National News
Bayelsa State: A one-Man Governorship Race
Bayelsa State: A one-Man Governorship Race
By: Michael Mike
As the race for the governorship seat in Bayelsa State hots up, the baggage that the deputy governorship candidate carries may end as albatross on Chief Timipre Sylva
The race for the Creek Haven Government House in Yenagoa is hotting up. With incumbent Governor, Senator Douye Diri of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and former Minister of State for Petroleum Affairs, Chief Timipre Sylva of the All Progressives Congress (APC) are considered as the two formidable candidates for the most coveted seat. But recent happenings in the state has put Diri way ahead of his opponent who is having issues of opposition not only with his party, but also within his kitchen cabinet. The issues broke out into the open with his known loyalists coming out to oppose him in most devastating moves.
If it was designed to embarrassed Sylva, it was spectacularly effective and devasting. His son and political protégée, Mr. Israel Sunny-Goli, a former member of the House of Representatives had called the press to announce his verdict on the 11 November governorship election.
Sunny-Goli had told a crowded press conference that if the Bayelsa state governorship election was to hold today, Sylva will loose, and that Governor Douye Diri has proved his capability and capacity with unprecedented level of development that has taken place in the lost fours. He stressed that in the even of an election holding today Diri is mostly to take over 80 percent of the votes. It was a damning reality assessment of the political situation of the state.
The reason why the assessment was particularly damning was not only because Sunny-Goli was one of Sylva political sons, but someone who was known to face the reality of the politics in the state. He was a two-term member of the state House of Assembly and a two-term member of the Federal House of Representatives.
They say that in life, experience is the best teacher, and that we never stop learning; and that every experience we go through teaches us something new. But that not to say that every lesson learnt is of the life changing variety. But in the case of Sylva, it is.
Only in 2019, the election of Mr. David Lyon was overturned by a pronouncement of the Supreme Court because the deputy governorship candidate had issues with his names and certificate. Many people believed that the running mate to Lyon, Senator Degi, was nominated by Sylva and Sylva could not feign ignorance of the legal encumbrances against Degi. He was accused of not conducting due diligence on Degi before he was made the running mate to Lyon even when few persons saw the danger ahead and drew Sylva’s attention to the issue.
Yet, it was simply dismissed with a wave of the hand and everything was taken for granted. The Supreme Court simply nullified the election 24 hours before the swearing-in. Many of his party faithful still accused him of setting Lyon up to fail.
Today, Lyon is the biggest loser and he is still nursing the wound of having wasted his hard-earned resources in that election. Lyon has not been considered for any national appointment to comfort him.
Lightening, they say, never strikes at the same place twice, but for Sylva, the saying may not apply. The same situation seems to be repeating itself as Sylva who is the governorship candidate of the APC has in a most controversial move picked Mr. Joshua Maciver, who was accused of jailbreak as his running mate. This move, they insisted, is like setting himself to fail. A repeat of what happened to Lyon.
To most Bayelsans, Maciver was particularly remembered for his brutality against the people at the height of the militancy that rocked the Niger Delta between 1999 and 2007. This was why he was later arrested and sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment for murder.
To the people of the state, Maciver is ineligible to run for the November 11th, election going by records of his conviction and alleged jailbreak. A civil society group, Coalition for Social Justice and Equity Initiative (CSJEI) said that it has begun a process to approach the courts over the alleged ineligibility of the APC deputy governorship candidate. Lamenting that having a person of such criminal record in the highest level of government has security implication for the state and the nation.
The CSJEI contended that the risk and moral burden of such action will be too heavy for the state to bear at this most critical period of its history.
According to the Coalition, Maciver was allegedly convicted by a court of law and was sentenced to serve a 10 years jail term for murder and terrorism in a Kaduna state prison. Maciver, the group insisted, however, did not complete his sentence as he escaped from prison by allegedly pretending to be sick and needing treatment.
The group, through its Public Relations Officer, Ezra Areo, also claimed that despite being declared wanted by the Ministry of Interior and the decision of the administration of Late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua to offer Presidential pardon to militants during the militancy days in the Niger Delta, Joshua Maciver refused to embrace the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP) fearing that the Amnesty programme was a clandestine ploy by the federal government to round him and others up.
Areo stated that “Maciver has over the years publicly claimed to have accepted the Amnesty programme, however, he never presented himself for proper documentation like the 30,000 Amnesty beneficiaries to the Presidential Amnesty team. Maciver was not alone in this reasoning as over 10,000 ex-agitators felt the same way.”
