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NOW THAT GUBIO HAS EMERGED: A lessom in Continuity and Control.

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NOW THAT GUBIO HAS EMERGED: A lessom in Continuity and Control.

By: Inuwa Bwala
inuwabwala3@gmail.com.

The emergence of Engineer Mustapha Gubio as the All Progressives Congress consensus governorship candidate for Borno State for the 2027 elections has reignited debate over succession politics in the North East.

The process contrasts sharply with the 2018 pathway that produced Professor Babagana Umara Zulum, as this one reveals how APC’s internal dynamics in Borno have evolved from competitive primaries to a craftily managed consensus.

In 2018 it was a heavily contested primary election, under the tutelage of the then Governor, Kashim Shettima: now Nigeria’s Vice President.

Professor Babagana Zulum, then Commissioner for Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Resettlement, RRR, entered a field of 10 aspirants. He polled 4,432 votes to defeat his closest rival, Idris Mamman Durkwa, who managed 115 votes.

The contest was open, yet reflected the party’s early attempt to manage a crowded field while preserving the “Borno Model” of Shettima-Zulum continuity. Zulum went on to win the general election with 1,175,440 votes, and secured a second term unopposed in the 2022 APC primary. His rise was built on technocratic credentials as a professor of agricultural engineering, visibility in post-insurgency reconstruction, and the then governor’s backing.

Engineer Gubio’s 2026 emergence, which has been ratified with the affirmation of the consensus over contest
has seemingly changed the the script. Engineer Mustapha Gubio, who untill recently Professor Zulum’s Commissioner for Works and Housing, was presented by the governor as the APC consensus candidate for 2027. The announcement followed the purchase of nomination forms worth N50m and a presentation to Vice President Kashim Shettima at the Presidential Villa.

Zulum described the choice as the product of “extensive consultations” and a “unified position” within the party. His media aide went further to clarify, that, it was an “anointment,” not a formal endorsement, but the effect was the same: other aspirants, including Senator Kaka Shehu Lawan, stepped down to preserve party unity. The move was endorsed by APC Borno Stakeholders, who cited Gubio’s “experience and long-standing interaction with people of diverse religions, cultures, and tribes”.
Many described it as two paths, with one objective.

The contrast is instructive, as Zulum’s emergence in 2018 was a test of internal competition within a party still consolidating after the 2015 merger. It produced a clear winner through votes. Gubio’s path in 2026 bypassed that process entirely, relying instead on elite consensus brokered by the governor, with VP Shettima’s public blessing.

Analysts say the shift reflects Borno APC’s confidence in its dominance and its desire to avoid rancorous primaries ahead of a national election. “In Borno, the governor usually holds the local keys, but the Vice President holds the national map,” a party chieftain once said.

The arrangement also signals Zulum’s attempt to institutionalize a political culture, that differs with the old order, which were always turbulent.
Like many others, it is to me a seamless continuity between two men who share technocratic backgrounds and close ties to powers that be.

Professor Zulum was a professor and Rector before entering politics; while Gubio oversaw infrastructure delivery as Commissioner for Works. The emphasis on continuity, stability, and administrative competence is consistent with the government’s 25 years rolling development plan.

While some may argue that, the consensus model carries risks, to me in particular, it reduces intra-party rivalry and attendant post primary enemity, leaving no room for perceptions of manipulation of the process.
But even this, it tests the durability of the Zulum-Shettima alliance, which has been central to Borno’s political stability since 2015.

For now, APC leaders insist the decision is about unity. Whether it delivers electoral victory in 2027 will depend less on how Gubio emerged, and more on whether he can match Zulum’s public appeal and the party’s track record of delivering Borno to APC in every election since 2015.

It is no longer a question of if, but when Engineer Mustapha Gubio wins the Borno governorship in 2027, the public expectations are naturally high, but may largely be shaped by three things: Professor Babagana Umara Zulum’s legacy, the security situation, and Borno’s development needs.

