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  • Ondo NANS Stakeholders Endorse Babtee For National President

    Ondo NANS Stakeholders Endorse Babtee For National President

    Stakeholders of the National Association of Nigerian Students in Ondo State have unanimously endorsed Comrade Akinteye Babatunde Afeez, popularly known as Babtee, for the position of National President of the association ahead of its forthcoming national convention.

    The endorsement was announced at a stakeholders’ meeting which had in attendance members of the Joint Campus Committee leadership, Student Union Government presidents and student leaders across tertiary institutions in the state.

    According to the stakeholders, the decision followed Babtee’s formal address at the meeting where he sought the blessings and support of his home state before officially declaring his intention to contest for the top office of the association.

    Speaking at the gathering, Babtee reportedly paid homage to leaders and emphasized that it was only proper to consult widely with his state chapter before embarking on the national assignment.

    After what was described as extensive consultations and a thorough assessment of his competence, experience, leadership capacity and commitment to the ideals of NANS, the stakeholders resolved to throw their weight behind his aspiration.

    They noted that Babtee’s years of active involvement in student unionism, advocacy for students’ welfare and principled leadership have earned him credibility and acceptance across the country.

    The forum maintained that his track record, humility and reconciliatory disposition place him in a strong position to unify the association at a critical time in its history.

    Chairman of the NANS Ondo Stakeholders Forum, Comrade Oluwarotimi Ajayi, popularly known as Osama, called on student leaders, senators and stakeholders nationwide to support Babtee’s ambition in the interest of unity and progress of the association.

    The forthcoming convention of NANS is expected to attract delegates from tertiary institutions across the country, with Babtee now formally backed by his home state chapter.

  • Tola Awosika Quits Partisan Politics, Rules Out 2027 Contest

    Tola Awosika Quits Partisan Politics, Rules Out 2027 Contest

    A grassroots political figure in Ondo State, Mr. Tola Awosika, has formally announced his withdrawal from partisan politics and declared that he will not participate in the 2027 general elections, marking a significant shift in his political trajectory.
    Awosika, who disclosed that he resigned his membership of the All Progressives Congress in December 2025, said the decision followed months of reflection, consultations, and personal reassessment about his future in public life.
    In a personally signed statement dated March 1, 2026, and titled “A New Focus And The Path Ahead,” Awosika said he was entering his 40th year with “mixed feelings of joy and soberness,” describing the moment as both celebratory and reflective.
    The Ondo-born politician, who has been active in grassroots mobilisation in the state over the past seven years, said his political journey was driven by what he described as “Project Nigeria”, a vision of a country that guarantees equal opportunities for citizens and secures the future of the next generation.
    According to him, his involvement in politics within the Sunshine State was motivated by a desire to contribute meaningfully to development at the ward, local, state, and national levels. He noted that over the years, he invested time and resources in community engagement and participated actively in political processes across various platforms.
    Awosika referenced the popular slogan associated with his political movement, “TA is coming,” which he described as a symbol of hope embraced by his supporters. He, however, indicated that his latest decision signals a transition rather than an abandonment of public service.
    “This is the season for me to consolidate on what I have achieved and plan to achieve. This is the season to watch, learn, avoid mistakes and most importantly, await the call from God,” he stated.
    He clarified that while he would continue to fulfil his civic obligations as a voter, he would neither seek nor support any partisan political position in the 2027 elections.
    Political observers say Awosika’s exit from active party politics may alter certain alignments within Ondo’s evolving political landscape, particularly among younger voters and grassroots supporters who had identified with his reformist rhetoric.
    In his message, Awosika urged aspirants and future candidates to remember that public office is a call to serve the people rather than an avenue for personal advancement. He also called on citizens to take responsibility in electing credible leaders.
    Awosika concluded his statement by wishing Ondo State and Nigeria well, reaffirming his enduring commitment to national development, albeit outside partisan political structures for now.
    The development adds to the growing list of political realignments ahead of the 2027 electoral cycle in Ondo State and across Nigeria.
  • Olawande Presents 2026 Youth Development Budget To National Assembly

    Olawande Presents 2026 Youth Development Budget To National Assembly

    The Honourable Minister of Federal Ministry of Youth Development, Comrade Ayodele Olawande, on Monday presented the Ministry’s 2026 budget proposal during a joint session of the National Assembly, outlining priority programmes targeted at empowering young people across Nigeria.
    In his presentation, the Minister detailed key expenditure areas focused on youth empowerment, job creation, skills acquisition, entrepreneurship support, and the full implementation of strategic initiatives designed to improve the socio-economic well-being of Nigerian youths.
    Olawande reaffirmed the Ministry’s commitment to transparency, accountability, and prudent management of public resources, while appealing to lawmakers for sustained legislative backing to enable the Ministry effectively deliver on its mandate.
    The session also featured extensive deliberations, with members of the Assembly seeking clarifications on implementation frameworks, performance benchmarks, and measurable outcomes expected from the proposed programmes in the 2026 fiscal year.
    The engagement, according to officials, formed part of the statutory budget defence process aimed at ensuring alignment between government policy objectives and legislative oversight responsibilities.

