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INSECURITY: Southern Senators Forum  Commend and Endorse  the Resolutions Southern Governors.

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* Urging them to work with The National Assembly for Optimal Results.

As security challenges continue to hit hard on the country and subjecting many to kidnapping and killing, the Southern Senators Forum (SSF), has commended Governors from the region for outrightly taking a firm position on burning national issues, including  banning open grazing of cattle.

The Senators submitted that such deft and unanimous policy would help in reining in those hiding under cattle grazing to unleash terror of kidnapping and killing on the residents of the region.

Southern Governors  Forum (SGF), had at its meeting held in Asaba, Delta State Capital, on Tuesday, unanimously passed a verdict prohibiting open grazing in the region to checkmate herders-farmers clashes and senseless kidnapping as well as  killings of Nigerian citizens of southern extraction.

A statement jointly signed by the SSF Chairman, Secretary General and Publicity Secretary, Senators Opeyemi Bamidele (Ekiti), Mathew Uroghide (Edo) and Chukwuka Utazi (Enugu), respectively and made available to journalists in Abuja and Ado Ekiti, on Wednesday, appaluded the step taken by the Governors, saying it would serve as a buffer to  wanton destruction of farmlands, kidnappings  and carnages .

The Senators lamented how the Southern farmers were losing Hundreds of millions of Naira to plundering of food crops through encroachments on farmlands and exposing the region to famine and acute food scarcity .

They said: “At this critical  point of our national life when the economy was being bedeviled by galloping inflation, youth unemployment and insecurity, food security is very crucial to mitigate the effects of these diverse evils on the citizens.

“Available records have shown that attaining food security status would remain a mirage in the south owing to ravaging effect of outdated livestock grazing policy being unleashed on farmlands by some unscrupulous herders.

“Most appalling were the seemingly unabated  kidnapping , raping and killing of our people by suspected herdsmen, who have become bandits heating up the system.

“With this uniform resolve by our Governors to initiate no-open grazing policy, the region will return to its peaceful and agriculturally self -sufficient status  it had assumed even long before Nigeria’s amalgamation in 1914”.

Bamidele, Uroghide and Utazi saluted the Governors for ruminating on the expediency and the need for speedy restructuring of the highly lopsided Nigerian nation, saying this will also help to remove the venom that had permeated the land on account of alleged neglect of certain  sections of the country.

The SSF leaders stated that ushering of  equality , equity and justice in the way the country is being run will wipe out ethnic tension , restore  peace and stability and ward off agitations for secession that are now gaining tractions across the land.

Finally, the Southern Senators Forum encouraged the Governors to swiftly follow up on their resolutions by immediately approaching the leadership of the National Assembly with a view to working  with the two arms of the parliament to ensure that their well articulated positions on the state of the nation, especially as relate to restructuring, State policing and the jettisoning of archaic traditional grazing methods, which fall short of global best practice standard and a potential threat to our national cohesion and peace, are thoroughly and decisively addressed through the ongoing constitutional review exercise.

 

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INEC Brings Forward 2027 Polls, Fixes January 16 for Presidential Election

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The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has rescheduled Nigeria’s 2027 general elections, fixing January 16, 2027, for the presidential and National Assembly polls.

The commission also announced that February 6, 2027, will now hold the governorship and State Houses of Assembly elections across the country.

The new timetable was disclosed on Thursday by Mohammed Haruna, National Commissioner and Chairman of the Information and Voter Education Committee, in an official statement.

Why the Shift?

INEC had earlier slated the presidential and National Assembly elections for February 20, 2027, while governorship and state assembly polls were scheduled for March 6, 2027.

However, the commission said it was compelled to adjust the schedule following the repeal of the Electoral Act, 2022 and the enactment of the Electoral Act, 2026, which introduced new legal and administrative frameworks guiding the conduct of elections.

According to the commission, aligning the electoral calendar with the provisions of the new law became necessary to ensure compliance, adequate preparation, and seamless implementation of reforms embedded in the 2026 legislation.

Implications for Political Parties

The revised dates effectively shorten the timeline for political parties, aspirants, and stakeholders preparing for the 2027 race. Parties are now expected to recalibrate their primary elections, campaign strategies, and logistics to meet the updated electoral window.

Political observers say the earlier schedule may also intensify early mobilization efforts, fundraising drives, and coalition talks among major contenders ahead of what is expected to be a fiercely contested general election.

INEC Assures Readiness

INEC reiterated its commitment to conducting free, fair, and credible elections under the new legal framework. The commission urged political actors and the electorate to take note of the revised timetable and cooperate to ensure a smooth electoral process.

With the 2027 general election cycle officially recalibrated, attention now shifts to how political parties and key stakeholders will navigate the compressed timeline under the new Electoral Act regime.

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Ibom Air Passenger Who Slapped Crew Lands in Kirikiri!

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In a dramatic twist to an in–flight scandal, Comfort Emmanson — the passenger accused of assaulting airline staff during an Uyo–Lagos Ibom Air flight — has traded her trip for prison bars.

The incident, which shocked fellow passengers, has now culminated in her being charged to court and remanded at the notorious Kirikiri Correctional Centre in Lagos.

Tunde Moshood, Special Adviser on Media and Communications to Aviation Minister Festus Keyamo, SAN, broke the news on Monday via his official X handle.

“The more reason the flying public should be more careful… the unruly passenger on the Uyo–Lagos bound Ibom Air, Miss Comfort Emmanson, has been charged to court and she’s now cooling off in Kirikiri,” Moshood revealed.

Witnesses say the altercation left crew members shaken, sparking renewed calls for stricter penalties for in-flight misconduct.

 

 

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NASS Passes ₦54.99trn 2025 Budget

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National Assembly Complex Abuja.
National Assembly Complex Abuja.
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The National Assembly on Thursday passed the ₦54.99trn 2025 Appropriation Bill.

The bill was passed separately by the Senate and the House of Representatives.

A breakdown of the budget showed N3.645trn for statutory transfers, N14.317trn for debt servicing, N13.64trn for recurrent expenditure and N23.963trn capital expenditure (development fund), with fiscal deficit put at N13.08trn.

The Deficit-to-Gross domestic product (GDP) Ratio was put at 1.52%.

Last Week, President Bola Tinubu increased the 2025 fiscal year budget from an initial N49.7trn to N54.2trn, seeking approval from the Senate and the House of Representatives.

The Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriations, Abubakar Bichi, while presenting the bill for consideration, stated that the committee met with the Presidential Economic Planning team to further discuss revenue projections and expenditure for the 2025 Appropriation Bill.

According to him, the 2025 Appropriation Bill was presented late, compared to that of 2024.

He urged the executive to present subsequent budgets to the National Assembly not later than three months before the next financial year, to maintain the January to December budget cycle.

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