Already, people are talking about, Sustaining and scaling up security gains.
It is no longer news that. Borno has made progress against Boko Haram/ISWAP, but communities like Gwoza, Chibok, Pulka, Kirawa, Wala and the Lake Chad areas still face periodic attacks with attendant food raids.

The public expects Engineer Gubio to continue Working closely with the military and federal government to secure rural communities and farmlands.
The public also expect him to work towards preventing a resurgence of insurgent recruitment driven by hunger and displacement.

There will be much expectations for him to also continue the “civilian-military” approach, which Governor Zulum used, by visiting frontline communities, supporting vigilantes, and pushing for resettlement.
Recent reports indicate that there may be dare food shortages and Gubio is expected to fix food security and humanitarian gaps.

The IDP crisis is still acute attendant upon the suspension of WFP aid since January 2026, this has further worsened hunger in camps and host communities, and people expect the next governor to push for the return of sustained food aid and livelihood programs, revive agriculture by making farmlands accessible and providing inputs, irrigation, and extension services, to avoid a situation where IDPs return to the bush because the conditions in camps are worse.

Like Zulum, Mustapha Gubio is also likely to deliver infrastructure and reconstruction, coming from the Works and Housing portfolio. There are very high expectations that, he will maintain Zulum’s pace on roads, schools, hospitals, and housing.

I am amongst those who rrmain confident that, he will complete resettlement projects for IDPs to return home with dignity, expand rural roads to open up agriculture and trade, improve electricity and water supply in Maiduguri and satellite towns and maintain Zulum’s “people-first” governance style.
I dare say, that Zulum built his reputation on unannounced visits, direct engagement with citizens, and quick responses to crises.
Borno residents expect Gubio to be visible, accessible, and tough on corruption and inefficiency. Anything less will be seen as a step back.

As a party man, I have seen the merits in managing party unity and succession politics, using the consensus arrangement, that produced Gubio as a model for future primary elections and will reduce rancour and unnecessary financial involvement. And I will not hesitate in recommending same to Engineer Gubio.

I know as a matter of fact, that the public expects him to govern for the whole state, not just as a placeholder, and to avoid alienating other power blocs in Borno politics. This has been the bane of many politicians in other climes.

The bottom line for Engineer Mustapha Gubio, is that, voters in Borno will judge Gubio and of course all those who may come on board to work with him by, whether he or they can keep the state safe, feed the people, and keep reconstruction moving without breaking the trust Zulum built with the masses.

If he’s seen as “Zulum 2.0” on service delivery but with his own approach to security and economy, expectations are that APC will hold Borno in 2027 and beyond.
With Gubio’s emergence and consequent affirmation, Borno looks set for another journey, remeniscient of the Zulum era. May God grant him good health, wisdom and understanding to tower above the public expectations.

inuwabwala3@gmail.com.

NOW THAT GUBIO HAS EMERGED: A lessom in Continuity and Control.

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The Map Does Not Lie: How AES Failed the Sahel Five years of military rule in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger have produced not sovereignty but collapse. No propaganda can survive the evidence of the May 2026 security map

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The Map Does Not Lie: How AES Failed the Sahel Five years of military rule in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger have produced not sovereignty but collapse. No propaganda can survive the evidence of the May 2026 security map

By Oumarou Sanou​

There is one document that no junta press conference can censor, no hired influencer can spin, and no state television anchor can reframe. It is the current security map of the Sahel, compiled from open-source intelligence platforms and conflict-monitoring organisations, including the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies, ACLED, the Critical Threats Project, the International Crisis Group, and the Institute for the Study of War.

That map tells a devastating story. In the blunt, unsparing language of colour-coded territory, it shows that the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) project has failed: not partially, not temporarily, but systematically and comprehensively. It does not argue. It does not editorialise. It simply shows.

The country-by-country picture is alarming in its specificity. Burkina Faso is the most catastrophic case. Over 90 per cent of the national territory is either under the control of jihadist groups or actively contested. The entire northern, eastern, and central belt, including the Sahel Region, the East Region, and the Boucle du Mouhoun, is red or deeply contested.

