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Forest Security Gaps Fuel Rise of Community Defence Groups, NCYP Warns FG

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Forest Security Gaps Fuel Rise of Community Defence Groups, NCYP Warns FG

By: Michael Mike

The Northern Christian Youth Professionals (NCYP) has raised fresh concerns over Nigeria’s worsening security landscape, warning that the growing emergence of community self-defence structures across the country signals a dangerous shift that could deepen national security fragmentation if not urgently addressed.

In a strongly worded statement issued on Monday and signed by its Chairman, Isaac Abrak, the group said Nigeria was approaching a “security turning point,” where communities increasingly feel compelled to defend themselves because of persistent attacks and the inability of existing security operations to maintain long-term territorial control in forested areas.

The group, while commending the Defence Headquarters and the Armed Forces for sustained offensives against terrorists and bandits operating within forest corridors, argued that military victories have repeatedly been undermined by the absence of permanent stabilisation and holding structures after clearance operations.

According to NCYP, the recurring pattern of dislodging armed groups from forests only for them to regroup and launch fresh attacks has remained one of the biggest weaknesses in Nigeria’s anti-terror campaign.

It noted that this pattern had played out across the North-East, North-West and North-Central regions and was now gradually extending into parts of the South-West, especially following recent security concerns linked to attacks around schools and rural settlements.

“The insecurity is no longer static; it is adapting geographically and exploiting governance gaps across forest territories,” the statement said.

The group warned that as insecurity spreads, more communities are resorting to local vigilante networks, hunters’ associations and informal defence groups for survival, a trend it described as both understandable and potentially dangerous if left outside a coordinated national framework.

Drawing parallels with international conflict zones, NCYP cited the experience of Iraq’s Sahwa (Awakening) Councils, where local Sunni communities mobilised against Al-Qaeda between 2005 and 2008, stressing that such initiatives only remained effective because they were eventually integrated into broader state security structures.

It also referenced community defence formations in Burkina Faso and Mali, warning that unregulated armed civilian groups often create new governance and security complications when multiple actors operate without central coordination.

The organisation, however, distinguished between informal vigilante groups and structured regional security outfits such as the Western Nigeria Security Network, codenamed Amotekun, which operates under state legislation and recognised institutional frameworks.

According to NCYP, the real danger lies in the unchecked rise of loosely coordinated armed groups operating independently across rural communities and forest regions.

The statement identified several major forest corridors allegedly exploited by criminal gangs and armed groups, including the Rugu forest belt spanning Katsina, Kaduna and Zamfara states, as well as the Birnin Gwari, Kamuku and Kuyambana forest axes.

It also pointed to Plateau State’s rural forest corridors linking Bokkos, Riyom, Bassa and Wase to neighbouring states such as Nasarawa, Benue, Kaduna and Bauchi, warning that the absence of integrated inter-state security coverage continues to provide escape and regrouping routes for armed elements.

NCYP further argued that the current pilot Forest Guard programme being implemented in selected states remains inadequate without nationwide expansion.

While applauding the recruitment of Forest Guards in Plateau State and other pilot areas, the group said isolated deployments would merely push criminal groups into neighbouring unprotected forests.

“In such situations, security pressure in one state only displaces armed groups into adjoining territories where they regroup and return,” the statement added.

The organisation recalled how Boko Haram insurgents previously exploited porous border regions linking Nigeria with Niger, Chad and Cameroon to evade military pressure before re-launching attacks, insisting that the same lesson now applies to Nigeria’s internal forest security challenge.

NCYP therefore called on the Federal Government, Defence Headquarters, the Office of the National Security Adviser and the Office of the Special Adviser to the President on Homeland Security to urgently transform the ongoing Forest Guard pilot initiative into a nationwide security architecture.

The current pilot programme operates in Adamawa, Borno, Kebbi, Kwara, Niger, Sokoto and Yobe states.

According to the group, expanding the Forest Guard structure nationwide would provide the military with a stabilisation and territorial holding force capable of securing cleared forests, improving intelligence gathering and strengthening local surveillance systems.

It maintained that the Armed Forces remain overstretched by simultaneous operations against insurgency, banditry, separatist violence, militancy and communal conflicts across different parts of the country.

“A nationwide Forest Guard framework would not replace the military, but would complement it by maintaining territorial control after clearance operations,” the statement noted.

NCYP warned that failure to urgently establish a coordinated national forest security structure could lead to the emergence of competing local security authorities operating with varying loyalties and without unified command oversight.

“The cost of delay will not be theoretical; it will be operational, structural and increasingly difficult to reverse,” the group warned.

Forest Security Gaps Fuel Rise of Community Defence Groups, NCYP Warns FG

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Tegbe Woos Investors to Power 35,000 Health Facilities, Says Healthcare Electrification Biggest Energy Opportunity in Africa

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Tegbe Woos Investors to Power 35,000 Health Facilities, Says Healthcare Electrification Biggest Energy Opportunity in Africa

By: Michael Mike

The Federal Government has intensified efforts to attract local and international capital into Nigeria’s healthcare sector, with Minister of Power, Joseph Tegbe declaring the electrification of over 35,000 health facilities nationwide as one of Africa’s most attractive investment opportunities.

