Christians not to be subjected to Sharia law – Sultan of Sokoto

The Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Muhammadu Sa’ad Abubakar III, says it is completely wrong for Christians to be taken to Sharia courts or forced to follow Sharia rules.

He said this on Wednesday during the opening of the 2025 meeting of the Nigeria Inter-Religious Council (NIREC) in Abuja.

The theme of the meeting was “Collaboration of Inter-Religious Council with Government to Promote Peace in Nigeria.”

The Sultan explained that Sharia is strictly for Muslims, and no Christian should be made to dress, act, or pray like Muslims.

He stressed that Nigeria is a multi-religious country, not a secular one, and that the government supports both Islam and Christianity without adopting either as a state religion.

He also rejected recent calls to scrap Sharia law, saying Nigeria allows all religions to practice freely without interference.

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abbas Tajudeen, also spoke at the event. He called for stronger cooperation between NIREC and the Federal Government to help build peace and fight insecurity.

Tajudeen warned that extremist groups are trying to use religion to divide the country, and praised NIREC for promoting unity over the years.

The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator George Akume, said Nigeria is facing serious challenges, including insecurity, political tension, and declining trust among citizens. He added that the country is also being misrepresented internationally because of misinformation about its security issues.

Akume assured Nigerians that the Federal Government will continue to protect lives and property.

He urged religious and traditional leaders to work together to encourage peace.

The President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Archbishop Daniel Okoh, said Nigeria is at a dangerous point in its history because insecurity threatens national unity.

He noted that religious institutions are highly trusted and can play a major role in building peace.

He called for closer partnership between the government and religious groups to encourage dialogue, unite communities, and promote tolerance.

The Executive Secretary of NIREC, Rev. Fr. Cornelius Omonokhua, also spoke.

He said religious leaders must work more closely with the government to defeat terrorism and banditry.

According to him, every human life matters, and all leaders must join hands to protect the people.

He prayed for wisdom for Nigerian leaders and asked for a change of heart for criminals, hoping they will turn into law-abiding citizens.

He also prayed for Nigerians to adopt positive values.

NIS announces temporary disruptions on passport platform

E-Passports

The Nigeria Immigration Service has announced that its Passport Digital Platform will undergo routine system maintenance, resulting in temporary service disruptions for users.

NIS said the maintenance window will run from 12:00 a.m. on 12 December to 6:00 a.m. on 14 December 2025 (GMT).

This was contained in a public notice shared on the service’s X handle on Friday and signed by its Public Relations Officer, ACI AS Akinlabi.

According to the statement, the exercise is aimed at enhancing system performance and improving overall user experience.

“The Nigeria Immigration Service wishes to inform the general public that it is carrying out routine maintenance on its Passport Digital Platform to enhance system performance and overall user experience.

“During this period, users will experience temporary service interruptions, slow response times, or limited access to selected NIS Passport Services,” the notice read.

The service appealed for public patience, noting that the exercise is essential to maintaining a secure and efficient digital passport ecosystem.

“Our technical teams are working round the clock to ensure full service restoration within the stated timeframe,” it added.

NIS also urged users who require assistance during the maintenance period to contact its support team via email at support@immigration.gov.ng or through its official social media handles.

In a related development, NIS announced on Tuesday the activation of temporary complaint-response channels on social media following the takedown of its support accounts.

The service said the new channels were created to ensure uninterrupted engagement with applicants experiencing difficulties with passport and visa processes.

According to the notice, affected applicants can now channel their complaints through the temporary X handles @InquireAtNaija, @nigimmigration, and @InquireAtNaija_, as well as via Instagram

Reps give NNPC Pension Fund three months to clear retirees’ arrears

House of RepresentativesThe House of Representatives on Thursday directed the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Pension Fund Limited to begin payment of all outstanding pensions and arrears owed to its retirees within a three-month timeframe.

The House also mandated its Committee on Pensions to investigate the operational activities of the NNPC Pension Fund Limited, comb through its financial records, investment portfolios, and asset-management practices, and recommend sanctions where infractions are established.

The resolution followed the adoption of amendments to a motion sponsored by Muhammad Shehu, a member representing Fagge Federal Constituency of Kano State.

Appealing to his colleagues to support the motion, Shehu lamented the frustrations faced by retirees and contributors under the scheme.