Captain Ibrahim Traore’s government retains authority in the Ouagadougou city centre, Bobo-Dioulasso, and a scattering of southern towns; nothing more. This is not a government losing ground. It is a government that has already lost it. In practical terms, this is state collapse, even if not yet formally declared.

Mali has crossed a point of strategic irreversibility in the north. Taoudeni, Timbuktu, and Menaka are gone. Bamako’s security perimeter has contracted to a 30-kilometre radius, a damning indicator of how drastically the capital’s envelope has shrunk. The centre, covering Mopti and Gao, remains a deeply contested warzone, with the state and armed groups competing for territorial authority.

Only a narrow western strip around Bamako and Kayes, and Sikasso in the south, remains under effective government control. Niger is the relative exception: Niamey, Zinder, and Maradi remain in the green zone. But rural Diffa and rural Agadez are already red, and Tahoua is contested. Niger is following the same trajectory as its neighbours, running roughly two to three years behind.

The overarching reality of the security landscape across all three AES states is the same: the juntas promised security and delivered the opposite — fragmentation. Secondly, isolationist militarism has failed to contain a transnational threat.

Thirdly, propaganda can no longer conceal the widening gap between rhetoric and reality. When soldiers seized power in Mali in 2020, Burkina Faso in 2022, and Niger in 2023, they advanced the same essential argument: that civilian governments had failed, that foreign partners had become liabilities, and that only military rule could restore sovereignty, dignity, and territorial integrity. Five years later, the verdict is written across the map. The Sahel is not stabilising. It is fragmenting. And the junta bears direct responsibility for accelerating that fragmentation. LP

One of the most consequential failures of the AES project lies in the belief that a deeply complex, transnational security crisis could be defeated through isolation, militarised nationalism, and anti-Western rhetoric. The junta did not merely fail to improve on their predecessors; they dismantled the cooperative security architecture painstakingly constructed over the years to contain extremist expansion.

MINUSMA, the United Nations stabilisation mission in Mali, incorporated contributions from dozens of countries, including African and Nigerian contingents; it was expelled in 2023. French military operations were terminated. American intelligence and aerial support structures were withdrawn.

European special forces and training missions ended. In their place came the Wagner Group, later rebranded as Africa Corps: a mercenary network with no democratic accountability, no long-term development agenda, and an established record of civilian abuses stretching from Libya to the Central African Republic and Sudan.

The fall of Kidal crystallised the contradiction with brutal clarity. Celebrated in 2023 as proof that expelling Western forces and embracing Moscow was an act of strategic genius, Kidal instead became a monument to strategic illusion: Africa Corps personnel reportedly negotiated their own withdrawal, while Malian troops were left isolated and exposed.

The city, once paraded as evidence of restored sovereignty, became evidence of betrayed sovereignty. Years of carefully constructed propaganda collapsed in a single moment of contact with the battlefield.

Yet the failure runs deeper than military reversals. Terrorism has never been solely a military problem. It thrives where governance collapses, economies deteriorate, institutions weaken, and citizens lose hope. Poverty, unemployment, corruption, weak border control, and absent public services remain the central drivers of extremist recruitment across the Sahel. On every one of these fronts, the juntas have failed to deliver any measurable improvement. Pp

Economic uncertainty has deepened. Investor confidence has evaporated. Media freedoms have been extinguished. Civil society increasingly operates under direct pressure. Democratic institutions, already fragile, have been fully subordinated to barracks authority. Regimes that promised the discipline and efficiency of emergency governance have instead exposed, with painful consistency, that soldiers without governing experience do not know how to govern.

Moreso, there is a profound irony in the junta’s claim to Pan-Africanism. The doctrine, as conceived by its founding thinkers, was rooted in solidarity, integration, and shared prosperity; not a licence for paranoid nationalism that severs ties with African neighbours, rejects regional cooperation, and sustains itself through information control and manufactured grievance. One can hold an audience captive on anger and resentment for a time. People ultimately require food, security, healthcare, and a future. Slogans, as the map makes plain, do not fill granaries or secure borders.

