Monday, October 13, 2025

DELTA STATE APC CHAIRMANSHIP SEAT: HON. EBIAKPO EZEBRI ON THE ROLL

Delta State APC Chairmanship seat needs someone who has the competence, credibility, candour, the potential and a man of vision to consolidate on the Renewed Hope for MORE Agenda of His Excellency, Rt. Hon. Sheriff Francis Oborevwori, JP, FICMC, FNIM, the Executive Governor of Delta State.

Hon. Ebiakpo Ezebri is a sincere, humble, vibrant, vocal and an articulate son of the soil, well-cultured from Burutu LGA of Delta State. He is on a mission to bring new ideas to the All Progreesives Congress (APC), and with his enormous harnessable potentials and buoyant experience in the political arena, APC in the State is on the part of greatness.

Hon. Ebiakpo Ezebri is a man of his words and he has the people in his heart. APC in Delta State can count on him and he will deliver even beyond expectations. He's people-centred as against elite-centredness and he will deliver as at when due.

Let's support Hon. Ebiakpo Ezebri for the position of the State Chairman of our great Party, the APC, in the State.

HON. EBIAKPO EZEBRI MEDIA TEAM.

The Nollywood Nation: Storytelling as Survival_ By William Z. Bozimo

Some nations record their history in books, while others etch their memory in stone. Nigeria, however, has chosen the camera. Where our history classes stutter and our archives gather dust, Nollywood has become our diary; raw, unedited, and sometimes chaotic, but undeniably ours. 

From the streets of Aba to the shores of Asaba, our filmmakers have spun stories with shoestring budgets and sheer determination. What began as grainy home videos sold on DVDs and CDs in crowded markets, has grown into the world’s second-largest film industry in terms of the number of movies produced per year. Nollywood is more than just an industry, it is therapy to the body and soul.

In a nation that attempts to make sense of itself amidst antagonistic poverty, politics, and paradox, every story is a sermon. The pastor on the screen is a critique of the church on the street. The corrupt politician in a movie set is a mirror of the man in the news. That village girl who eventually makes it to the city in a movie is not just a character played for awakening or entertainment purposes only, it is the reality of every Nigerian who dares to dream beyond their postcode. 

Through melodrama and mythology, Nollywood performs the work our leaders often fail to do. It educates, cautions, and consoles. But let us be honest, Nollywood is also flawed. Too frequently, we recycle clichés, exalt superstition, and glorify the very vices we claim to be fighting against. But even in its imperfection, it holds a power our parliament envies. 

No government white paper has the reach of a single blockbuster movie. No policy briefing moves hearts like a late-night film streamed on a used cracked phone screen with faded bottom numbers and borrowed data. The question now is not if Nollywood entertains, because it does. However, can we all identify its profound role?  

It is an archive of our lived pain and experiences, and a pulpit where the nation preaches to itself. Nollywood is the market woman’s gossip curled into cinema, the nation’s trauma and plea repackaged into storytelling, and our survival instinct transmitted in digital form. Therefore, when all the lights are dim and the screen is flickering, remember that you are not just seeing a movie and watching actors display their talents; you are watching Nigeria wrestle with itself: its fears, desires, and contradictions. 

Whenever you watch Nollywood movies, you are watching people who have refused to disappear, insisting that their stories, however imperfect, must be told.

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

Saturday, October 11, 2025

HOW JUSTICE LEARNT TO SHAKE HANDS WITH GREED_By: Ebikabowei Kedikumo

They say the court is the last hope of the common man,  
but today, if an ordinary person runs there for help,  
he comes back carrying an empty bag  
and a lesson in how money talks louder than truth.  
The judge’s robe, once white like fresh morning,  
now carries the smell of the marketplace,  
stitched not with threads of fairness  
but with the fine fabric of fat envelopes.  

Once, justice stood tall like a stubborn palm tree,  
refusing to bend for the storm.  
Now it bends quickly, 
not for wind, but for the warm handshake of greed.  
The gavel that used to roar like thunder,  
now nods politely to money bag politicians  
as if saying, “Welcome, my master.”  