He condemned what he described as “inappropriate operations, injustice, financial mismanagement, non-payment of entitlements and gross negligence” by the Fund’s management.

The NNPC Pension Fund Limited originated as a Trust Fund in 1983 to manage the pension assets of the NNPC and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission.

It was reconstituted as the Incorporated Trustees of the NNPC Pension Fund in 1986, and later transformed into NNPC Pension Fund Limited following the enactment of the Pension Reform Act 2014.

Shehu reminded lawmakers that, “The objectives of the Pension Reform Act, 2014, are to establish a uniform set of rules, regulations, and standards for the administration and payment of retirement benefits across the Public Service of the Federation.

“The Retirement Savings Accounts remain the only financial lifeline available to retirees upon retirement.”

Despite this, he said, “Most NNPC retirees are unable to access retirement funds, despite fulfilling all statutory requirements under the Contributory Pension Scheme, causing widespread hardship, inequality, and disillusionment.”

The lawmaker further accused the Pension Fund’s management of routinely flouting judicial directives.

He added, “The management of NNPC Pension Fund Limited has consistently failed to comply with court orders directing payment of harmonised pensions to retirees, leaving the aged retirees to staged protests.”

He noted that the Fund has violated Section 50(1)(a) of the PRA 2014 and Clause (b) of the approved conditions, which states that “The scheme must be fully funded at all times and that any shortfall must be made up within 90 days.”

The lawmaker added that years of “inappropriate financial management, lack of transparency, and disregard for regulatory standards” have weakened trust in the pension system.

He lamented, “Many of the retirees, after decades of dedicated service to the nation, are presently battling health and financial difficulties due to the inaction and negligence of those entrusted with their welfare.

“The current framework of the NNPC Pension Fund Limited is inconsistent with international best practices, and there is an urgent need for the Federal Government to adopt an international standard pension fund structure and framework for sustainable investment, transparency, and accountability in pension management.”

NAFDAC destroys N5bn fake, expired products in Nasarawa

Prof-Mojisola-AdeyeyeThe National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control, on Thursday, destroyed unwholesome and substandard products worth over N5bn in Nasarawa State.

Our correspondent gathered that the unwholesome and substandard products, which were seized from Nasarawa, Benue, Kogi, Niger, and Plateau states of the North-Central region, were destroyed at the Angwan Rere dumpsite in Lafia, Nasarawa State.

Speaking at the event, the Director-General of NAFDAC, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, stated that the fake products were confiscated by the agency’s personnel during outine monitoring exercises.

The DG, who was represented at the event by the North-Central Zonal Director of the agency, Kenneth Azikiwe, said the exercise was aimed at preventing such dangerous products from re-entering into the markets and causing harm.

She listed some of the seized products as fake drugs, falsified medical devices, unsafe cosmetics, fake detergents and expired chemicals.

“Some of these products were intentionally hoarded, concealed, deliberately revalidated after their expiration date, maliciously positioned and displayed for sale by some unscrupulous merchants of death for unsuspecting Nigerians.

“Also up for destruction today are damaged and expired products voluntarily handed over to us by some well-meaning and God-fearing businessmen and women.”

The DG gave the assurance that NAFDAC would continue to ensure that only the right quality products are available for sale and consumption in the country.

She appealed to members of the public to provide the agency with useful information on the activities of those either selling fake products or producing substandard products that constitute threats to human life.

In his goodwill message on behalf of the state government, the Nasarawa State Commissioner for Security and Safety Matters, Usman Baba, commended NAFDAC for sanitising the state and ensuring that only genuine products are sold for human consumption.

Oil output rose by 35,000bpd in November – Report

OPECNigeria recorded one of the strongest month-on-month production gains among Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries members in November 2025, pumping 1.436 million barrels per day, up from 1.401 mbpd in October, according to the December 2025 OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report.

The figures, drawn from direct communication between member countries and the organisation, show that Nigeria added 35,000 bpd in November, its most significant rise in recent months.

However, this is still below the country’s allotted quota of 1.5 mbpd, even as the country continues efforts to restore output toward the target.  The increase underscores gradual improvements in upstream security and project optimisation across major producing terminals.

