Tag: Atiku Abubakar

  • CAN and Atiku Mourn Late Hero Imam Who Saved 262 Christians

    CAN and Atiku Mourn Late Hero Imam Who Saved 262 Christians

    The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has paid tribute to the late Imam Abdullahi Abubakar, widely recognized for sheltering Christians during a 2018 attack in Plateau State. Political leaders, including former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, also issued condolences and highlighted the Imam’s legacy as a bridge-builder.

    Community reactions emphasize the Imam’s role as a symbol of interfaith solidarity in a country frequently strained by ethno-religious tensions.

    Echotitbits take: National cohesion is often advanced by individual courage before institutions catch up. The challenge is translating this kind of moral leadership into scalable, sustained peace-building mechanisms.

    Source: The Punch – https://punchng.com/can-honours-late-plateau-imam-who-saved-over-200-christians/ (January 17, 2026)

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Atiku Abubakar Rules Out Stepping Down for ADC Presidential Ticket

    Atiku Abubakar Rules Out Stepping Down for ADC Presidential Ticket

    In an update published by The Punch, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar dismissed claims that he might withdraw from the contest for the African Democratic Congress (ADC) presidential ticket, insisting he remains committed to the race.

    Through his media adviser, Paul Ibe, Atiku accused the ruling APC of attempting to meddle in the internal affairs of opposition coalitions and urged Nigerians to resist moves aimed at weakening the opposition ahead of the 2027 elections.

    Daily Post and Tribune Online also reported the stance, noting Atiku’s rejection of calls to step aside and pointing to heightened interest in the ADC following recent political realignments.

    Echotitbits take: Atiku’s refusal to step aside sets up a high‑stakes internal contest. Peter Obi may bring youth momentum, while Atiku brings structure and experience—how the party manages competing ambitions will shape whether it unifies or fractures ahead of 2027.

    Source: Vanguard – https://www.vanguardngr.com/2026/01/adc-presidential-ticket-no-one-is-stepping-down-atiku/ 2026-01-07

    Photo Credit: Vanguard

  • Presidency Rebutts Critics Over Tinubu’s Paris Lunch Photographs

    Presidency Rebutts Critics Over Tinubu’s Paris Lunch Photographs

    According to Vanguard reporting on January 7, 2026, the Presidency defended President Bola Tinubu after opposition leader Atiku Abubakar criticized photographs of the President dining in Paris, framing the images as a symbol of misplaced priorities.

    Presidential aides described the criticism as tone‑deaf and said the President remains engaged with national issues, adding that online claims alleging the photos were AI‑generated or manipulated are unconvincing.

    Premium Times and Channels TV also covered the dispute, reporting on the Presidency’s explanation of the photo quality and continued opposition claims that the images were selectively edited amid insecurity concerns.

    Echotitbits take: In a high‑inflation environment, luxury imagery carries political costs. The administration may be better served shifting from image defense to clearer, measurable messaging on how policies are improving everyday living conditions.

    Source: Vanguard – https://www.vanguardngr.com/2026/01/nigeria-burns-while-presidency-defends-lunch-photos-in-paris-atiku/ 2026-01-07

    Photo Credit: Vanguard

  • NBA and Atiku demand a halt to new tax laws over alleged ‘gazette’ alterations

    NBA and Atiku demand a halt to new tax laws over alleged ‘gazette’ alterations

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-24 06:24:00

    In an update published by Punch, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar are calling for an immediate suspension of Nigeria’s newly signed tax reform laws, citing allegations that the gazetted text differs from what lawmakers passed.

    The NBA’s concern is procedural legitimacy: if a law’s final text was altered after legislative passage, then implementation becomes legally risky—especially for businesses planning compliance, pricing, and payroll systems around the new regime.

    Atiku’s position is more politically charged, urging investigation and framing the controversy as a major governance breach that could undermine democratic lawmaking.

    The dispute has also opened a second front: whether the executive should proceed with the planned January 1, 2026 implementation date while lawmakers investigate.

    Vanguard reported Atiku asked EFCC to probe the “illegal and unauthorised alterations,” while also quoting the NBA’s call that “all plans for implementation… should be immediately suspended.”

    Echotitbits take: If this isn’t resolved fast, you risk a compliance freeze—companies won’t know which text to obey, and investors hate legal ambiguity. The smart move is a rapid, transparent harmonisation process (and publication of the verified final text) before January 1.