In today’s courtroom, truth is measured like tomatoes—  
the richer you are, the bigger your share.  
A clever lawyer can turn a cow into a mosquito  
if the bench is well-fed.  
Politicians arrive with cash that sings,  
and the gavel becomes a happy drumstick,  
beating to the rhythm of their pocket songs.  
During elections, the court is the busiest stall in town,  
selling verdicts to whoever drops the heaviest bag.  

The judges, once feared for their firmness,  
now dance like invited guests at a big wedding,  
taking instructions from their rich hosts,  
freeing guilty friends  
and locking up innocent strangers.  
Yes, justice is blind,
but now it wears a blindfold made from crisp naira notes.  

Without honest courts,  
a nation is like a boat without a paddle,  
spinning in the middle of the river.  
No investor trusts a place  
where judgments are decided in private dining rooms  
before the case even begins.  
Why plant a farm  
if the harvest will go straight into a thief’s barn?  

Court orders now fly away like kites in the wind.  
The rule of law is just another song for official events,  
sweet on paper but tasteless in reality.  
Behind certain closed doors,  
politicians keep the judges on short leashes,  
whispering secrets that can pull them like goats.  
And when greed shakes hands with justice,  
truth stands outside holding its shoes—  
because it was asked to leave quietly.  

If this country is serious about growing,  
fairness has to matter more than political friendship.  
But here, greed plays the loudest drum,  
and those meant to guard justice  
move their feet to its sound.  

Today, the courts do not just smell of corruption,
they cook it, season it, and serve it hot.  
Instead of saving the nation from bad leaders,  
they crown them, shield them,  
and help them build stronger walls against honesty.  

We live in a place  
where the scales of justice tip toward the heavier pocket,  
where truth is sold by the kilo,  
and hope is beaten into comedy.  
Until our judges decide that God’s fear  
is worth more than a politician’s handshake,  
Nigeria will keep marching like a donkey tied to a post,
burning the sun, but not moving forward.  
And justice, that proud symbol of fairness,  
will keep smiling politely,  
while shaking hands with greed.  
EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State

National Assembly Passes Cybercrimes Act lnto Law, as Spreading of Fake News, Online Abuse, lnciting Ethnic Hatred Among Others Prohibited

The new Cybercrimes Act 2025 has officially been passed into law by the National Assembly under Senate President Godswill Akpabio.

This means every provision in the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) Act is now fully binding and enforceable across Nigeria.

 If you’re an online user, content creator, or admin of any digital platform (WhatsApp, Facebook, Telegram, etc.), you must know what this law says — because ignorance will not be an excuse.
Key Offenses Under the Cybercrimes Act

1️⃣ Unauthorized Access (Section 3)
Accessing someone else’s phone, laptop, or account without permission.
➡️ Punishable by up to 5 years in prison

2️⃣ Tampering with Data (Section 4)
Deleting, modifying, or interfering with another person’s digital data.
➡️ Punishable by up to 5 years in prison

3️⃣ Disclosure of Critical Information (Section 5)
Sharing classified or sensitive data without proper authority.
➡️ Punishable by up to 15 years in prison

4️⃣ Recording Private Conversations (Section 10)
Recording private discussions without authorization, even if you are part of the conversation.
➡️ Punishable by up to 2 years in prison

5️⃣ Publishing Fake News (Section 19)
Spreading false, misleading, or deceptive information online.
➡️ Punishable by up to 2 years in prison

6️⃣ Online Harassment & Abuse (Section 22)
Posting offensive, vulgar, or indecent content to insult or humiliate others.
➡️ Punishable by up to 2 years in prison

7️⃣ Inciting Ethnic/Religious Hatred (Section 24)
Making statements that provoke ethnic, tribal, or religious violence.
➡️ Punishable by LIFE imprisonment

Important for Group & Page Admins

If you manage a WhatsApp Group, Facebook Page, Telegram Channel, or any online community, you can be held responsible for what members post.