This will be the fourth consecutive month Nigeria has failed to meet its assigned quota, the last time being in July 2025.

Oil production, which fell sharply in August and September due to maintenance downtime and industrial action, appreciated slightly again in October and November, showing the struggle to return to meeting the OPEC quota once again.

The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Heineken Lokpobiri, said recently that Nigeria would demand a higher oil production quota. Lokpobiri said the country’s current quota, pegged at about 1.5 mbpd, no longer reflects its true production capacity.

According to him, Nigeria would make a strong case for an upward review to at least two million barrels per day. Lokpobiri’s comment came at a time when the country’s crude output dropped from over 1.5 mbpd in July to 1.39 mbpd in September.

It was observed from the report that despite Nigeria’s growth, overall OPEC crude production was largely flat, rising by just 39,000 bpd to an estimated 25.17 mbpd in November.

Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest producer, recorded the biggest absolute increase, adding 48,000 bpd to reach 10.05 million bpd. The kingdom continues to carry the heaviest share of the group’s voluntary output adjustments.

Libya’s production also ticked up, rising by 14,000 bpd to 1.365 mbpd, maintaining its recovery trajectory despite lingering internal instability. Kuwait and the UAE reported mild increases of 10,000 bpd and 8,000 bpd, respectively.

Venezuela sustained its slow output recovery, adding 10,000 bpd to reach 1.142 million bpd, supported by incremental operational improvements.

Iraq posted the most notable drop, cutting 40,000 bpd to 4.1 mbpd amid renewed pressure from OPEC to improve compliance with agreed output levels. Congo recorded a smaller decline of 8,000 bpd, producing 269,000 bpd. Iran, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea did not provide direct production figures.

Reps move to regulate CBN operations

CBN-VUILDING-700×375The House of Representatives on Thursday took initial legislative steps to strengthen transparency and accountability in the operations of the Central Bank of Nigeria, following the second reading of a bill seeking comprehensive amendments to the Central Bank of Nigeria Act, 1991.

The proposed legislation, co-sponsored by the House Leader, Prof Julius Ihonvbere, and Lagos lawmaker, Jesse Onakalausi, received unanimous support during plenary.

Titled “A Bill for an Act to Amend the Central Bank of Nigeria Act, 1991, to allow for proper day-to-day operations, professional oversight and enhance checks and balances, and for other matters connected thereto, 2025,” the bill responds to mounting concerns about gaps in governance and oversight at the apex bank—issues that gained national prominence following recent controversies surrounding monetary policy decisions, foreign exchange management, and the 2022 currency redesign.

Nigeria’s central banking framework has long been criticised for its weak corporate governance structure, particularly the concentration of operational and oversight powers in the office of the CBN Governor.

This fusion, analysts argue, contributed to years of opacity in policy formulation, excessive discretion in foreign exchange administration, and insufficient checks on fiscal financing through Ways and Means advances. These concerns set the backdrop for the latest legislative push.

Explaining the rationale behind the bill, Onakalausi said it arose from an urgent need to reinforce governance, autonomy, transparency, and accountability within the apex bank, “In light of recent national and global economic realities.”

Addressing lawmakers on the general principles of the proposed amendments, he emphasised the overarching responsibility of the central bank, noting that, “The CBN plays a central role in stabilising the financial system, ensuring monetary credibility, safeguarding price stability, and promoting public confidence in the Nigerian economy.”

However, he observed that recent developments have exposed deep-seated weaknesses. According to him, “Developments in recent years – ranging from governance concerns, foreign exchange distortions, monetary policy inconsistency, weak oversight mechanisms, to the challenges witnessed around currency redesign and policy communication – have exposed structural gaps in the principal Act.”

A key objective of the bill, Onakalausi said, is restoring sound corporate governance. He argued that in most jurisdictions, the Governor manages day-to-day operations while the Board provides oversight—an arrangement that ensures institutional balance.

While stressing that “Both roles are meant to be separate to avoid conflict of interest,” he noted that “The current CBN Act merges the positions of Governor and Board Chairman, creating an avoidable concentration of power. This bill separates these roles to ensure professional oversight without interference in day-to-day operations.”