Speaking at the National Healthcare Electrification Investor Matchmaking Forum held in Lagos under the Nigeria Power for Health Initiative (NPHI), Tegbe urged investors to embrace innovative and sustainable financing models capable of ending the chronic energy deficits that continue to undermine healthcare delivery across the country.

The forum, organised by the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare in partnership with UK PACT, brought together government officials, development partners, hospital administrators and private sector leaders to explore pathways for mobilising private capital into healthcare electrification.

Tegbe said reliable electricity had become indispensable to modern healthcare delivery, stressing that access to power was no longer merely an infrastructure issue but a critical determinant of patient outcomes, emergency response capabilities and the overall effectiveness of health institutions.

Describing himself as an early stakeholder in the initiative before assuming office as Minister of Power, he reaffirmed his commitment to driving its implementation, noting that the programme aligns with the power sector reform agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the administration’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

According to the minister, the country’s more than 35,000 registered primary, secondary and tertiary healthcare facilities represent a vast pipeline of commercially viable projects capable of attracting investment into solar mini-grids, hybrid energy systems, battery storage technologies, smart metering, energy management platforms and climate-resilient infrastructure.

“The opportunity before investors is significant and scalable,” Tegbe said, adding that healthcare electrification offers long-term prospects for sustainable returns while addressing a critical social need.

He assured prospective investors that the Federal Government would provide the policy support, regulatory certainty and inter-ministerial coordination required to de-risk investments and ensure successful project delivery.

Tegbe disclosed that the Ministry of Power is already implementing similar interventions through the World Bank-supported Nigeria Electrification Project, under which solar mini-grids and hybrid energy solutions have been deployed in healthcare facilities across the country.

He also pointed to the provisions of the Electricity Act as a robust regulatory framework that supports power purchase agreements, mini-grid licensing and increased participation by state governments in electricity projects.

The minister maintained that the ultimate goal of the initiative is to strengthen healthcare infrastructure and position Nigeria as a preferred destination for quality healthcare services in Africa.

Also speaking at the forum, Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Iziaq Adekunle Salako, described the NPHI as a strategic departure from traditional donor-dependent interventions towards a commercially sustainable Energy-as-a-Service model.

Under the framework, he explained, specialised energy providers would finance, install and maintain power systems for healthcare facilities, thereby eliminating one of the most persistent obstacles to effective healthcare delivery.

Salako noted that unreliable power supply continues to threaten the operation of theatres, diagnostic equipment, vaccine cold-chain systems and emergency services across many health institutions.

He said the initiative is built on blended financing mechanisms, institutional preparedness and national scalability, with the first phase targeting federal tertiary hospitals before expanding to primary and secondary healthcare facilities nationwide.

According to him, a new governance structure has already been established to drive implementation, strengthen investor confidence and unlock private-sector participation in the healthcare energy market.

The renewed push by government signals a major attempt to leverage private investment to solve one of the healthcare sector’s most enduring challenges, while simultaneously opening a potentially multi-billion-dollar market for clean energy developers and infrastructure financiers.

Tegbe Woos Investors to Power 35,000 Health Facilities, Says Healthcare Electrification Biggest Energy Opportunity in Africa

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Muslim Media Practitioners Demand Public Holiday for Islamic New Year

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Muslim Media Practitioners Demand Public Holiday for Islamic New Year

By: Michael Mike

The Muslim Media Practitioners of Nigeria (MMPN) has renewed its call on the federal and state governments to declare the first day of the Islamic calendar, Muharram 1, a public holiday, arguing that millions of Muslims deserve the same recognition accorded Christians on January 1 of the Gregorian calendar.

The group made the demand as Muslims across Nigeria and the world marked the commencement of Hijrah 1448 A.H on Tuesday.

In a statement signed by its National President, Alhaji Abdur-Rahman Balogun, MMPN said the declaration of a public holiday for the Islamic New Year would reflect fairness, justice, and adherence to the rule of law while strengthening religious harmony in the country.

“Muharram 1 is our own January 1. We want both the Federal and state governments alike to declare it as such in the interest of religious harmony in the country,” Balogun stated.

The association argued that official recognition of the Islamic New Year would give Muslims a greater sense of belonging and further reinforce national unity in Nigeria’s multi-religious society.

MMPN also urged governments at all levels to formally recognize and use the Islamic calendar alongside the Gregorian calendar in official engagements.

The group called on the Nigerian Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) to engage government authorities on the issue and other matters affecting the Muslim community.

While congratulating Muslims and non-Muslims on the new Islamic year, Balogun urged adherents of Islam to use the occasion for self-reflection, moral renewal, and prayers for the success of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration.