The consequences of this failure have long since ceased to respect national boundaries. The Sahel is now a sanctuary in which jihadist organisations regroup, recruit, train, and plan operations far beyond the AES perimeter. Benin, Togo, Ghana, and Côte d’Ivoire face mounting pressure along their northern frontiers. Nigeria, already confronting multiple security emergencies, faces heightened risks from arms trafficking, militant mobility, and cross-border radicalisation flowing freely across porous boundaries.

What was once dismissed as alarmist conjecture, the emergence of a contiguous Islamist corridor across the Sahel, is now discussed by serious analysts not as a remote possibility but as a live and advancing threat. Instead of a Pan-Africanism of prosperity, the juntas have produced what must plainly be called a terrorist Pan-Africanism: a transnational network of instability exported to an entire neighbourhood.

None of this means previous international interventions were without fault; they were not. France, ECOWAS, the United Nations, and Western partners made consequential errors, and many Africans held entirely legitimate grievances about the terms of external engagement.

But replacing imperfect cooperation with strategic isolation and mercenary dependence has produced demonstrably worse outcomes for the very populations those juntas claimed to liberate. That is not an argument for foreign dominance; it is an argument for African-led, accountable, and genuinely cooperative security of the kind that authentic Pan-Africanism has always demanded.

ECOWAS and the international community cannot afford to wait for this trajectory to run its course. The immediate priorities are clear: reinforce the security capacity of coastal states, restore regional intelligence-sharing frameworks, and develop credible contingency plans for scenarios that are no longer theoretical.

The longer-term priority is equally plain: support any government that emerges from the ruins of these juntas with the legitimacy, institutional capacity, and regional relationships needed to rebuild. That support must be conditioned on African leadership, civilian accountability, and the categorical exclusion of mercenaries, of every nationality and flag, from any future stabilisation architecture in West Africa.

Sovereignty is not measured by the vehemence of anti-Western slogans, the spectacle of military parades, or the confidence of televised communiques. It is measured by whether a state can protect its citizens, secure its territory, and offer its people a future worth believing in. The security map of the Sahel in May 2026 delivers that verdict with clarity and honesty that no junta broadcast has matched.

The question now is whether this region’s leaders and the broader African community are finally prepared to read it honestly and act accordingly, before the cost of continued inaction becomes truly irreversible.
Oumarou Sanou is a social critic and researcher specialising in governance, security, and political transitions in the Sahel. He writes on geopolitics, regional stability, and African leadership dynamics.

Contact: sanououmarou386@gmail.com

The Map Does Not Lie: How AES Failed the Sahel Five years of military rule in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger have produced not sovereignty but collapse. No propaganda can survive the evidence of the May 2026 security map

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My Maiduguri Story

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My Maiduguri Story

By: Abigail Olugbode

A teenage girl, Abigail Olugbode recounts a day she would never forget during a near fatal attack on her estate in Maiduguri as a young girl.

For a long time, bombing wasn’t something I only heard about from news or far places—it was part of life. I grew up in Maiduguri, Borno State, during a time when attacks were frequent and unpredictable. Some days we’d get to school and be sent back home because there were reports of terrorists nearby. Other days, we were already in class when teachers suddenly told us to go under the desks and stay completely quiet.

I was six years old at the time, so I didn’t fully understand everything happening around me, but I understood fear. It showed up in small ways—in how people talked, how quickly things could change, and especially in my mum’s face whenever my dad wasn’t home.

There’s one memory that has stayed with me more than the others. It doesn’t really have a lesson. It’s just… what happened.

It was December 20th, 2014. My mum had just given birth to my baby sister, and my grandmother had come from Lagos to help out.

That day started off normal. We were outside frying plantain. I still remember the smell, and how we were all just there waiting to eat. Nothing felt wrong at that time.

Then someone came with the news—Boko Haram had entered 1000 Housing Estate, the estate where we lived.

Everything just shifted immediately.

My grandmother started panicking and praying out loud, calling on God and saying she didn’t want to die yet. It sounded almost like a strange kind of comic relief at first, the way she was speaking so loudly, like she was trying to be heard over everything. But she was scared—you could hear it underneath.