  • THE IRT ABUJA SAGA IN ONDO: The Travails Of The Oppressed, Their Tormentors And Their Timely Savior (The Concluding Part)

    THE IRT ABUJA SAGA IN ONDO: The Travails Of The Oppressed, Their Tormentors And Their Timely Savior (The Concluding Part)

    There is something almost theatrical about the recent Gestapo style extraction of two rural men from their ancestral homes in Ondo by operatives of the Intelligence Response Team from Abuja. One could be forgiven for assuming that a cartel of international arms dealers had finally been uncovered in the quiet agrarian communities of Ondo. Alas, the grand criminal conspiracy, when stripped of its costume and exaggerated lighting, turns out to be what it always was, a tired land dispute already before a court of competent jurisdiction.

    Yet, in a country where spectacle often substitutes for substance, two villagers were bundled into a Hummer bus and subjected to an exhausting twelve hour road journey to the Federal Capital Territory under the convenient labels of “threat to life” and “arson.” Labels, in our policing culture, sometimes function less as legal classifications and more as psychological weapons designed to break the spirit of suspects before the law even speaks.

    But Nigeria, thankfully, is still not entirely bereft of honourable men in uniform.

    We are relieved to report that the head of the IRT section of the force, Muhammad Sanusi Ahmed, a professor of law and by reputation a disciplined and uncompromising officer, did not receive the conduct of his subordinates with applause. On the contrary, he reportedly expressed displeasure over allegations of manhandling and torture and insisted that if such claims were proven, severe sanctions would follow. More remarkably, he also warned that if the complainants themselves were found to have lied, they too would face consequences.

    That is the language of institutional integrity. That is the temperament of a man who understands that policing is not private warfare outsourced to the highest bidder.

    And here, the narrative takes a turn that even the most cynical observer must acknowledge with relief.

    Upon finally being brought before the Professor, the two men, unwashed, exhausted, barefoot, and visibly shaken, were, for the first time since their ordeal began, treated like human beings. Not minding their condition, their stench, or their obvious poverty, he listened carefully and patiently, like a teacher confronting a troubled classroom rather than an executioner presiding over condemned men.

    They spoke cautiously. How could they not? Their tormentors were still within the same complex. The fear was real and intimidating. According to their account, upon arrival at Kabba, officers had allegedly withdrawn ₦300,000 from their bank accounts in two installments and issued chilling warnings: “You will rue if this leaks. We know your homes. We picked you from there. Be guided” They looked in our eyes for assurances, and we quickly agreed in unison, “yes sir, we echoed like school children” Those threats, they said, sank deep into their hearts. Yet when confronted before their superior, the same officers reportedly removed their sandals and swore brazenly that no such extortion occurred.

    The victims were stunned. How do men deny something traceable while their victims remain under their custody and mercy?

    Out of fear of further trouble, and knowing now the Professor’s reputed zero tolerance for fraud, they initially hesitated to mention the financial extortion at all.

    What is now clear, however, is that were it not for his intervention, the story might have ended very differently.

    However, what’s unknown to the complainants was that their armed gang on our ancestral land had reportedly been boasting to the farmers that the suspects shouldn’t be expected anytime soon as they were being prepared for arraignment on concocted charges before friendly magistrate courts in Abuja. According to accounts, arrangements had supposedly been sorted, including a 14 day detention order intended to justify an investigation into a matter already before a High Court of competent jurisdiction back home. In other words, detention first, justification later.

    That plan, however collapsed the moment the Professor stepped in.

    Far from endorsing the theatrics, he reportedly ordered their immediate release, instructed that they must not pay a single kobo to any officer under his command, and ensured that no further financial harassment occurred. Administrative delays linked to election activities in Abuja slowed their departure slightly, but the outcome had already changed. The dungeon door prepared for us had been shut before it could consume us.

    They eventually arrived back in their village at about 1:00 a.m. on Sunday, February 22, 2026.

    What awaited them was not silence, but communal eruption!