 If you knowingly allow illegal content or fail to moderate, the law holds you accountable.

Stay Safe, Stay Protected

Always verify before you share.

Moderate your groups and enforce rules.

Friday, October 10, 2025

NIGER DELTA WHERE THE PROTECTOR TURNED PREDATOR_By: Ebi Kedikumo

Once, the Army wore the robe of guardianship,  
A shield against harm,  
A promise to stand between danger and the people.  
They called it protection.  
We believed them.  

But somewhere along the path,  
The protector dropped the shield,  
And picked up the torch --
Not to light the way,  
But to burn the homes of those they swore to defend.  
In Okuama, our river village,  
We woke to the growl of guns.  
Not for the guilty few,  
But for everyone --
The innocent, the old, the young, the unborn, the cripple.

The ARMY came like a storm from the forest,  
Breathing fire,  
Swinging claws instead of hands,  
Tearing down walls,  
Leaving only the dust standing like a lone survivor in a graveyard of ash.  

The killers of seventeen soldiers were known,  
Named.  
Yet, instead of finding them,  
The Army punished the earth itself.  
Fields turned black,  
Fishing boats turned to embers,  
Villagers fled into the jungle,  
Where snakes hissed and crocodiles watched.  
It was not the first time.  
Ayakoromo burned when one soldier died.  
Gbaramatu burned searching for one man.  
I remember Ayakoromo --
The smoke took my grandmother,  
Eighty-eight years old, too slow to run.  
It took cousins and friends,  
It took our laughter.  

Yet in the North,  
Where bandits kill soldiers in plain daylight,  
The villages remain whole,  
The huts intact,  
Even the grass is not trampled.  

Why does the fire only fall on our roofs?  
Why does the claw only strike our children?  
The wind carries no answer.  
The palm trees stay silent.  

The army calls it justice.  
We call it terror.  
The protector has become the predator.  
The shield has become the spear.  
They say they guard the people,  
But the people lie in ruins.  

In Europe,
in the world beyond our borders,  
No community burns for the sin of one man.  
No mother buries her child for a crime committed in  far away lands  
But here,  
The Army sweeps through like locusts,  
Leaving ashes where bread once baked,  
Leaving silence where songs once rose.  
Leaving bitterness where sweetness once holds sway.

These killings stain the uniform forever.  
This is state violence --
An army unleashed on its own citizens,  
And a government too cowardly to speak.  
Every burnt home is proof of failure.  
Every displaced family is a mark of shame.  
You cannot build a nation by crushing its people.  
You cannot preach unity while practicing destruction.  

In the eyes of the world,  
These are crimes,  
And in the eyes of history,  
They will be remembered as the darkest chapters  
Of Nigeria’s betrayal of the Niger Delta.

The protector turned predator  
Is the greatest betrayal of all.  

EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State

Just-ln: lYC Edo, Ondo State 7-Clan Chairmen Backs 'Vote of No Confidence' on Nicholas lgarama over Abuse of Office and Misconduct

In a statement released and signed by the 7 clans chairmen of ijaw youth council IYC Edo and Ondo states namely;
Apoi clan 
Arogbo clan 
Egbema clan 
Furupagha clan 
Gbaraun clan 
Okomu Clan and
Olodiama clan said they remain firmly on the pass of vote of no confidence on Nicholas igarama, chairman IYC western zone.in there statement they cannot divide the house of 24 clan Chairmen forum which are fighting for a common goal and the progress, unity of the zone 

The leader of 7 clan forum Edo and Ondo state, and Chairman Okomu Clan, also secretary 24 clan forum, Comrade Simonghan perekeme Ernest, said that it a matter of round table dialogue 
Speaking on the development,Engr Lawoni Dumonfaye, chairman IYC Egbema clan,who is the host of the zonal chairman, said that he has no special preferential treatment from him , and has no reason to PASS VOTE OF CONFIDENCE on him.