My mum quickly gathered us inside and told us to keep quiet. My dad was calm, but very firm. He told us where to stay and that nobody should go outside. No discussion.

Then we heard gunshots.

Inside the house, staying quiet wasn’t easy. The baby started crying. The younger ones couldn’t sit still. People were whispering, shifting around, arguing in low voices. Everyone was trying, but no one was really calm.

Even the dog was barking like crazy. At some point, we were whispering at it to shut up, like it would actually understand.

My mum got really tense and said she would flog anyone who didn’t keep quiet. That was enough. Everyone froze after that.

My grandmother kept insisting we should run. She was begging my dad, switching between prayer and panic. She would get loud, then remember and lower her voice again.

But my dad didn’t move. He just stayed alert and kept listening to what was happening outside.

So we stayed.

We just sat there listening. The gunshots, the silence between them, even our breathing—it all felt too loud.

At some point, things got quieter inside. The baby stopped crying. The dog finally stopped barking. Even my grandmother went from talking to just whispering prayers.

And we waited.

By morning, everything was calm again.

Later we heard what actually happened. People who tried to run were shot. Houses were attacked.

That’s when it really hit me.

That could have been us.

We didn’t do anything special. We just stayed where we were—and somehow, that was enough.

My grandmother left for Lagos as soon as she could find transport. The whole thing really shook her. Even though she was grateful we survived, she didn’t want to stay anymore.

As for me and my siblings, something changed in us without us even noticing. We had heard gunshots so many times that it stopped feeling strange. It became something you just lived with.

Our relatives would always call when there were reports of attacks, asking why we were still in Maiduguri, telling us to leave.

But to us, it didn’t feel unusual.

It was just life

My Maiduguri Story

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The Satellite That Refused to Stand Still: Why Nigeria’s Space Asset Is Finally Coming Into Its Own

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The Satellite That Refused to Stand Still: Why Nigeria’s Space Asset Is Finally Coming Into Its Own

By Danjuma Amodu

For more than a decade, Nigeria has occupied a unique but under-celebrated position in Africa’s digital story. Since 2011, the country has operated its own communications satellite—an achievement few nations on the continent can claim. It placed Nigeria in a select league of countries with sovereign space-based communications infrastructure, a strategic asset capable of shaping everything from national security to broadband access. Yet for years, that satellite seemed to orbit in quiet contradiction: full of promise, but only partially woven into the fabric of everyday Nigerian life.

That contradiction is now being challenged.

When Jane Nkechi Egerton-Idehen assumed leadership of Nigerian Communications Satellite Limited in 2023, she stepped into an institution that reflected a broader pattern in Nigeria’s public infrastructure—significant capital investment without corresponding utilisation. The satellite’s broadcasting capacity was underused, its broadband services had lost commercial traction, and the organisation leaned heavily on government patronage. In a country where millions remained unconnected, the gap between capability and impact was glaring.

Her arrival coincided with a policy shift under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, whose Renewed Hope Agenda placed digital infrastructure at the centre of economic transformation. That alignment of leadership and national policy created a narrow but critical window: the chance to reposition satellite technology not as a technical luxury, but as foundational infrastructure.

To understand the significance of what has followed, it is important to situate Nigeria’s satellite programme within a broader historical and economic context. Nigeria’s space ambitions date back to the early 2000s, driven by a recognition that terrestrial infrastructure alone could not solve the country’s connectivity challenges. Vast rural expanses, difficult terrain, and the high cost of fibre deployment meant that millions would remain excluded unless alternative technologies were deployed. Satellite offered that alternative—capable of reaching the unreached, connecting the disconnected, and doing so at scale.

But infrastructure, by itself, does not guarantee impact. It requires strategy, partnerships, and, crucially, a market.

What has changed in the past two years is not the satellite itself, but how it is being positioned. Under Egerton-Idehen’s leadership, NIGCOMSAT has shifted from a largely government-facing agency to a more commercially aware and partnership-driven enterprise. The expansion of television channels on its platform—from 45 to 150—and the growth of its audience from 2 million to 7 million Nigerians are not just statistics; they represent a deliberate effort to maximise existing capacity and prove relevance in a competitive media landscape.