    More than a hundred villagers had gathered in the dead of night, waiting anxiously. The moment they appeared, relief erupted into celebration. Two fat goats were brought out and slaughtered instantly in gratitude for their safe return. In rural Nigeria, where wealth is measured less in currency than in community, such gestures speak louder than editorials.

    And herein lies the irony that must trouble any serious observer.

    For while the Professor represents the intellectual conscience of the system, the events leading up to his intervention expose how easily institutional machinery can be manipulated by determined private actors. There are troubling insinuations that complainants boasted of paying significant sums to ensure prolonged detention so that the suspects’ spirits would be broken. Whether street bravado or something more sinister, the mere possibility underscores the vulnerability of the poor when power, money, and influence converge.

    The truth, inconvenient as it may be, has been sitting quietly in plain sight from the beginning.

    This same complaint was first reported at a local police post directly opposite the disputed property. The officer in charge at the time reportedly inspected the alleged destruction and dismissed it as intimidation. Dissatisfied, the complainants escalated it through multiple police formations until the matter reached higher commands, where yet another inspection reportedly found no credible evidence. The dispute remained what it always was, civil litigation dressed in criminal clothing.

    Unable to secure validation locally, escalation by desperation followed.

    Thus emerged the dramatic invasion by distant operatives, transporting suspects across jurisdictions despite the presence of senior police formations within the region. Such actions inevitably raise uncomfortable questions about forum shopping, intimidation tactics, and whether distance itself is being weaponised against poor citizens who can barely feed themselves, and who are unfamiliar with metropolitan legal terrain to now begin to borrow money in pursuit of a case in a distant land of Abuja. We therefore appeal to the good conscience of the Professor that the case be effectively transferred to the AIG’s office, Zone 17, Akure, where their purported arson and threat to life allegation remains alive till this day.

    Meanwhile, the land at the centre of the controversy is no speculative bush parcel. It is an inheritance stretching back over two centuries, reinforced by multiple High Court judgments, including one dating back to 1970. Ironically, the complainants’ father had long ago sold the same land to the RCCG church, and the ownership dispute is currently before the High Court. In legal terms, the matter is sub judice. In practical terms, it should never have left the courtroom.

    But when a case is weak in law, it often grows loud in intimidation.

    The emerging pattern suggests an attempt to deploy police machinery as leverage in a civil dispute that the complainants likely know they cannot win judicially. Documentation issues, conflicting transactions, and historical judgments appear to weigh heavily against them. Thus, harassment becomes strategy, criminal allegations become instruments, and detention becomes negotiation.

    What must concern police leadership is not merely the fate of two villagers. It is the institutional precedent. When law enforcement becomes susceptible to manipulation by financially stronger actors in land conflicts, public confidence erodes, and the uniform risks being perceived not as a symbol of justice but as a rentable asset.

    The Professor at the helm may well represent the best aspirations of the system. But aspirations alone cannot shield the poor from oppression if operational discipline falters beneath him.

    Still, credit must be given where it is due.

    To the ebullient Professor, Muhammad Sanusi Ahmed, a gentleman officer who detected inconsistencies, rejected intimidation theatrics, and chose integrity over convenience, the rescued villagers now extend profound gratitude. His conduct aligned with earlier findings by multiple local police formations that had handled the matter before escalation distorted it.

    In an era when cynicism about institutions is fashionable, moments of incorruptibility deserve recognition.

    We shall continue to watch. And if the affluent insist that the poor must not live in dignity on their ancestral soil, the streets, history teaches us, have a way of responding when institutions hesitate.