Onakalausi added that the bill seeks to strengthen monetary policy independence and bring Nigeria’s regulatory architecture in line with global standards. “This bill restructures the MPC to improve expertise, independence, and transparency, aligning Nigeria with best practices seen in economies such as the United Kingdom, South Africa, the European Union, and Brazil.”

He also highlighted concerns over the historic misuse of Ways and Means financing. “It prevents fiscal abuse as Section 38 (Ways and Means Advances) has historically been one of the most abused provisions under the CBN Act.

“This bill introduces a clear limit – 10% of the previous year’s actual revenue – to prevent inflationary financing of government deficits and ensure fiscal responsibility,” he said.

Additional provisions of the bill focus on safeguarding the naira and improving transparency in foreign exchange management.  It also introduces “A 90-day notice, impact assessments, mandatory National Assembly briefing before major monetary actions like redesign or demonetisation,” ensuring that sudden policy shocks are avoided.

While acknowledging the need for central bank autonomy, Onakalausi maintained that such independence must be accompanied by strong oversight mechanisms.

The bill proposes new reporting standards that will require the apex bank to submit its annual audited accounts within two months, provide quarterly reports on monetary policy decisions, and maintain a publicly accessible website containing all its publications.

Other key amendments include revising Section 6 to read: “A professional Chairman separate from the Governor, experienced in economics, banking, finance, or public financial institutions.” Section 8 is also amended to state: “Governor and Deputy Governors to serve a single six-year term.”

To promote continuity and reduce political interference, the draft legislation provides that “Two Deputy Governors must be drawn from internal Directors for institutional continuity.”

The reconstituted Monetary Policy Committee will consist of the Governor, four Deputy Governors, two board members, and four external experts who, according to the bill, “Must be independent and cannot hold public office.”

If passed, the bill would mark one of the most far-reaching reforms of the CBN Act since its enactment, with implications for governance, monetary policy, and the broader financial system.

Nigeria’s exports outpace imports as trade surplus hits N6.69tn

NBSNigeria recorded a trade surplus of N6.69tn in the third quarter of 2025, at a 27.29 per cent growth rate, continuing a trend of trade surpluses. Stakeholders attribute the consistent positive performance to the economic reforms in the foreign exchange market.

Latest data from the National Bureau of Statistics on foreign trade in goods showed that total exports in Q3 2025 stood at N22.81tn, while imports amounted to N16.12tn, resulting in a surplus of N6.69tn.

The figure represents a 27.29 per cent year-on-year rise, compared to the N5.26tn surplus recorded in Q3 2024. However, it reflects a 10.36 per cent decline from the N7.46tn surplus posted in Q2 2025.

Economists and private-sector groups explained to The PUNCH that the Q3 2025 foreign trade figures showed that reforms in the FX market, trade liberalisation, and currency adjustments have boosted export competitiveness and encouraged backward integration.

Stakeholders, including the Director of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, stated that the reforms had significantly strengthened Nigeria’s export position.

Yusuf said, “The current economic reforms have resulted in a situation where export performance has been increasing because of the reform in the foreign exchange market, the liberalisation of the market, the ease with which export proceeds can come in, and the fact that the depreciation in the currency has made our export sector more attractive and more competitive.”

He added that the policy environment had also slowed imports. “Once you experience depreciation, imports become more expensive and less attractive. People will now import only if they don’t have a choice. Local products, especially those with high local content, are generally more competitive,” he stated.

Yusuf explained that the FX reforms had pushed firms into backward integration, saying, “We are seeing more backward integration now than before because it is cheaper to use local resources than to bring in resources from outside the country.”

Although some short-term shocks, including insecurity, logistics challenges and the recent 30 per cent local value-addition policy for shea exports, had affected certain sectors, he stressed that Nigeria remained on course. “Our balance of trade and balance of payment situation has improved as a result of the reform,” the CPPE chief stressed.

The PUNCH had reported the Former President of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Gabriel Idahosa, stating that the country’s export growth trends aligned with the expectations of the market.

He noted that non-oil exports should continue to expand, citing growing investment in processing and value addition. According to him, “the various efforts by individuals and companies should see a steady growth in non-oil exports.”

Idahosa said the fall in crude exports was expected due to increased domestic refining. “Since the government has resumed the Naira for crude to all refineries, we expect exports of crude to reduce,” he said, adding that this only underscored the need to deepen non-oil export growth.