He also commended governors in several northern states as well as Oyo and Osun states for declaring public holidays to mark the Islamic New Year and urged other state governments to emulate the gesture.

On security, Balogun condemned ongoing attacks and killings by insurgent groups, describing them as un-Islamic, and appealed to perpetrators to embrace peace and end violence.

He further advocated tougher legislation against rape, kidnapping, and terrorism, lamenting what he described as a culture of impunity that allows many offenders to evade justice.

The MMPN president urged Nigerians to celebrate the Islamic New Year in moderation and pray for peace, stability, and progress in the country.

Muslim Media Practitioners Demand Public Holiday for Islamic New Year

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FG To Roll Out 10,000 Electric Tricycles To Nigerian Market In August, Says VP Shettima

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FG To Roll Out 10,000 Electric Tricycles To Nigerian Market In August, Says VP Shettima

Adds: President Tinubu’s priority is to move Nigeria from fragmented transport system to integrated logistics chain

By: Our Reporter

The Federal Government is set to roll out 10,000 electric tricycles for use as part of a broad plan to ease public transportation across Nigeria.

The tricycles will be distributed by the North East Development Commission (NEDC) in August, 2026 for use across the northeast region and beyond.

The Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, who disclosed this during a courtesy call by The Transporters For Tinubu / Shettima 2027, said the President “has approved the replication of the initiative in other parts of the country by the various regional development commissions.”

He noted that the priority of the administration of President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu is to move Nigeria from a fragmented transport system to an integrated logistics chain where ports, rail lines, CNG-powered trucks, inland waterways, airports and local feeder roads work together to support commerce, agriculture, industry and national integration.

Senator Shettima explained that the federal government’s transport reform agenda is anchored on the nationwide rollout of Compressed Natural Gas, major port upgrades and a stronger logistics chain.

This, he said, is aimed at improving working conditions for transport workers across road, rail, maritime, aviation and pipeline operations.

VP Shettima maintained that the Tinubu administration is determined to build a transport economy that lowers the cost of movement, reduces delays at ports, connects farms to markets, strengthens national productivity and gives transporters a more dignified place in the country’s development process.

“Our vision is an unbroken logistics chain, where a container moves from a deep-sea port to a rail wagon, then to a CNG-powered truck, then to a trader in Ariaria Market or Maiduguri, without delay or policy failure,” he said.

He said the Presidential Compressed Natural Gas Initiative has begun to prove that Nigeria can use its domestic gas resources to reduce the cost of transportation, especially for heavy-duty vehicles, while government continues to address the technical and infrastructure concerns affecting smaller vehicles.

“We said CNG could cut fuel costs by over 60 per cent, and many called it fantasy. Today, heavy-duty trucks run on Nigerian gas, proving sceptics wrong and returning money to your pockets,” he stated.

Senator Shettima added that the administration is also pushing reforms in the maritime sector through the operationalisation of Lekki Deep Sea Port, the development of the National Single Window and renewed attention to inland waterways, saying the objective is to make Nigerian ports more efficient and globally competitive.

“Before this administration, clearing a container could become an encounter with frustration, corruption, and decay. We promised to unlock the blue economy. Today, with Lekki Deep Sea Port operational, the National Single Window taking shape, and inland waterways receiving attention, our ports are preparing to compete with the world’s best,” he said.

The Vice President also assured transporters that the Federal Government would continue to support policies that promote affordable fuel, insurable fleets, bankable contracts and dignified working conditions.

“This administration shall continue to stand with the Nigerian transporter. We shall continue to fight for affordable fuel, insurable fleets, bankable contracts, and dignified working conditions. We shall build roads that last, rails that stretch across this great nation, ports that breathe, and airports that reflect our pride,” he said.

Earlier in his remarks, the Technical Adviser to the Vice President on Transportation, Logistics and Innovation, Prince Segun Obayendo, said the group, which constitutes a critical engine of Nigeria’s socio-economic survival, was unanimous in its endorsement and support for the Tinubu/Shettima presidency in the 2027 presidential election.

He said the executives of all the groups in the nation’s transport sector comprising air, maritime, rail and road unions, had consulted widely and were emphatic about their conviction and support for the Tinubu administration based on its achievements across different sectors.

Prince Obayendo said the group is convinced that the administration of President Tinubu has set the country on the path of positive growth hence they are prepared to mobilise the support of members of the various unions in the transport sector to ensure Mr President’s re-election in 2027.

For his part, Secretary-General of the Maritime Workers Union of Nigeria (MWUN), Comrade Oniha Erazua, expressed gratitude to the Tinubu administration for the recognition given to unions in the transport sector in his government.

He said transporters and other stakeholders are convinced that the reforms of the Tinubu administration in the sector would yield greater dividends if sustained, hence their resolve to support the Tinubu/Shettima ticket in the 2027 election.

FG To Roll Out 10,000 Electric Tricycles To Nigerian Market In August, Says VP Shettima

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