The group also accused Joshua Maciver of alleged forgery of Federal Government documents. He was alleged to have forged a Presidential Amnesty identification card purportedly issued in August 2009 and numbered BY/B4/007/09.
“It is common knowledge that sometimes on the 25th of June 2009 the president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Late Musa Yar’adua issued AMNESTY PROCLAMATION wherein he granted amnesty to Niger-Delta Militants. It is also important to state that Amnesty is usually and generally, addressed to classes or even communities wherein it allows the government of a Nation or State to “forget” criminal acts, usually before prosecution has occurred. Amnesty has traditionally been used as a political tool of compromise and reunion following a war, which offences are usually politically inclined.”
“In the case Joshua Maciver, he was allegedly convicted by a competent court of jurisdiction sometime in 2006, for murder and terrorism and an alleged fugitive which conviction has no relation with militancy activity, therefore the amnesty proclamation of 2009 which cannot operate to serve as a pardon for the conviction of the offences committed by Joshua Maciver, which is not in any way associated with militant activities in the Niger-Delta.”
“At this juncture it is also imperative to understand the difference between amnesty and pardon. While AMNESTY is targeted towards group of people for forgetfulness of offences of political nature, PARDON seeks to set aside the punishment of an individual, for a criminal who has been TRIED AND CONVICTED. By the AMNESTY PROCLAMATION made on the 29th of June, 2009 same does not in any way seek to pardon or forget the conviction and sentencing of any individual howsoever called.”
The group insisted that this was the situation when the former Minister of State for Petroleum Resources and APC governorship candidate, Timipre Sylva, presented him to the people as his Deputy Governorship candidate.
Meanwhile, the Presidential Amnesty office under Maj Gen Barry Tariye Ndiomu (rtd.) has disowned Joshua Maciver as not being a “beneficiary of the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua pardon in 2009.”
Following the series of crises trailing the APC governorship candidate and his deputy and barely three months to the election, the likelihood of the APC candidate contesting the election with Maciver is dicey.
To most Bayelsans, Governor Douye Diri has no opposition and that if the election was held today, Governor Diri will win.
Bayelsa State: A one-Man Governorship Race
National News
From Ports to Food: How Partnership with China is Driving Nigeria’s Economic Transformation
From Ports to Food: How Partnership with China is Driving Nigeria’s Economic Transformation
By: Adeola Adelabu
For years, Nigeria’s conversations around economic transformation have been long on ambition but short on execution. Increasingly, however, a more pragmatic pattern is emerging, one defined by structured partnerships, targeted investments, and a growing emphasis on delivery. Nowhere is this shift more visible than in the evolving relationship between Nigeria and China.
As bilateral cooperation deepens, a broad portfolio of projects spanning infrastructure, manufacturing, and agriculture is beginning to reshape Nigeria’s economic trajectory. The emerging signal is clear: development is no longer being framed solely around policy intent, but around measurable outcomes.
A clear demonstration of this shift is the operational success of the Lekki Deep Sea Port. Developed in partnership with China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC), the port stands as one of the most significant private-sector-led infrastructure investments in Nigeria in recent years. With over $1 billion in equity contribution by CHEC, the facility is now fully operational, easing port congestion, improving cargo handling efficiency, and strengthening Nigeria’s position as a maritime gateway for West Africa.
Beyond its infrastructure value, Lekki Deep Sea Port is increasingly seen as a case study in what structured international partnerships can deliver when aligned with domestic priorities. It highlights a key lesson: investment alone is not sufficient; execution, governance, and operational sustainability are what convert capital into national value.
However, infrastructure is only the starting point of industrial transformation. The next frontier lies in rebuilding Nigeria’s productive base, particularly in steel. No modern economy achieves industrial depth without a functioning steel industry, and this reality places renewed attention on the revival of the Ajaokuta Steel Company.
For decades, Ajaokuta has remained an unfulfilled potential. Yet, renewed collaboration involving Chinese technical and investment partners has reopened the possibility of repositioning it as a core pillar of Nigeria’s industrial ecosystem. A functional steel plant would reduce import dependency, lower production costs across sectors, and stimulate downstream industries such as construction, fabrication, and manufacturing.
The strategic logic is further reinforced by Nigeria’s resource endowment, particularly iron ore deposits in Itakpe, Lokoja and Ogun state. Combined with improving logistics infrastructure, including rail and inland transport corridors, the fundamentals for a viable steel value chain are present. What remains critical is execution discipline and sustained policy continuity over time.
If infrastructure and steel represent the backbone of industrialisation, agriculture represents its most immediate and socially visible impact. In a context where food inflation continues to pressure household incomes, interventions that directly affect food supply and pricing carry both economic and political significance. This is where the National Integrated Poultry Project becomes particularly consequential.