Furthermore, united we stand divided we fall,we want concerned stakeholders, Leaders to profer solution for the zone 

Signed:

Comr Simonghan Perekeme Ernest 
Chairman Okomu Clan IYC, secretary clan Chairmen forum 

Comr Arigidi Toibokumoh
Chairman Arogbo clan IYC, Treasurer clan Chairmen forum 

Comr Lawoni Dumonfaye 
Chairman Egbema Clan IYC 

Comr Brown Tonbra Evans 
Chairman furupagha Clan IYC 

Comr Diepreye Isaac 
Chairman Gbaraun Clan IYC 

Comr Michael Kekegha 
Chairman Olodiama Clan IYC 

Comr Osere Michaiah 
Chairman Apoi Clan IYC.

Thursday, October 9, 2025

2027: WHY GOODLUCK EBELE JONATHAN COULD CHANGE NIGERIA'S STORY FOREVER

The political atmosphere in Nigeria right now, as we move closer to the 2027 presidential election, is tense. It is filled with propaganda, quiet threats, and fear  -- especially inside the ruling party’s camp. The reason is clear: rumours are growing that Goodluck Ebele Jonathan may return to the race for president. And let us be clear--  this is not the same Jonathan of 2015.  This is a new improved Jonathan with the heart of a true leader.

Today, Jonathan is wiser, more experienced, and more respected across the world. He carries the humility and compassion that are natural to his Ijaw roots. Since leaving office, he has travelled widely, met with world leaders, and learned deeply about governance and leadership from an international perspective. Jonathan is no longer just a Nigerian politician; he is a global statesman. I strongly believe he has the vision, character, and capacity to rebuild Nigeria and introduce a new style of leadership built on fairness, integrity, and progress.  

If Jonathan becomes president in 2027, Nigeria will experience positive and possibly revolutionary changes. This is exactly why some people, especially those in the ruling party fear him. They know that once he declares his intention to run, the political game will change dramatically. The 2027 election may become the most interesting and defining moment in Nigeria’s democratic history -- a true turning point in how Nigerians choose their leaders and how elections are conducted.  

President Tinubu will face a very strong and determined opponent if Jonathan enters the race. At the moment, the tide is not in Tinubu’s favour. Many ordinary Nigerians are unhappy with his leadership style, which they feel benefits only the elites while leaving the masses in hardship. Over the past months, economic struggles and poor governance have increased the desire for change. By 2027, voters will be even more determined to select a leader who offers hope, stability, and justice.  

Some critics say Jonathan has no strong political structure. But let us remember -- did Peter Obi have a political structure in 2023 before winning 12 states? The answer is no. That election proved that determination, integrity, and personal character matter far more than so-called “political structures.” By 2027, the idea of political structure will matter very little compared to the trustworthiness and competence of a candidate.  

With the right electoral reforms in place before the election, rigging will be far reduced, and money will no longer be able to buy victory. The Nigerians of 2027 will not be the same as those of 2023 -- they will be more aware, more demanding, and less willing to be manipulated. If votes truly count, millions will vote massively for a leader like Jonathan.  

Many politicians who stand with Tinubu today are doing so just to stay politically relevant for now. Come 2027, many will show their true colours. Tinubu’s chances of winning will be very slim because the hardship and dissatisfaction created by his leadership will come back to haunt him.  

For Nigeria to move forward and prosper, Goodluck Jonathan must contest the 2027 presidential election. He is a formidable force who can unite the nation and lead it toward stability, progress, and genuine democracy. The time for Jonathan’s return is now --;and Nigeria’s future could depend on it. 

Ebikabowei Kedikumo
- Ayakoromo Town

Meet May Agbamuche-Mbu, the Newly Appointed Acting Chairman of INEC

May Agbamuche-Mbu is a seasoned legal practitioner with over three decades of experience working with diverse clients in both the public and private sector. She hails from Delta State, although she was born in Kano where she attended St. Louis Secondary School. 

She graduated from the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) in 1984 with an LLB in Law.
After her call to the Bar in 1985, she attended the College of Law, London and qualified as a Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales.

May has an LLM with specialisation in Commercial and Corporate Law from Queen Mary and Westfield College, London and completed two postgraduate degree programmes in International Dispute Resolution and International Business Law respectively. 