  • OPINION: THE NEW GOVERNMENT EMPEROR OF ONDO

    OPINION: THE NEW GOVERNMENT EMPEROR OF ONDO

    Something is brewing in Ondo State that may yet puncture the fragile calm for which that corner of the federation is known. For months, whispers have travelled faster than official memos, and testimonies have piled up like unattended files in a dusty registry. We have watched, listened, and documented. Those who believe they have suffered under the weight of one man’s influence may tarry a little longer. The can of worms is swelling. It will not remain sealed forever.
    Curiously, our initial searchlight was pointed in the wrong direction. Like many observers, we assumed the rot, if any, must flow from the very top of the justice architecture. Yet emerging facts suggest something more ironic and more troubling. The Attorney General himself, by multiple credible accounts, appears to have neither the appetite nor the patience for the petty intrigues being conducted in his name. By reputation and record, he is a man who earned distinction long before public office called. Those who know his professional journey speak of diligence, discipline, and an almost old fashioned reverence for integrity. Indeed, he continues to receive commendations for what many consider sincere efforts at reform within the Ondo State Ministry of Justice.
    And therein lies the paradox.
    For while the principal may be pursuing institutional order, his second in command, his Permanent Secretary, allegedly conducts a parallel theatre of influence that would embarrass even the most creative fiction writer. Never in the institutional memory of that ministry has there been, according to insiders, such a smooth operator who appears to delight in desecrating a lofty public office by simultaneously courting complainants and the accused, squeezing both sides under the noble sounding pretext of “rendering assistance.” Vulnerability, in this ecosystem, reportedly becomes currency. Distress becomes an opportunity. Properties change hands in murky arrangements allegedly justified as necessary sacrifices to “appease the boss,” an explanation that investigations increasingly suggest may be nothing more than a convenient cocktail of lies.
    It reaches the height of absurdity when a public officer is allegedly pacified with several acres of land in a property whose ownership is itself contested, yet proxies are deployed and confidence maintained that the tracks are covered. Even more astonishing are claims circulating within official corridors that financial inducements running into millions of naira were collected to facilitate the issuance of yet another nolle prosequi in a matter where one had already been entered. Ironically, the supposed beneficiary at the helm reportedly refused to participate, thereby exposing the possibility that he may not even have authorised the earlier decision attributed to him. What began as a concealed transaction thus mutated into institutional embarrassment.
    The plot thickens further. Emerging accounts suggest that a respected human rights campaigner, allegedly unaware of the deeper factual matrix, may have been the individual initially persuaded to intervene, pressing certain influence buttons that triggered consequences now proving difficult to defend. Those familiar with the structure of prosecutorial authority understand that discretionary powers, when exercised without exhaustive scrutiny, can create unintended openings. Opportunists, like hawks circling prey, are quick to exploit such openings for personal enrichment.
    And then there are those who had counted their chickens before they hatched. These were the beneficiaries who, believing that the Permanent Secretary had the ear and blessing of his principal, happily collected huge sums of money and secured landed properties through proxies, convinced that subsequent nolles would follow like clockwork. Now, their mirth has curdled into fury, teeth gnashing, eyes narrowing, as the ultimate authority, perhaps through divine intervention, chooses to wash his hands of the entire charade and allow the law to take its ordinary, unflinching course.
    Naturally, this sudden shift unsettles the Permanent Secretary’s alleged masterplan. Reportedly, he has scrambled to recast himself as a brilliant strategist, claiming credit for reducing charges from capital offences to mere misdemeanours. But the supposed beneficiaries are not so easily fooled. They insist their day in court was never part of the bargain. What they paid for was a nolle, and a nolle, like in the first instance, is exactly what they expect in return. As at the time of writing, the fiat sought by counsel to the complainant is said to be gathering dust in the office of the second in command, who appears unwilling to act on it because doing so would further expose the injustice. Our man, whose appointment confirmation only happened two or three weeks ago, now finds himself bewildered, restless, and reportedly losing sleep over the unraveling of his schemes.
    Meanwhile, the embattled second in command, described by critics as a man who would collect blood money from the devil’s treasury if opportunity beckoned, is reportedly under pressure from multiple quarters. Alleged associates and unsavoury actors who believe promises were made are said to be demanding delivery, creating a climate of anxiety that now follows him like a shadow. Confirmation of his appointment may have produced celebration, but what keeps him awake now, observers say, is the approaching horizon of retirement. A future outside the protective walls of the office can be frightening for a man whose professional survival allegedly depends more on influence than competence. Hence the frantic accumulation, the indiscriminate appetite, the absence of decorum even in the act of taking gratification.
    Within the ministry itself, resentment reportedly simmers. Junior officers, who once benefited from minor legitimate tokens of appreciation customary in legal practice, now complain privately that even those crumbs are intercepted. Yet fear seals lips. No one wants to be marked. No one wants to be transferred to administrative Siberia. So they wait, whispering prayers for the calendar to advance toward his exit.
    The atmosphere of fear is perhaps best illustrated by the reaction of senior colleagues. When the respected Director of Public Prosecutions, Olubodun, was approached for comment, he reportedly declined, visibly uncomfortable. Among junior staff, merely mentioning the Permanent Secretary’s name allegedly triggers nervous silence, hurried phone disconnections, and the reflex caution one reserves for dangerous power.
    And so Ondo finds itself confronting a familiar Nigerian paradox. A system may possess honorable leadership at the top, yet still be undermined by corrosive actors operating just beneath the surface. Empires do not always rise through official proclamation. Sometimes they emerge quietly, built on fear, favours, and the manipulation of institutional gaps.
    But every emperor, history teaches, eventually meets the daylight.
    And daylight, in this case, is coming.
  • OPINION: THE NEW GOVERNMENT EMPEROR OF ONDO