He explained that currency reforms were already yielding the intended effect. “The whole idea of unifying the exchange rate is that we should be gaining from exports since the value of the Naira has come down. Most countries tactically devalue their currency to promote exports,” he said.

Idahosa stressed that Nigeria must remain an export-led economy. “Any strong economy in the world must be a significant exporter of goods and services. That is the only way to keep the currency strong,” the former LCCI president added.

The NBS data further showed that agricultural imports rose to N1.10tn, a 25.03 per cent increase from Q3 2024 but a 6.87 per cent drop from Q2 2025. Raw material imports surged 27.70 per cent year-on-year to N2.02tn, while manufactured goods imports stood at N7.77tn.

On the export side, crude oil remained dominant at N12.81tn, followed by other petroleum gases and manufactured products. Agricultural exports fell 11.69 per cent year-on-year to N786.62bn, while raw material exports jumped 136.38 per cent to N1.04tn.

Nigeria’s top five export destinations in Q3 2025 were India, Spain, France, the Netherlands, and Italy. Stakeholders noted that despite some sectoral declines, recent figures showed that Nigeria’s trade structure was shifting in line with policy goals.

Yusuf called for policy stability to sustain gains, saying, “Consistency in policy is what guarantees continuity. The reform has come to stay.”

Local refining boom slashes petrol Imports by N6tn

Fuel PumpNigeria’s petrol import bill fell sharply in the first nine months of 2025, dropping by N6.07tn compared with the same period of 2024, according to an analysis of National Bureau of Statistics trade data.

The value of imported motor spirit, ordinary, stood at N5.42tn between January and September 2025, far below the N11.50tn recorded in the corresponding period of 2024. The contraction represents a 52.82 per cent collapse in the country’s petrol import bill, a shift analysts link to improvements in domestic refining output and reduced dependence on offshore supply.

A breakdown of the quarterly data shows that the decline has been consistent since the start of the year. In the first quarter of 2024, Nigeria spent N3.81tn on PMS imports, but this fell to N1.76tn in the first quarter of 2025, indicating a 53.8 per cent decline, or about N2.05tn.

The second quarter followed the same pattern, with PMS imports sliding from N4.36tn in Q2 2024 to N2.38tn in Q2 2025. This represented a year-on-year fall of N1.99tn, or 45.6 per cent. The third quarter recorded the sharpest contraction: petrol imports dropped from N3.32tn between July and September 2024 to N1.29tn in the same period of 2025, a decrease of N2.03tn or 61.2 per cent.

Across all three quarters combined, Nigeria imported N6.07tn less PMS than it did in 2024, underscoring the magnitude of the shift in its petroleum supply structure.

Although the NBS has not attributed the decline to a single factor, the speed and scale of the reduction align with ongoing improvements in domestic production capacity.

The trend also suggests a gradual easing of foreign exchange pressure caused by large-scale fuel importation since the subsidy reform of 2023. The NBS filings show that PMS remained one of the country’s top import items through 2024, but its share has thinned steadily.

In Q1, Q2, and Q3 of 2025, motor spirit still featured prominently in the import basket, but at far lower values than in previous years. The declining import trend corresponds with the growing influence of the Dangote Petroleum Refinery, the 650,000-barrel-per-day facility, which began diesel and aviation fuel production in January and added petrol output in September, and is considered central to Nigeria’s goal of fuel self-sufficiency.

The refinery’s entry has created greater competition in the downstream market, with petrol retail prices in the country dropping randomly throughout the year. However, operations at the facility have faced early challenges. In March, Dangote Refinery temporarily suspended local currency sales due to difficulty in sourcing foreign exchange, as the refinery purchases crude oil in dollars but receives payments in naira.

The Federal Government has since stepped in to resolve the naira-for-crude bottleneck, allowing the refinery to continue the deal and reducing Nigeria’s reliance on petrol imports.

The President of the Dangote Group and founder of the Dangote Petroleum Refinery, Aliko Dangote, earlier said that there would be an announcement of what he called a major ‘shakedown’ in the entire country soon. Dangote said this was not about price reduction, but the complete overhaul of the downstream sector.

He stated this in an interview with newsmen following the recent visit of President Bola Tinubu to the $20bn refinery in Lekki, Lagos.