May is also an expert in Alternative Dispute Resolution and is a member of the Chartered Institute of Arbitrators of the United Kingdom Nigeria branch, where she served as Secretary to the Institute.

Between March 2010 and November 2011, May served on the Presidential Projects Assessment Committee (PPAC) as the sole solicitor, evaluating an extensive nationwide portfolio of major unfinished public projects in Nigeria and in March 2016, she was appointed a member of the Ministerial Committee set up to prepare The Road Map for the Solid Minerals Sector.

Before her appointment as a National Commissioner for INEC, May was the managing partner of her law firm in Lagos, Norfolk Partners and also the editor of THISDAY LAWYER, a weekly legal pullout in one of the nation’s most widely read newspapers. 

From January 2014 to September 2016, May published 120 legal editorials under her column LEGAL EAGLE. Her consistent exposure to public affairs/related projects put her in a unique position to build a reputable body of commentary and expert opinion in many specialized areas. 

Her work remains a source of public advocacy on many national and international issues.

Her new role now is acting Chairman of INEC.

Opinion: TITHES, JETS AND HOLY LIES –The Hyena in the Pulpit–

In my country,  
we have pastors whose Bible is like a big calculator.  
Every verse is about money.  
Their church is no longer a place for prayer.  
It is a holy marketplace for miracles.  
Faith is the basket.  
Tithe is the price tag.  

Every Sunday morning,  
men and women rush to church before the sun rises,  
like traders hurrying to Lagos market.  
Some eat nothing,  
but hold tight their tithe envelopes  
like tickets to heaven.  
Pastor warns them:  
“If you do not pay tithe,  
you will not prosper.  
Your blessings will expire.”  
And who wants an expired blessing?  
The church building shines with gold  
like the palace of a rich chief in a Nollywood film.  
Pastor’s Italian suit is so bright  
it blinds the eyes like Harmattan sun on new zinc.  
He catwalks to the pulpit with pride,  
Bible in one hand,  
spiritual ATM card in the other.  

Then the show begins.  
He shouts into the microphone:  
“My people! Sow your seed now!  
One tithe today brings seven blessings tomorrow!”  
Members say “Amen!” loudly,  
but their pockets are crying quietly.  

Even the poor must give.  
Pastor tells them 
“When you are poor, that is the time to give more.  
That is advanced faith.”  
Some sell their last chair to sow seed.  
Others drop their husband’s car keys on the altar  
for ‘kingdom investment’.  

Months later,  
Pastor drives a new luxury jeep  
with air colder than winter in London or Toronto,  
while his members trek home under a sun  
hotter than pepper soup fire.  
Pastor flies private jets,  
saying it is “mission work”,  
but mission work often ends in Dubai, London or Bahamas.  
He posts pictures beside the sea,  
wearing sunglasses and drinking coconut water:  
“Doing the Lord’s work.”  
Once, in the deep forest,  
there lived a hyena who called himself
"Messenger of the Sky"  
He told the other animals:  
“If you do not bring me meat every week,  
the sky god will stop the rain.  
Your rivers will dry,  
your children will starve,  
and your homes will fall.”  

The animals believed him.  
Each week,  
the goats brought grass,  
the antelopes brought fresh leaves,  
the hares brought sweet berries,  
and the monkeys brought ripe bananas.  
The hyena ate all of them.  
Soon his stomach grew round like a big drum,  
while the other animals became thin like dry sticks.  

One young antelope asked:  
"Messenger Hyena,
to whom do YOU give meat,  
before the sky god blesses you?”  

The hyena became angry.  
He roared and shouted:  
“Look at my fat belly!  
That is the proof of blessing!  
Do not ask foolish questions!”  

But the animals kept thinking.  
One by one, they understood  
that the hyena’s blessing  
was only their hard work in his stomach.  
So they stopped bringing him food,  
and walked away to another part of the forest.  
In Today's Nigeria,  
our pastors are the hyenas.  
They build mansions in Banana Island,  
buy Rolls Royce cars and armoured vehicles,  
and fly private jets.  