    OPINION: THE NEW GOVERNMENT EMPEROR OF ONDO

    Something is brewing in Ondo State that may yet puncture the fragile calm for which that corner of the federation is known. For months, whispers have travelled faster than official memos, and testimonies have piled up like unattended files in a dusty registry. We have watched, listened, and documented. Those who believe they have suffered under the weight of one man’s influence may tarry a little longer. The can of worms is swelling. It will not remain sealed forever.
    Curiously, our initial searchlight was pointed in the wrong direction. Like many observers, we assumed the rot, if any, must flow from the very top of the justice architecture. Yet emerging facts suggest something more ironic and more troubling. The Attorney General himself, by multiple credible accounts, appears to have neither the appetite nor the patience for the petty intrigues being conducted in his name. By reputation and record, he is a man who earned distinction long before public office called. Those who know his professional journey speak of diligence, discipline, and an almost old fashioned reverence for integrity. Indeed, he continues to receive commendations for what many consider sincere efforts at reform within the Ondo State Ministry of Justice.
    And therein lies the paradox.
    For while the principal may be pursuing institutional order, his second in command, his Permanent Secretary, allegedly conducts a parallel theatre of influence that would embarrass even the most creative fiction writer. Never in the institutional memory of that ministry has there been, according to insiders, such a smooth operator who appears to delight in desecrating a lofty public office by simultaneously courting complainants and the accused, squeezing both sides under the noble sounding pretext of “rendering assistance.” Vulnerability, in this ecosystem, reportedly becomes currency. Distress becomes an opportunity. Properties change hands in murky arrangements allegedly justified as necessary sacrifices to “appease the boss,” an explanation that investigations increasingly suggest may be nothing more than a convenient cocktail of lies.
    It reaches the height of absurdity when a public officer is allegedly pacified with several acres of land in a property whose ownership is itself contested, yet proxies are deployed and confidence maintained that the tracks are covered. Even more astonishing are claims circulating within official corridors that financial inducements running into millions of naira were collected to facilitate the issuance of yet another nolle prosequi in a matter where one had already been entered. Ironically, the supposed beneficiary at the helm reportedly refused to participate, thereby exposing the possibility that he may not even have authorised the earlier decision attributed to him. What began as a concealed transaction thus mutated into institutional embarrassment.
    The plot thickens further. Emerging accounts suggest that a respected human rights campaigner, allegedly unaware of the deeper factual matrix, may have been the individual initially persuaded to intervene, pressing certain influence buttons that triggered consequences now proving difficult to defend. Those familiar with the structure of prosecutorial authority understand that discretionary powers, when exercised without exhaustive scrutiny, can create unintended openings. Opportunists, like hawks circling prey, are quick to exploit such openings for personal enrichment.
    And then there are those who had counted their chickens before they hatched. These were the beneficiaries who, believing that the Permanent Secretary had the ear and blessing of his principal, happily collected huge sums of money and secured landed properties through proxies, convinced that subsequent nolles would follow like clockwork. Now, their mirth has curdled into fury, teeth gnashing, eyes narrowing, as the ultimate authority, perhaps through divine intervention, chooses to wash his hands of the entire charade and allow the law to take its ordinary, unflinching course.
    Naturally, this sudden shift unsettles the Permanent Secretary’s alleged masterplan. Reportedly, he has scrambled to recast himself as a brilliant strategist, claiming credit for reducing charges from capital offences to mere misdemeanours. But the supposed beneficiaries are not so easily fooled. They insist their day in court was never part of the bargain. What they paid for was a nolle, and a nolle, like in the first instance, is exactly what they expect in return. As at the time of writing, the fiat sought by counsel to the complainant is said to be gathering dust in the office of the second in command, who appears unwilling to act on it because doing so would further expose the injustice. Our man, whose appointment confirmation only happened two or three weeks ago, now finds himself bewildered, restless, and reportedly losing sleep over the unraveling of his schemes.
    Meanwhile, the embattled second in command, described by critics as a man who would collect blood money from the devil’s treasury if opportunity beckoned, is reportedly under pressure from multiple quarters. Alleged associates and unsavoury actors who believe promises were made are said to be demanding delivery, creating a climate of anxiety that now follows him like a shadow. Confirmation of his appointment may have produced celebration, but what keeps him awake now, observers say, is the approaching horizon of retirement. A future outside the protective walls of the office can be frightening for a man whose professional survival allegedly depends more on influence than competence. Hence the frantic accumulation, the indiscriminate appetite, the absence of decorum even in the act of taking gratification.
    Within the ministry itself, resentment reportedly simmers. Junior officers, who once benefited from minor legitimate tokens of appreciation customary in legal practice, now complain privately that even those crumbs are intercepted. Yet fear seals lips. No one wants to be marked. No one wants to be transferred to administrative Siberia. So they wait, whispering prayers for the calendar to advance toward his exit.
    The atmosphere of fear is perhaps best illustrated by the reaction of senior colleagues. When the respected Director of Public Prosecutions, Olubodun, was approached for comment, he reportedly declined, visibly uncomfortable. Among junior staff, merely mentioning the Permanent Secretary’s name allegedly triggers nervous silence, hurried phone disconnections, and the reflex caution one reserves for dangerous power.
    And so Ondo finds itself confronting a familiar Nigerian paradox. A system may possess honorable leadership at the top, yet still be undermined by corrosive actors operating just beneath the surface. Empires do not always rise through official proclamation. Sometimes they emerge quietly, built on fear, favours, and the manipulation of institutional gaps.
    But every emperor, history teaches, eventually meets the daylight.
    And daylight, in this case, is coming.
  • Aiyedatiwa Allocates ₦15 Each For Citizen Healthcare, Says PDP