    Source: The Punch — December 24, 2025 (https://punchng.com/nba-atiku-demand-new-tax-law-suspension/)
    The Punch 2025-12-24

  • Opinion: Nation Building Over Party Politics – Nigeria’s Path for the Next 24 Years

    Opinion: Nation Building Over Party Politics – Nigeria’s Path for the Next 24 Years

    The Aso Rock, Nigeria

    Opinion: Nation Building Over Party Politics – Nigeria’s Path for the Next 24 Years

    Nigeria stands at a crossroads where the choice between perpetual political brinkmanship and purposeful nation building will determine the fate of over 200 million people. For decades, our politics has revolved around personalities, ethnic arithmetic, and empty party slogans, rather than coherent ideologies or long-term visions. Today, no major political party in Nigeria sincerely advances a consistent political philosophy; instead, parties often serve as shifting platforms for elites to capture power, switch allegiances, and share spoils.

    Given this reality, it is neither radical nor undemocratic to argue that the country’s focus over the next generation must shift decisively from party-centered politics to nation-centered governance. If those entrusted with leadership — regardless of partisan labels — dedicate themselves to genuine social and economic transformation, it should matter less whether they belong to one party or a hundred. What matters is progress, stability, and prosperity.

    Critics may call this a drift toward a de facto one-party state, but it is better understood as a call for ideological unity on nation building. Nigeria desperately needs leaders who see beyond election cycles and prioritize industrialization, quality education, universal healthcare, modern infrastructure, and social justice. We need continuity in policies that work, not endless resets every four or eight years just because a new party wants to mark its territory.

    History shows us that countries like Singapore and Rwanda achieved rapid development not by fetishizing partisan competition but by forging a national consensus on discipline, economic planning, and inclusive growth. In these contexts, the energy spent on political bickering was redirected into building systems, attracting investment, and delivering results.

    Of course, the danger of unchecked power is real; accountability must never be sacrificed. But accountability can come through institutions — independent courts, vibrant civil society, free media — rather than the illusion of multiparty rivalry that offers no ideological choice. When opposition parties simply mirror ruling parties in opportunism, democracy becomes a hollow ritual.

    For Nigeria, the question is simple: if a government is genuinely transforming the economy, empowering citizens, and entrenching good governance, why should the nation interrupt that trajectory in the name of an election that merely swaps one set of self-interested politicians for another? Why not build a broad coalition of stakeholders — across regions, ethnicities, faiths — around a shared developmental agenda and hold leaders accountable to that, rather than to party colors?

    Over the next 24 years, what Nigeria needs is not a rotating door of politicians but a sustained national project: one that creates jobs, ends poverty, secures lives and property, modernizes agriculture, and raises Nigeria’s human capital. We should champion policies, not parties; performance, not propaganda; and unity, not division.

    The time has come for Nigerians to reject the empty spectacle of party politics without ideology and embrace a renewed, patriotic commitment to nation building — for the sake of today’s citizens and generations yet unborn.

    Bunmi Adebayo, writes from Abeokuta

  • Nigerian Opposition Figure Sells $100m Intels Shares, Blames Buhari-led Govt for Woes

    Nigerian Opposition Figure Sells $100m Intels Shares, Blames Buhari-led Govt for Woes

    Former Vice President and co-founder of Integrated Logistics Services Nigeria Limited (Intels), Atiku Abubakar, has finally sold his shares in the company through a series of transactions executed by Guernsey Trust in an open-secret deals that began in December 2018 but reached its climax last year.

    With the transaction over, Atiku accused the President Muhammadu Buhari administration of displaying rare greater urgency in the last five years in destroying legitimate businesses that are employing thousands of Nigerians because of politics.

    It was gathered that the former presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) sold his shares in Intels to Orleal Investment Group, the parent company of Intels, for various amounts totaling over $100 million.

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    The money was paid to Atiku in three instalments – $60 million, $29 million and $24.1 million.

    With this transaction, the former vice president has divested from Intels, Nigeria’s undisputed largest logistics company which provides comprehensive integrated services for the nation’s oil and gas industry.

    Confirming the development, Atiku’s Media Adviser, Paul Ibe, said it’s true that his boss “has been selling his shares in Intels over the years.”

    According to him, “It assumed greater urgency in the last five years, because this government (President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration) has been preoccupied with destroying a legitimate business that was employing thousands of Nigerians because of politics.

    “There should be a marked difference between politics and business.

    “Yes, he (Atiku) has sold his shares in Intels and redirected his investment to other sectors of the economy for returns and creation of jobs.”

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    Intels spokesman, Tommaso Ruffinoni, also corroborated Ibe’s statement, saying Atiku gave the company a goodbye kiss in December 2019.

    The spokesperson added that with Atiku’s exit, two of his children working in Intels, Adamu Atiku Abubakar and Aminu Atiku Abubakar, have left Intels.

    The former vice president in 2015 described Intels as his most successful business, but the story changed in the last five years as the Buhari administration allegedly moved to stifle Atiku as the symbol of opposition in Nigeria.