Asked to mention the ‘big thing’ he had in store for Nigerians with the refinery, Dangote replied, “Now that the President has visited and he has given us additional energy, we will inform you, you will hear from us soon, and that will be one of the major shakeups in the entire country. It is not the reduction of price; it will be the total overhaul of the downstream.”

Dangote, who refused to let the cat out of the bag, noted that the company would go on a “massive trajectory” with the refinery. “I told the President that he had not seen anything yet; we are going on a massive trajectory, much more than what you have seen here. If you come back in the next five years, the refinery will be on the back burner,” he stated

The businessman also restated that the refinery would be listed on the stock exchange market, starting with the fertiliser company this year. Dangote noted that the refinery offered extensive benefits to the Nigerian economy and its people, declaring that the days of long fuel queues were over in Nigeria.

“We remain steadfast in our commitment to contributing meaningfully to Nigeria’s economic transformation, supporting your administration’s efforts to build a self-reliant, globally competitive nation. We have remained Nigeria’s highest tax-paying company.  With continued collaboration and shared resolve, we are confident that the journey ahead will usher in even greater opportunities for our people and our country,” Dangote said.

In October 2025, Dangote said there are plans to expand the Dangote oil refinery from the 650,000 capacity to 1.4 million barrels per day, the largest in the world. The PUNCH first reported in July that the refinery planned to scale up to 700,000 bpd by December this year.

According to S&P Global, the Nigerian business mogul is seeking to double the size of the refinery with Middle Eastern funding, putting it on track to become the largest in the world. The Dangote refinery has transformed Nigeria into a net exporter of diesel and jet fuel and supplies vast quantities of petrol that were once imported from Europe.

Dangote was said to have described his ambitions to develop African energy independence as a “herculean task.” “We have to build the refinery again, either here or somewhere else. But really, somewhere else is not possible because we’d have to go and spend so much building infrastructure, and we have the infrastructure already here,” Dangote was quoted as saying.

 

Gov Fubara denies sidelining Rivers lawmakers, Wike loyalists

Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara has dismissed claims that he is sidelining members of the State House of Assembly or loyalists of the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike.

Speaking in Ahoada West during the commissioning of the Ahoda–Omoku Road extension, Fubara said reports suggesting he had shut out some political stakeholders were false.

He explained that his recent visit to President Bola Tinubu was strictly for state matters.

“There is this insinuation going around.

“I went to see the President a few days ago, but it was purely for state interest.

I have no disagreement with members of the National Assembly or with our state lawmakers,” he said.

Fubara said he had made efforts to meet with the lawmakers but was waiting for party leaders to convene the agreed reconciliation meeting.

“It was agreed that the minister, our leader, would arrange the meeting. Up till now, it has not been fixed,” he said.

He described claims that he refused to meet the lawmakers as untrue, adding that he had no reason to exclude any stakeholder.

Blame Makinde, not Tinubu for PDP woes – Oyo APC tells Nigerians

The All Progressives Congress (APC) has advised Nigerians to blame governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State and not President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for any misfortune that may befall the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)

The party made this declaration via a statement made available to DAILY POST on Wednesday.

DAILY POST reports that some Nigerians have been attributing the misfortunes in the PDP to Tinubu.

APC has, however, said that Nigerians should not blame Tinubu for the challenges facing the party.

The party in a statement signed by its Publicity Secretary in Oyo State, Wasiu Olawale Sadare noted that Governor Makinde of Oyo State and his colleagues should be held responsible for the misfortunes in PDP.

Sadare in the statement noted that Makinde has ruined the PDP.

He said, “Rather than look inward for solutions, supposed elders and leaders within the PDP left everything to chance and paved the way for the likes of Gov. Makinde to take over the affairs of their party.

“Because he lacked capacity, experience and other traits required to lead a national party, Gov. Makinde emerged the final nemesis which consumed the PDP as he is now the only governor belonging to the umbrella party in the whole of Southern Nigeria with only three or four left in the North.

“As a matter of fact, Gov. Makinde cannot deliver the PDP from its current comatose condition.

“If virtually all his governor colleagues can leave the party for him, questions should be asked about his mission and vision for the PDP while President Tinubu should be allowed to focus on his job as the president of the country”.