According to Joseph Tegbe, the project is designed to address structural constraints in Nigeria’s poultry value chain, particularly high feed costs and supply inefficiencies. By integrating large-scale poultry production with domestic cultivation of key feed inputs such as maize and soybean, the initiative directly targets the most significant cost drivers in the sector.
The economic rationale is straightforward: reducing feed costs lowers production costs, and lower production costs improve affordability for consumers. In practical terms, this is expected to translate into more accessible prices for eggs and poultry products, which remain critical sources of affordable protein for millions of Nigerian households.
The implications extend beyond consumers to producers. Poultry farmers, many of whom operate under volatile input pricing and thin margins, stand to benefit from more stable feed supply chains and reduced production costs. This could enhance profitability, encourage sector expansion, and strengthen resilience across the agricultural value chain.
The scale of ambition is significant. Pilot phases are scheduled for Kaduna and Oyo States, with plans for national expansion thereafter. Each integrated facility is expected to operate at industrial scale, housing up over one million layer birds alongside substantial broiler capacity, and collectively producing millions of eggs daily.
The programme is projected to generate tens of thousands of direct jobs and hundreds of thousands of indirect opportunities across farming, logistics, processing, and distribution.
Yet, Nigeria’s development history underscores an important caution: ambition does not automatically translate into impact. The country has seen several large-scale agricultural and industrial programmes falter due to weak coordination, inconsistent policy implementation, and limited accountability mechanisms.
This makes execution the defining variable. Clear timelines, institutional coordination, and measurable performance indicators will determine whether these initiatives become transformational or remain under-realised potential.
Encouragingly, recent engagements under the Nigeria–China Strategic Partnership indicate that over $20 billion in investment commitments have been mobilised across agriculture, mining, automotive manufacturing, and energy.
While this signals strong investor confidence, commitments must ultimately be judged by outcomes, jobs created, food prices reduced, industries strengthened, and productivity improved.
Taken together, the trajectory from Lekki Deep Sea Port to Ajaokuta Steel and the National Integrated Poultry Project reflects a more integrated approach to economic development, one that connects infrastructure, industry, and food systems within a single framework of cooperation. The Nigeria–China partnership is therefore evolving beyond diplomacy into an economic delivery platform. The real question is no longer about the scale of ambition, but the consistency of execution.
If Nigeria succeeds, the impact will be tangible: lower food costs, stronger industrial capacity, and expanded employment opportunities. If it fails, these initiatives risk joining a long list of unrealised development plans. Ultimately, the difference will be defined not by vision, but by execution.
Adeola Adelabu is the Lead, Media and Public Relations at the Nigeria–China Strategic Partnership (NCSP).
From Ports to Food: How Partnership with China is Driving Nigeria’s Economic Transformation
National News
Nigeria Launches Nationwide Drive to Safely Manage Small Battery Waste
Nigeria Launches Nationwide Drive to Safely Manage Small Battery Waste
By: Michael Mike
Nigeria has taken a major step toward tackling a fast-growing but often overlooked environmental threat with the launch of a national initiative to ensure the safe collection and recycling of small-sized waste batteries.
Unveiled at the Federal Ministry of Environment’s Green Building in Abuja, the programme introduces a structured system for the environmentally sound management of discarded household batteries—ranging from button cells in wristwatches to AA and AAA batteries in remote controls, as well as lithium-ion units powering mobile phones and other portable devices.
Speaking at the event, Minister of Environment, Balarabe Lawal, described the initiative as a decisive intervention to close a long-standing gap in Nigeria’s waste management system.
He noted that while large batteries such as those used in vehicles often attract recycling value, smaller batteries are routinely ignored and improperly disposed of, posing serious risks to both human health and the environment.

“These small-sized batteries are deceptively dangerous,” the minister said. “They are easily discarded, yet they contain toxic substances that can contaminate our soil, water, and food systems. This initiative is about protecting lives—especially those of women and children who are most vulnerable to the impacts of environmental pollution.”
At the core of the programme is the deployment of specially designed collection receptacles across strategic locations in the Federal Capital Territory, including markets, schools, offices, and motor parks. The goal is to make safe disposal accessible at the point of use, ensuring that hazardous battery waste does not end up in dumpsites or informal recycling channels.
The initiative is being implemented in partnership with the Alliance for Responsible Battery Recycling (ARBR), the Producer Responsibility Organisation for Nigeria’s battery sector under the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) framework.
Established in 2019, ARBR is tasked with coordinating the collection, transportation, and environmentally compliant recycling of battery waste nationwide.