    It would be recalled that Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) purportedly cancelled its 17-year-old contract for pilotage monitoring with Intels without any cogent reasons.

    The Buhari administration had in October 2017 directed NPA to terminate the boats pilotage monitoring and supervision agreement that the agency has with Intels, arguing that the contract was void ab initio.

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    Riding on the present administration’s disdain for Atiku, NPA accused Intels of refusing to remit to the Federal Government service boat pilotage revenue in the firm’s custody, which amounted to $207.646 million (N78.905 billion) as at September 30, 2019.

    NPA explained that the money was aside from service boat pilotage revenue for January 1, 2020 to July 31, 2020, amounting to $97.029 million, which added up to $307.675 million (N115.775 billion) in the custody of Intels.

    But, the then Atiku’s Intels denied all the allegations, saying NPA was owing it to the tune of $895.8 million cumulatively.

    Idowu Sowunmi

  • Recall, Recalibrate Your 2021 Budget to Save Nigeria’s Economy, Atiku Tells Buhari

    Recall, Recalibrate Your 2021 Budget to Save Nigeria’s Economy, Atiku Tells Buhari

    Former Vice President and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) presidential candidate in 2019 general elections, Atiku Abubakar, has berated President Muhammadu Buhari over his 2021 budget proposal recently presented to the National Assembly.

    Atiku, in a statement on Saturday titled: “The 2021 Budget Proposal Contravenes The Fiscal Responsibility Act,” charged the President to be courageous enough to recall and recalibrate the 2021 budget proposal to reflect the provisions of the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA) of 2007 and the current economic realities in Nigeria.

    According to him, “The budget deficit in the proposal is ₦5.21 trillion. This amount is just over 3.5 per cent of Nigeria’s 2019 GDP.

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    “This is contrary to the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007, which provides in Part II, Section 12, subsection 1 that: ‘Aggregate Expenditure and the Aggregate amount appropriated by the National Assembly for each financial year shall not be more than the estimated aggregate revenue plus a deficit, not exceeding three per cent of the estimated Gross Domestic Product or any sustainable percentage as may be determined by the national Assembly for each financial year.’”

    He explained that the deficit of 2021 budget shows the precarious state of Nigeria’s finances, which have since been overburdened by excessive borrowing on the part of the Buhari administration.

    Atiku, who stated that he could itemise several reasons why Buhari’s 2021 budget is not feasible and realisable, insisted that the President should be patriotic enough to recall the budget otherwise it would be catastrophic for Nigeria’s economy.

    The statement reads in part: “Looking at the 2021 Budget Proposal placed before the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday, October 8, 2020, a number of issues, very grave and perhaps disturbing issues arise.

    “I could bring up several of them, but for the sake of its direness and consequence to our economy, permit me to address one very important issue.

    “The budget deficit in the proposal is ₦5.21 trillion. This amount is just over 3.5 per cent of Nigeria’s 2019 GDP. This is contrary to the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007, which provides in Part II, Section 12, subsection 1 that: ‘Aggregate Expenditure and the Aggregate amount appropriated by the National Assembly for each financial year shall not be more than the estimated aggregate revenue plus a deficit, not exceeding three per cent of the estimated Gross Domestic Product or any sustainable percentage as may be determined by the national Assembly for each financial year.’

    “Nigeria had a GDP of approximately $447 billion in 2019. Three percent (three per cent) of this amount is $13.3 billion, which at the current official exchange rate of ₦379 to $1, gives you a figure of ₦5.07 trillion.

    “So clearly, the budget deficit of ₦5.21 trillion, as announced by President Muhammadu, is above three per cent of our GDP and is therefore in contravention of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007.

    “Even more disturbing is the fact that our GDP has fallen sharply from its 2019 figures, and has been projected by the World Bank and other multilateral institutions at somewhere between $400 billion and $350 billion. Meaning that in actual sense, the ₦5.21 trillion budget deficit is actually far above the three per cent threshold stipulated by the FRA.

    “That this escaped the notice of the Buhari administration shows a glaring lack of rigour in the formulation of the Budget. A very disturbing development.

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    “Furthermore, this deficit shows the precarious state of our national finances, which have since been overburdened by excessive borrowing on the part of the Buhari administration.

    “It has not escaped my attention that the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007 makes provision for the National Assembly to raise the threshold of the budget deficit from three per cent to a higher figure. However, if this is done, they will be serving this administration’s interests, not Nigeria’s, because the Act says that such a threshold must be sustainable. Is it sustainable when our budget makes almost as much provision for debt servicing, as it does for capital expenditure?

    “As such, I call on the President, to recall this budget, and recalibrate it to reflect the provisions of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007, and the current economic realities of the nation. To do otherwise will not only be unpatriotic, it will also be catastrophic for our nation’s economy.”

    Idowu Sowunmi