Equally important is the organisation’s role in Nigeria’s Digital Switch Over, executed in partnership with the National Broadcasting Commission. For years, the transition from analogue to digital broadcasting has been slow and uneven. Satellite infrastructure, with its wide coverage and reliability, provides the backbone needed to accelerate that transition. In this sense, NIGCOMSAT is not merely a participant but an enabler of a long-delayed national reform.

Perhaps the most consequential shift, however, lies in connectivity. Nigeria’s digital divide is not just a technological issue; it is an economic and social fault line. Urban centres continue to attract investment in fibre and mobile networks, while rural communities remain underserved because the business case for traditional infrastructure is weak. By partnering with companies such as MTN Nigeria and IHS Towers, NIGCOMSAT is positioning satellite as a complementary layer—extending coverage to places where cables cannot easily go.

This has real-world implications. It means a rural clinic can access telemedicine services. It means a school in a remote community can connect to digital learning platforms. It means security agencies, including the Nigerian Navy, can maintain communication in environments where terrestrial networks fail. These are not abstract gains; they are practical interventions in some of Nigeria’s most persistent development challenges.

The introduction of the NIGCOMSAT Accelerator Programme in 2024 adds another dimension to this transformation. Historically, space infrastructure in many countries has been treated as a closed system—owned and operated by government, with limited avenues for private sector innovation. By opening access to startups, NIGCOMSAT is effectively democratising its infrastructure, allowing entrepreneurs to build solutions on top of it.

The significance of this cannot be overstated. More than 80 startups have already passed through the programme, developing applications that range from security-focused drone systems to healthcare connectivity platforms. The example of rural hospitals being linked through VSAT technology illustrates a broader point: when infrastructure becomes accessible, innovation follows. By training over 500 young Nigerians—many of them women—the programme is also investing in human capital, ensuring that the country is not just a consumer of technology, but a creator.

At the policy level, voices like Bosun Tijani have reinforced the strategic importance of satellite technology. His assertion that satellite systems sit at the centre of global digital transformation reflects a growing consensus: connectivity is no longer optional; it is foundational. In this context, Nigeria’s status as the only West African country with its own communications satellite is not just a point of pride—it is a strategic advantage that must be fully leveraged.

That advantage is set to deepen with the planned launch of NigComSat-2A and NigComSat-2B, approved by the federal government and scheduled for 2028 and 2029. These satellites will expand capacity, improve redundancy, and position Nigeria to meet growing demand for broadband and digital services. More importantly, they signal continuity—a recognition that space infrastructure is not a one-off investment, but a long-term commitment.

Yet, even as progress is evident, it would be premature to declare victory. Challenges remain. The sustainability of commercial gains, competition from global satellite providers, regulatory bottlenecks, and the broader economic environment will all shape the trajectory of NIGCOMSAT’s transformation. The real test will be whether these early gains can be consolidated into a durable, self-sustaining model that continues to deliver value beyond government support.

Still, there is a clear shift underway. For years, Nigeria’s satellite story was one of quiet existence—present, functional, but largely peripheral to the national conversation. Today, it is becoming central to discussions about connectivity, innovation, and economic inclusion.

Egerton-Idehen captured this vision succinctly when she framed investment in space as an investment in education, healthcare, security, and commerce. That framing matters because it reframes the narrative: from space as a distant, technical domain to space as a practical tool for development.

In the end, the story of Nigeria’s satellite is not just about technology. It is about utilisation, leadership, and the ability to translate infrastructure into impact. After years of circling with untapped potential, the satellite that once seemed content to stand still is now moving—steadily, deliberately—into the centre of Nigeria’s development agenda.

Danjuma Amodu is a journalist and public analyst based in Abuja. He writes on governance, digital infrastructure, and public policy.

The Satellite That Refused to Stand Still: Why Nigeria’s Space Asset Is Finally Coming Into Its Own

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