Providing an overview of the project, ARBR representatives highlighted the growing volume of small battery waste driven by increased technology use and energy access across Nigeria. Despite their widespread use, these batteries often enter general waste streams at the end of their lifecycle, releasing hazardous materials such as cadmium, mercury, nickel, lithium, and lead into the environment.

“Collection is the foundation of environmentally sound management,” ARBR stated. “Without it, the entire value chain—from transportation and storage to treatment and recycling—breaks down. This project is designed to ensure that these batteries are captured early and directed into safe, regulated systems.”
Beyond collection, the programme establishes a coordinated downstream process involving the evacuation of collected batteries to central aggregation hubs, from where they will be transported to licensed recycling facilities, including export where necessary under national regulations. Key partners, including the Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) and the Waste Pickers Association of Nigeria (WAPAN), are expected to play critical roles in ensuring the system’s efficiency and sustainability.
The initiative is anchored on Nigeria’s National Policy on Battery Waste Management (2022) and the National Environmental (Battery Control) Regulations (2024), which mandate the responsible lifecycle management of batteries in line with global environmental standards.
In a goodwill message, the Director General of the National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA), Prof. Innocent Barikor, described the launch as a strong demonstration of Nigeria’s commitment to meeting its obligations under international environmental agreements, including the Basel Convention on hazardous waste.
He emphasized that the rapid proliferation of battery-powered devices has created an escalating waste stream that demands urgent and coordinated regulatory action.
“This is not just a technical exercise,” Barikor said. “It is a declaration of intent that Nigeria is ready to protect public health and preserve its ecosystems through science-based and enforceable solutions.”
He further noted that the initiative builds on groundwork laid under the PROBAMET project, which helped map informal sector activities, identify infrastructure gaps, and raise awareness among stakeholders in the battery value chain.
Stakeholders at the event commended the Federal Ministry of Environment for its leadership, while also acknowledging the role of international development partners in providing technical and financial support for the project.
Experts say the initiative could also unlock economic opportunities by integrating informal waste collectors into formal systems and advancing Nigeria’s circular economy agenda—where waste is treated as a resource rather than a burden.
As the programme rolls out, officials are calling on Nigerians to adopt responsible disposal habits, stressing that the success of the initiative depends not only on infrastructure but also on public participation.
“Every battery properly disposed of is a life protected and an ecosystem preserved,” the minister said. “This is the beginning of a nationwide movement toward cleaner, safer environmental practices.”
The launch marks what stakeholders describe as a critical turning point in Nigeria’s approach to hazardous waste management, with expectations that the model could be expanded beyond the Federal Capital Territory to other parts of the country in the near future.
Nigeria Launches Nationwide Drive to Safely Manage Small Battery Waste
National News
US. Embassy Abuja Seals Landmark Tech Partnership with Ilorin Innovation Hub
US. Embassy Abuja Seals Landmark Tech Partnership with Ilorin Innovation Hub
By: Michael Mike
The U.S. Embassy Abuja has signed a three-year Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Ilorin Innovation Hub, launching its first public-private partnership outside the American Spaces Network and signaling a strategic expansion of U.S. engagement in Nigeria’s fast-growing technology ecosystem.
The agreement, formalized at a ceremony in Abuja, is set to deepen collaboration in artificial intelligence (AI), science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), as well as professional development, particularly targeting young innovators and tech professionals in Kwara State.

Speaking at the event, U.S. Embassy Public Diplomacy Counselor Lee McManis described the partnership as a significant step toward strengthening innovation-led economic ties between Nigeria and the United States. He noted that Kwara is steadily emerging as a technology hub, attracting growing interest from American companies eager to invest, compete, and collaborate within the region’s evolving digital economy.
Under the terms of the MOU, both parties will roll out a series of programs showcasing American leadership in technology and innovation. These initiatives will include business English training, STEM-focused education, and capacity-building workshops designed to align Nigerian talent with the demands of U.S. industries.
The partnership is also expected to create new pathways for knowledge exchange, entrepreneurship, and workforce development, reinforcing broader efforts to position Nigeria as a competitive player in the global tech landscape.
Officials say the initiative reflects a shared vision centered on innovation, education, and opportunity as drivers of sustainable economic growth. The collaboration is poised to not only empower local talent but also strengthen bilateral relations through practical, skills-based engagement.
With this move, the U.S. Embassy is extending its footprint beyond traditional platforms, embracing targeted partnerships that directly impact emerging innovation ecosystems across Nigeria.
US. Embassy Abuja Seals Landmark Tech Partnership with Ilorin Innovation Hub
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