    Aiyedatiwa Allocates ₦15 Each For Citizen Healthcare, Says PDP

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ondo State has criticised the 2026 Appropriation Law of the state, accusing the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) administration of prioritising the comfort of political office holders over the welfare of citizens.
    In a statement issued in Akure on Tuesday by the party’s Director of Media and Public Communications, Wándé T. Àjàyí, the PDP described the budget as elitist and insensitive, citing what it called disturbing allocations to luxury vehicles amid poor funding for healthcare and education.
    According to the party, the approved 2026 budget earmarked a total of ₦23.3 billion for government vehicles and transport-related items, including ₦2.1 billion for the purchase of 27 Toyota Fortuner SUVs for 26 members of the Ondo State House of Assembly and one clerk.
    The PDP expressed concern that the same budget allocated just ₦69 million for drugs and medical supplies for a population of over 5.3 million people in the state.
    The party noted that the allocation translates to less than ₦15 per citizen for medicines for the entire year, describing it as alarming at a time when public hospitals across the state are struggling with shortages of essential drugs.
    It further pointed out that the education sector received ₦515 million for educational materials and equipment, an amount it said was far below what was budgeted for lawmakers’ vehicles alone.
    “The figures are clear and contained in the approved budget. This is not a budgeting oversight but a reflection of misplaced priorities,” the PDP said.
    The opposition party argued that a government that allocates billions of naira to luxury SUVs while underfunding healthcare and education has failed in its basic responsibility to the people.
    The PDP called on the Ondo State Government to urgently review the budget and redirect funds to critical sectors, particularly healthcare and education, to address the pressing needs of citizens.
    It reaffirmed its commitment to holding the government accountable and advocating for policies that place the welfare of the people of Ondo State above the comfort of political elites.
  • Landowner Branded Land Grabber: How State Power Is Being Weaponised To Settle Scores In Ondo

    Landowner Branded Land Grabber: How State Power Is Being Weaponised To Settle Scores In Ondo

