nigerians.

Sources indicated that the purge is part of a broader effort by DSS Director-General Adeola Ajayi to restore discipline within the service. A top intelligence officer explained, “Some of the dismissed officers were fast becoming rogues, threatening the service’s integrity. The DSS doesn’t compromise on its reputation. The current DG is reforming the agency and cleansing the system.”
Several of the dismissed personnel had ongoing disciplinary issues prior to Ajayi’s tenure. “Some officers were previously queried or lightly sanctioned, but when the same offences occurred again, the current DG acted decisively,” a DSS member said.

Officials also revealed that around 15–20% of the dismissed officers had traveled abroad without formally resigning. “They were dismissed for improper resignation. The DG aims to instil discipline and address behaviours that were previously ignored,” another insider added.

The DSS released the identities and photos of the dismissed officers to protect the public and prevent misuse of the agency’s name. A senior officer emphasized, “People who are dishonest about their credentials cannot work here. These are trained personnel, and the government is ensuring they do not exploit the DSS name for illicit activities. That is why their photos were made public.”

Opinion: WHEN THE RAIN COMES FROM AMERICA TO QUENCH NIGERIA'S FIRE- The Thieves Who Fear Other Thieves are Shouting -

Opinion: WHEN THE RAIN COMES FROM

When help knocks at the gate, some run to open it,  
others hide the key inside their stomachs and shout,  
"Thief! Thief! The visitor is a thief!"  
He is coming to steal our oil.
Yet the true thief lives in our kitchen,  
eating the family’s soup before it is cooked.  
They point at America as the fox at the door,  
while they sit at the table with wolves , with the bandits,
who have been chewing our bones for years.  

Which oil do they speak of?  
Is it the oil that flows like golden rivers into the pockets of leaders,  
whose appetite is larger than the sky?  
The oil we have never tasted except in the smoke from a gun?  
The oil that makes leaders taller than towers 
and the followers smaller than shadows?
They act as if they are guarding our treasure,  
yet the treasure is buried under their corrupt beds.  
If the visitor comes and turns our roads from crocodile pits  
to smooth dancing floors for cars;  
if the night becomes so quiet our people 
can sleep without listening for the cough of guns;  
If we have electricity 24 / 7,
if the road from Warri to Asaba  
becomes a straight ribbon we can walk with closed eyes, 
then why fear the guest?  
A guest who brings bread is better  
than a brother who serves stones and scorpions.

Some say the guest will never leave if allowed to come.
But look — your own brothers have stayed in power forever.  
They have tied themselves to the State treasury  
with ropes made from our suffering for decades.
They plant trouble in the morning  
and harvest gold in the night.  
If disorder had a father,  
it would be wearing agbada in Abuja.  

Maybe -- just maybe
God is sending a broom from across the ocean  
to sweep the snake’s skin out of our yard.  
Here, in Nigeria,
the political class cooks hunger in large pots  
and serves it steaming to every home.  
The land is not green anymore 
it is now red.  
White, the colour of peace has been poured over  
with the blood of the innocent.   
People now leave the country like ants fleeing boiling water.  

Our security budget swells like a greedy belly,  
yet insecurity grows taller than mountains.  
Two governments rule here:  
one is in the State House,  
the other in the forest,  
taxing farmers for the right to breathe  
and appointing their own Commander-in-Chief that has a standing army.
There is no sovereignty in Nigeria anymore.
So if a guest comes carrying peace in his hands,  
do not push him away because of pride.  
Pride does not mend broken roads,  
and it does not chase fear away from our nights.  
Right now, Nigeria needs help,  
Nigeria needs the quiet sound of peace  
flowing like a calm river through our streets.  

Nigeria, when help comes as a guest, 
do not shut your door and pretend you are not at home.  
Open the door wide,  
dust the chairs,  
make a room soft enough for it to rest.  
Help is a rare traveller,
when it comes, host it.  

My people,  
stop crying that America will come to drink our oil.  
America’s cups are already full,  
their wells are deep with their own riches.  
The mouths that shout loudest saying  "don't come" 
are the same corrupt mouths that have been dipping  
into our pot of wealth for decades.  
They are the ones we raised up as protectors,  
but behind our backs  
they feed the very criminals that kill us.

Our political leaders have turned into the wolves.
The night’s watchmen now hide thieves in their pockets.  
And  to you, ordinary Nigerian,  
who says the guest should not come  
because you enjoy the small crumbs  
falling from the thieves' table ...
I have pity for you.  
You walk with chains round your neck,  
chains that will not break even with a lifetime of days.  

Nigeria's wound is so open  
that even a school child can see its bleeding.  
Yet you, grown and wise,  
still wave the helper away,  
as if you have been charmed  
by the sweet tongue of our political leaders.  

The truth is simple:  
Nigeria is on fire.  
The flames eat the ground,  
smoke climbs into the clouds.  
If rain falls from across the sea  
to cool our burning land,
let the innocent be silent and welcome it,  
and let the guilty keep showing their teeth,  
shouting into the wind,  
“We don’t want America!”

EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo

Just-ln: INEC Declares Soludo Winner Of 2025 Anambra Governorship Election

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has declared Professor Chukwuma Charles Soludo, candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), winner of the Anambra State governorship election.

According to the official results released by INEC, a total of 584,054 votes were collated across the 21 local government areas of the state. Soludo polled 422,664 votes, maintaining a commanding lead over his closest rival, Nicholas Ukachukwu of the All Progressives Congress (APC), who scored 99,445 votes.
Other parties that participated include the African Democratic Congress (ADC), which garnered 8,208 votes, and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), which trailed with 1,401 votes.

Announcing the results at the INEC State Collation Centre in Awka on Sunday, the State Collation Officer and Vice Chancellor of the University of Benin, Prof. Edogah Omoregie, commended stakeholders for their cooperation throughout the exercise.

Below are the local government results as announced by INEC:

LGA APC, APGA LP, PDP

Dunukofia 3,284 14,892 71 16

Awka North 3,661 15,895 299 203

Njikoka 5,687 22,213 311 47

Nnewi South 9,281 17,286 73 12

Nnewi North 5,441 20,320 1,140 45

Ayamelum 7,478 13,340 117 13

Anambra East 3,108 14,665 304 207

Ogbaru 3,768 22,803 347 30

Oyi 5,118 18,882 3,641 16

Orumba North 2,615 24,664 131 17

Orumba South 2,828 19,818 16 18

Aguata 4,125 35,559 124 82

Onitsha North 4,677 24,225 500 111

Onitsha South 4,156 15,742 615 73

Anaocha 5,956 20,118 483 42

Awka South 5,038 27,896 520 63

Idemili South 6,015 17,224 276 40

Ekwusigo 2,973 18,749 194 70

Idemili North 6,383 25,498 1,275 125, 

Ihiala 4,425 23,557 135 .
With victories recorded in all 19 local government areas so far announced, Soludo’s triumph reinforces APGA’s dominance in Anambra politics and consolidates his position as one of the most influential political figures in the state.