And I still ask:  
Who do these pastors pay tithe to  
before their own prosperity began?  
From which altar did they sow for their first private jet?  

Yet the followers believe poverty is proof  
that God is testing them.  
They believe pastor’s riches are proof  
that God has favoured him.  
But the truth is plain:  
The only account being credited is pastor’s bank account 

If all the tithe money was used for the people,  
we would have free schools, good hospitals,  
and jobs for the youth.  
But no --
it buys pastor fine suits,  
big houses, shiny cars,  
and fattens his accounts like a Christmas goat.  

One day, the people’s eyes will open.  
They will see that “Yahoo” is not only boys with laptops –  
some it is men with pulpits.  
And when that day comes,  
the church seats will be empty,  
the “holy bank” will be closed,  
and silence will fill pastor’s mansion.  

He will stand beside his dusty private jet and armoured car, asking:  
“Where have my people gone?”  
And from far away,  
a strong voice will answer:  
“We have gone to work.  
We have gone to save.  
Heaven is not for sale.”  

EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Vote Hon. Ebiakpo Ezebiri for Delta State APC Chairman, a Loyal, Trusted, Dedicated and Consistent Party Faithful

By divine providence, Delta South is positioned to produce the next Delta State APC Chairman to pilot the affairs of the Party in the State, and by divine providence too, HON. EBIAKPO EZEBRI, from Burutu LGA of Delta State, is a distinguished Chairmanship Hopeful, well qualified in all ramifications and fits into the leadership equation that will bring about cohesion in the Party and the State.

Hon. Ebiakpo Ezebri is a God-fearing individual, and has respect for the people and rule of law, and he will embrace every progressive opinion that will give the Party a good legacy. In all his life, he is a consistent person, accountable and loyal to the Party. He is a patronage that epitomizes the very essence of Party loyalty, dedication, consistency and leadership. These are the attributes that any one that will change the tide of the Party should possess.
Politics is an examination that one doesn't write for himself but requires the collaboration of stakeholders, and so, Hon. Ebiakpo Ezebri's candidacy will galvanize all Party members to achieve victory come 2027.

Let's support Hon. Ebiakpo Ezebri for the position of the State Chairman of our great Party and Delta State APC will not remain the same.

Leave Goodluck Jonathan Alone-Contesting in 2027 is Not a Crime That Will Soil His Integrity_By: Ebikabowei Kedikumo

Lately, I keep hearing all sorts of noise: “If Jonathan contests in 2027, his name will be dragged in the mud.”, he will tarnish his good name"" "those who want Jonathan to contest are enemies" blablabla.

Really? Since when did contesting an election become a crime? Since when did offering to serve your country turn into bad character or behaviour that stains a person’s reputation?  

 Jonathan is a Niger Delta man -- our brother.  As President, he carried himself with dignity. Out of power, he has carried himself with even greater dignity.  He left office peacefully, without any messy drama, and with a historic line that shook the world:  

“My ambition is not worth the blood of any Nigerian.”

Whether he wins or loses in 2027 will never erase the honour God has placed on his head.  
Politics belongs to every Nigerian, not a closed club reserved for a select few or selected tribes.
Jonathan has the right to run. He has influence, experience, and global respect.  When he speaks, the entire political space pauses.  When he  coughs,, the ruling party gets nervous., political heavy weights from the North, East, South and West tremble.
That is the kind of voice Niger Delta needs in Abuja -- strong, respected, and listened to nationwide 

So why are we pushing discouraging him?  
Contesting is not stealing.  
It is not corruption.  
It is simply saying to the people: “Do you want me?"
If they say no, life goes on.  
If they say yes, he serves.  
It is that simple.  

Instead of chasing him from the race, we should be shouting: “Go ahead, Jonathan!”  
If one of our own can take a shot at the biggest seat in the land,
we should stand behind him, not hide him in a corner.  