    In Ondo today, truth is not merely contested; it is deliberately inverted. A lawful landowner can wake up to discover that the full machinery of the state has been deployed to rebrand him a criminal, not because he broke the law, but because he refused to surrender his inheritance to the powerful. That is the grim subtext of what has happened to Ojo Ajisafe.
    After an unsuccessful attempt to forcefully wrest his family’s land from him, and following an even more sinister bid to snuff the life out of this peasant bricklayer for the simple offence of standing on lawful inheritance coveted by a coalition of interests that includes powerful politicians and their proxies, a new strategy was activated. When violence failed, character assassination was deployed.
    Ojo Ajisafe was first labelled a master forger. His crime, according to his adversaries, was that the several subsisting court judgements in his favour were allegedly fake. Never mind that these judgements were issued by competent courts over time, after due process. A petition was hurriedly assembled, adorned with the signatures of over two dozen politicians, and propelled by influence rather than evidence. The outcome was predictable.
    In the early hours of one morning, Ojo’s home was encircled by no fewer than eighteen heavily armed policemen. He was seized, manacled like a common criminal, and hauled away in a display designed not to investigate crime, but to humiliate and intimidate. At the Force Headquarters in Akure, he was chained to the ground of his cell, a treatment that belonged more to a military dictatorship than a constitutional democracy. This spectacle was enabled, facilitated, and legitimised by the then Commissioner of Police, Mr Wilfred Afolabi, whose complicity in that shameful episode remains an indelible stain.
    For one week, Ojo languished in detention. His ordeal unfolded under the watch of local government officials and self-styled lawmakers who ought to have defended the weak but chose instead to supervise injustice. Silence, in that moment, was not neutrality; it was endorsement.
    Then something unexpected happened.
    A new Commissioner of Police, Wale Lawal, arrived. A hard-nosed professional with a reputation for blunt honesty, he brought with him a disposition unfamiliar to Ondo’s power brokers: an allergy to elite pressure. He studied the case file, asked the inconvenient questions, and refused to be placated. Almost immediately, Ojo was released. More damaging still to the architects of the frame-up, the so-called “fake judgements” were transmitted back to the courts that issued them. The response was devastating. Every single judgement was confirmed authentic. The forgery narrative collapsed under the weight of facts.
    One would expect that to end the matter. It did not.
    On 14 February 2025, Ojo Ajisafe was again attacked, this time in a near-fatal assault allegedly carried out by the same adversarial forces bent on dispossessing him of his family’s inheritance. When brute force failed and forgery allegations imploded, desperation took centre stage.
    Shamelessly, and with a desperation that defies decency, Ojo Ajisafe’s adversaries began to peddle yet another grotesque falsehood. They swore that the grievous injuries sustained by this voiceless peasant bricklayer were not the result of a violent attack, but merely animal blood, tortoise blood or monkey blood, used to smear his head. It was the same tired script they had deployed earlier when they claimed that his subsisting court judgements were forgeries, a lie that only collapsed when a senior police officer with conscience went the extra mile to uncover the truth.
    Ojo spent three agonising days at the Trauma Centre of the Ondo State Specialist Hospital. The injuries to his head, caused by a brutal machete attack, were severe and life threatening. Yet there was no remorse, no hesitation, no retreat by those who sought his end. Their singular interest remained unchanged, his family’s inheritance. To them, his continued existence was an inconvenience. He was meant to die. No more, no less.
    Though his wounds were stabilised, his condition deteriorated in the early hours of the morning. At about 3 am, he was hurriedly transferred in a government ambulance to Union Diagnostic Centre in Akure when his situation became critical. Even then, those invested in his destruction reportedly prayed for the worst, eager for death to rescue their collapsing narrative. Had he died, they were prepared to swear without blinking that it was a snake bite, a cult attack, or the handiwork of unknown herdsmen, as though they had stood at the scene themselves.
    But Ojo survived. And in surviving, he disrupted yet another carefully rehearsed lie. Against calculation, against influence, and against expectation, he lived. And that survival, more than any allegation, is what has unsettled the powerful.
    For Ojo Ajisafe had a faithful God.
    Today, the matter sits with the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, now under the shadowy influence of a pathetically compromised officer who effectively directs the affairs of the ministry. His stewardship has just been confirmed; his retirement looms. Yet, rather than wind down quietly, he appears determined to leave behind a legacy of infamy. Verifiable documents exist. Trails are intact. And when the reckoning comes, his entire career may collapse under the weight of his own excesses.
    But the most grotesque twist came when all previous schemes failed.
    An arm of government, acting with the active connivance of a thoroughly discredited former Honourable desperately seeking relevance, conspired with his co-travellers to rebrand Ojo Ajisafe a “land grabber.” The irony would be amusing if it were not cruel. A poor bricklayer, armed with multiple court judgements affirming his family’s ownership, suddenly recast as a criminal syndicate leader, simply because he refused to be bullied off his land.
    This was not law enforcement. It was intimidation. It was an attempt to exhaust, shame, and silence a man whose only crime is refusing to surrender what the law has repeatedly affirmed is his.
    What we are witnessing is not a dispute over land. It is a test of whether justice in Ondo State still recognises the poor as human beings. When the powerful fail at negotiation, they deploy force. When force fails, they deploy lies. When lies collapse, they deploy the state itself.
    And when the state becomes the weapon, silence becomes complicity.
    This case unfortunately, is not dying anytime soon because holistic private investigation is at this time being processed and shall be unleashed at the fullness of time for the world to decipher.
  • Ondo @ 50: Tinubu Pledges Continued Support For Ondo State, Salutes Gov. Aiyedatiwa, People Of Ondo

    Ondo @ 50: Tinubu Pledges Continued Support For Ondo State, Salutes Gov. Aiyedatiwa, People Of Ondo

    …Tunji-Ojo draws massive cheers in Akure
    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has described Ondo State as a beacon of resilience, unity, and democratic discipline, saying the State’s first fifty years reflect the strength, industry, and civic consciousness of its people.
    The President stated this at the Ondo State Sports Complex, Akure, during the grand ceremony to mark the 50th Anniversary of the creation of Ondo State, in a goodwill message delivered on his behalf by the Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo.
    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu congratulated Governor Lucky Orimisan Aiyedatiwa and the people of Ondo State on the historic milestone, commending their resilience, unity, and commitment to democratic ideals. He expressed deep appreciation for the support of the people of the state and praised their remarkable participation and discipline during the last general elections, noting that such commitment reaffirmed their belief in accountable leadership and national progress.
    According to the President, Ondo State has, since its creation, distinguished itself in education, public service, culture, and economic contribution to Nigeria, producing leaders, professionals, and citizens who have played critical roles in shaping the nation’s growth and stability.
    He said the golden jubilee was not only a celebration of the past but a moment to project a bold vision for the future, stressing that Ondo State is richly endowed with fertile land, a long coastline, mineral resources, and a vibrant youth population capable of driving prosperity through agriculture, education, technology, tourism, and the blue economy.
    President Tinubu assured the people that the Federal Government, under the Renewed Hope Agenda, remains committed to supporting Ondo State in harnessing these opportunities, improving infrastructure, strengthening security, and empowering communities to ensure inclusive growth and equitable development.
    He also sent a special message to the youth of the State, describing them as architects of the next fifty years, and urged them to embrace creativity, discipline, innovation, and service as tools for sustaining development and strengthening Nigeria’s democracy.
    He further noted that Ondo State’s rich cultural heritage, traditions, and diversity remain a source of strength, peace, and unity, urging citizens to continue to uphold tolerance and mutual respect as pillars of a thriving society.
    In an atmosphere that signalled a renewed political momentum in Ondo State, particularly as the state looks ahead to future electoral engagements, the Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, drew loud cheers from the crowd as the ceremony progressed, delivering the President’s message with clarity and passion. In a show of massive acceptability and admiration, party faithful and residents openly celebrated the Minister, chanting his name and commending his visible commitment to party development in the state, sustained grassroots mobilisation, and energetic promotion of the achievements of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration.
    President Tinubu concluded by calling on all stakeholders to work together to make Ondo State a model of national progress, a centre of innovation and education, a hub of agricultural and technological excellence, and a place where every citizen can achieve their full potential, assuring that the Federal Government will continue to stand with the people of Ondo State as partners in progress.
  • Ilutitun Youths Celebrate Ebenezer Akinsanmiro’s AFCON Bronze Medal Achievement

    Ilutitun Youths Celebrate Ebenezer Akinsanmiro’s AFCON Bronze Medal Achievement

    Ilutitun youths have hailed their son, Ebenezer Akinsanmiro, for his contribution to Nigeria’s bronze medal finish at the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) in Morocco.
    Akinsanmiro, born 25 November 2004 in Lagos, is a Nigerian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Italian Serie A club Pisa, on loan from Inter Milan. He began his career at the Beyond Limits Academy and Remo Stars in Nigeria before moving to Europe, where he signed for Inter Milan in January 2023 and later spent a season on loan at Sampdoria. For the 2025–26 season, he joined Pisa on loan with an option to buy and a buy-back clause for Inter.
    The midfielder’s strong performances in Italy, including regular Serie A appearances and impactful displays, earned him a place in Nigeria’s final 28-man squad for the AFCON tournament.
    At AFCON 2025, the Super Eagles progressed to the semi-finals before missing out on the final. They went on to secure the bronze medal, defeating Egypt 4–2 on penalties after a 0–0 draw in the third-place play-off in Casablanca, extending Nigeria’s unbeaten record in bronze-medal matches at the competition.
    In a statement issued by the Ilutitun Youth Development Forum (IYDF) and signed by its President, Dip. Bankole Ogunbamerun, the youths described Akinsanmiro’s achievement as a source of great pride that has brought honour to Ilutitun Osooro, Ondo State, and the nation.
    The Forum said his rise from local academy football to the continental stage reflects resilience, discipline, and exceptional talent, and serves as inspiration to young athletes in the community.
    Plans are underway to accord Akinsanmiro a hero’s welcome on his return to Ilutitun.