Win or lose, Jonathan will remain respected worldwide.  But if we push him out with discouraging words, we send the wrong message -- that Niger Delta people don’t deserve the presidency.  That is a message I will never support.  

As for me, I’m clear: Jonathan should contest. When he does, I will stand beside him with 100% moral support and deep pride.  And I believe that everyone from the Niger Delta who values dignity, equity, and representation should do the same.  
Let us defend our own.  
Let us stop condemning his ambition.  
Because running for office is not a crime -- it is democracy in action.

EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO

Covenant of Peace Global Ministries Set to Hold Her End of Year Annual Thanksgiving/3rd Year Anniversary Oct 26, in Warri, lnvites General Public

According to the General Overseer and founder of the Covenant of Peace Global Ministries, Apst. Peter Sunday stated that the open heaven glorious prophetic manifestation harvest thanksgiving would hold on the last Sunday 26 October, 2025 at the church premises No, 5 Market road by the bridge, Ogbokone Community, Warri, Delta State.

He said the harvest will also marked the 3rd year anniversary and fund raising for the church land purchase for the cathedral building project towards salvation and winning souls for Christ.

This years Theme is tagged: 'IF IT IS NOT GOD' Psalm 124:1-8.

Time: 8:AM Prompt.

The statement further adds that a powerful God's servant, Bishop Dr. Apst. Efe would be the guest speaker to bless the children of God at the event 
The general public is hereby specially invited to come with their family, friends and loved ones to witness an amazing and unforgettable encounter with God on that day .

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Featured Article: Between English and the Mother Tongue_By William Z. Bozimo

A child in Lagos recites the alphabet in flawless English, yet struggles to string a sentence in Yoruba. In Kano, a teenager greets in Hausa but answers exam questions in Queen’s English. In Delta, the laughter of the Urhobos and Isokos is fading gradually, drowned by the insistence of “proper English.” We are raising a generation fluent in the tongue of our colonisers while we are still stammering in the languages of our ancestors.

This is not just a question of language; it is an inquiry of identity. To lose a language is to lose a worldview. Every proverb, every idiom, every rhythm in Igbo, Tiv, Ibibio or Izon carries the doctrine of a people, how they see the sky, how they measure respect and interpret destiny. When we replace those idioms with borrowed phrases, we are not just speaking differently; we are also thinking differently.

We also risk becoming strangers to ourselves. The English language, no doubt, has given us bridges across tribes, borders, and oceans. It is the passport that makes our literature global, from Achebe to Adichie. But the danger of the bridge lies in its potential to replace the village square. If all our local dialects are dismissed and seen as being backward, and only what is foreign is praised as refined, then we are building our futures on borrowed soil.

The tragedy of our schools these days is that there is still punishment for speaking in one's mother tongue, a practice that lingers in recent times. A child fined for speaking Efik at break time learns shame, not fluency. A young boy scolded for slipping into Igala language in class learns silence, not pride. As we are constantly trying to “modernize” ourselves, we have turned our mother tongues into relics. However, all hope is not lost. 

Across the diaspora, Nigerian parents are now rediscovering the urgency of teaching their children their local dialect like Yoruba lullabies and Igbo greetings. Technology is opening new doors like the introduction of podcasts in Hausa, apps teaching Tiv, and social media skit makers reviving Pidgin as the people’s parliament. The mother tongue may be bruised, but it has not been silenced. The task before us is simple but urgent: let English remain our bridge, but let our “local dialect” remain our roots. For a tree without its roots cannot stand, and a nation without memory cannot endure. 

Between the English language and our mother tongue, we must learn balance; so that when our children speak to the world, they do not forget how to also speak to their ancestors.

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

SHOPPING BASKET IN UNIFORM-(The Hungry Goats of the Checkpoint)_By: Ebi Kedikumo

The men in uniform do not eat bullets.  
They eat money ,
soft, warm, fresh-from-your-pocket money.  
They stand by the roadside,  
like vultures waiting for a tired cow to fall.  

They say “bail is free,”  
and yes, it is free,
until your wallet decides otherwise.  
Freedom now has a price,
They will call it small settlement  
but small settlement is the mother of big settlement.  
Receipts are written in whispers.
Before your case is heard,
Your cash must speak first 
Even mosquitoes show you mercy at night,  
but these ones bite you in broad daylight.  

Checkpoints grow on our roads 
Like stubborn weeds after rain.
They do not grow to stop thieves,
but to harvest small notes from tired drivers 
You think they stand there to catch robbers?  
No -- except the robber is you,  
driving with innocent face.  

Police stations do not smell of justice,  
they smell of negotiation.  
Before your matter reaches the court,  
the money has already reached the pot.  
And oh, they cook it well ,
no receipts, just long throat and short conscience.  

Sometimes they smile,  
sometimes they frown,  
but the ending is the same   
your cash is the missing praise song in their daily devotion.  
Protection is sold here,  
by kilo, like smoked fish at Ogbe-Ijaw market.
What was built to protect,
now prowls like a hungry goat in the yam barn.

In my country,  
the uniform is not just cloth,  
it is a shopping basket.  
They shop in your pockets,  
they cart away your peace.  
And until the day the uniform stops eating like a hungry goat in a yam barn,  
the police will keep firing their favourite weapon ...
their stomachs. 
Until the day the uniform stops trading,
It will be a force,
not for the law,
but for the pocket.
EBIKABOWEI KEDIKUMO - writes from Ayakoromo Town, Delta State

INC 2026 ELECTION: A Clear and Compelling Choice: High Chief (Dr.) Nengi James, OON for INC President_By: Pereke Warefa

For the Ijaw National Congress (INC), the body that speaks for the Ijaw people, the 2026 presidential election is a chance to pick a leader with a proven record of service, national influence, and deep love for the Ijaw nation. High Chief (Dr) Se-Alabor Nengi James, OON, stands out as that clear and compelling choice.

His long history of dedication and his excellent credentials show he is ready to take on the top job. High Chief (Dr) Nengi James for I N C President  is not just a community figure; he is a national asset. The prestigious national award of Officer of the Order of the Niger (OON) is proof of his selfless service to Nigeria. This kind of honor is given to those whose actions go beyond their personal interests and truly serve the public good.

His work is seen not only in his own community, but in other communities as well. As the founder and Executive Director of the Nengi James Foundation and Talent Search and Advancement Initiative, he is not waiting for others to solve problems. He is actively working to help the Ijaw people by:

*Doing good deeds (Philanthropy): Giving back to the community. Lifting the Ijaw People through His Foundation.

* Finding and growing talent: Helping young Ijaw people find their skills and grow them.

* Teaching business skills: Showing people how to start and run their own businesses.

This hands-on work shows a strong commitment to the well-being and future of the Ijaw people.

The experience that makes High Chief (Dr) Nengi James  truly ready for the INC Presidency is his role as a National Director for the South-South region of the National Civil Society Council of Nigeria.
This is a big job. It means he has been a national leader who must:

* Bring groups together: Coordinate many different civil society organizations.

* Fight for rights: Speak up strongly for human rights.

* Watch the government: Keep an eye on government and private companies to ensure they are fair and transparent.

His time in this role shows his ability to lead at a national level. He knows how to work with

different people and groups to push for transparency, accountability, and good governance.

This experience is a perfect fit for the INC Presidency. The INC’s main work is to speak for the Ijaw people and talk with state and federal governments. Dr. Nengi James’s background in civil society has given him a deep understanding of politics and the best ways to bring about real, positive change.

High Chief (Dr) Nengi James’s qualifications are not just words on paper. They are a direct result of his strong dedication to the Ijaw people. From his national award to his foundation’s work and his leadership in civil society, his whole career points to a man who is fully prepared to serve.
His belief, “With your support and God we will make Ijaw Nation Greater,” is more than just a catchy phrase. It is a clear goal supported by a lifetime of dedication and a proven record of success.
For the sake of a stronger, more united, and more prosperous Ijaw nation, High Chief (Dr) Nengi James is the obvious and right choice for INC President come 2026.