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Nuj Borno council, post election thoughts, functional committees of progress and the need to hurry up

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Nuj Borno council, post election thoughts, functional committees of progress and the need to hurry up

Sam Kayode

Now that the long awaited election of a new council executive has come and gone, one’s greatest fear has been, how to break the obvious ice of disunity among some categories of members. Well like the partisans, Nigerians always find a way to unify among common interests sometimes before, during or after their own elections. In the case of the Borno council of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ), I believe the desired unification is going on well, but if there are any remnants of anger remaining, within our great union, it’s time for such comrades to bring in their own input so our new council will work effectively again. It’s attainable if we are ready to rise above certain mediocre idiosyncrasies associated with the way things were done before.

That certain wrong things were done this or that way before does not make it correct. The most correct phenomenon in this short life of ours given by our creator is change. So one will expect colleagues to adjust to “change” accordingly and appropriately. Before now, the chairmen were over burdened with too many activities even more than they can chew. A press center committee was set up in the last dispensation and one thing led to another the chairperson had to leave her station the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA) for the University of Maiduguri. The rest is history because much was not gotten from them as dividends. As a matter of fact, there has not been any strong press Centre committee activity in the executives I have witnessed from comrades Kakami, Baba Shek, Talba and even till date.
This is why an active press centre committee is needed to give members dividends of democracy. We cannot continue to do things the same old way gentlemen. This is why we must be in a hurry to fix our own now so our chairman Dauda Ilya can have time to carry out his duties as a reporter since he obviously did not ask for a “leave of absence” for him to do his job effectively.

Time to inaugurate relevant committees

Its time for the various committees to roll in and start work. It’s a deal we signed verbally during our campaigns that we will bring everyone on board to proffer solutions to our acts as comrades in the press Centre. As a result, over burdening the chairman and his executives unnecessarily with petty assignments like fixing bulbs that should be handled by the secretary of such a committee, will not give them ample room to think about what next which the chair should be involved in using his capacity and willpower to think along side his executives following after his campaign promises for his colleagues.

Press centre committee

One of such a vital committee in my mind’s eye is the “press centre committee”. It is not right for the chairman of the union to be the one to rush to the office of Yola electricity at Monday market for instance to fix our electricity supplies whenever it is cut. His duty if he visits the office of the regional manager is to seek partnership to benefit members and nothing more. There are so many resources out there for us to harvest and that is what we expect the chairman and his team to go after because we cannot continue to rely only on the government all the time.
Paying electricity bills is the function of the press Centre committee. They should off course do this in conjunction with the secretary who is the head of the secretariat, fixer of the nuts and bolts and keeper of all files and documents belonging to the union. It is the press center committee that will be generating desired funds and remitting same to the treasurer. The advantage of this is that too much of familiarity has been created between the exco members and the shop owners, the committee would not show them how whitish or brownish their teeth are. They should have a complete statistics of the rent payers and how much is generated. The committee system had existed in all the articles of constitutions I have seen and read from Sani Zoro’s Era to the present Era. Borno is backwards because they rely too much on the exco system other than allowing the committee to do the dirty job and cleaning the stable for them after if mistakes are made.

Ethics committee

If a colleague runs foul of our constitution, the ethics committee should be there to handle it. As a matter of fact, I understand the names of members of this committee have been penciled but we don’t know what is causing the delay in their inauguration because such committees are not driven by gratis or honorarium. As a matter of fact, this committee is supposed to be extremely independent because they owe their allegiances mostly to the letters of the constitution so that they are not found to be below board or siding with any side of a conflict which will obviously jeopardize the result they will turn over to the council. Members of this committee must also be knowledgeable about the constitutional way things are done at the national level so they don’t fall into the weakness of na so we de do am. If a colleague decides to drink heavy alcohol and disgrace the profession in a public place by doing wrong things, it’s this committee that will handle such a petition from the public and make recommendations to congress. The ethics committee are advocators always dressing well and living above board. They cannot be found in a beer parlor guzzling alcohol at “artillery” till midnight because that will deem their status in the eyes of ordinary colleagues who still behave sheepishly in this part of the country.

Welfare committee

When a member is assaulted physically or battered by an irate crowd in a bid to carry out his or her constitutional duty, the welfare committee chair and his or her people should be at the spot to douse the tension. It is they who should be the first set of people to visit that member before intimating the chair and exco about the state of affairs of the wounded or slain colleagues. At the end of the day if congress is to be alerted by a press release of what really happened, it is them that would write such a release in conjunction with the secretary which would be signed by the chairman. There is a need for the treasurer to be a natural member of the welfare committee because of her crucial roles concerning payments of hospital bills or sourcing for funds to bury a colleague in case such a Comrade male or female has paid the Supreme sacrifice.

Nobody knows tomorrow, especially the outcome of the insurgency we are battling with. That makes Borno peculiar and such a committee “must” exist to carry out that role. Committees are not meant to make members of exco jobless so to speak but they will be doing their natural duties we elected them from alongside the new roles given to them as committee chairmen. The two ex official members are also natural members that should be shared among such committees. We don’t expect the ethics committee to be completed without the only serving lawyer in the executive Comrade Abdulsalam. That would help a lot when we have challenges related with the public where our colleagues are involved deeply. The case of N14 million land sale is purely an ethical issue and they should have been in the fore front for the ethics committee instead of the exco directly which can bring bad blood. Therefore who ever thinks this is not necessary needs to search each or her brain to understand the peculiarities of Borno. The capacity of the chair of this team is vital and fundamental. He or she cannot be thinking inside the box and hope to succeed. Far from it.

Needed attraction of members to the center through more food and drinks outlets.

So many challenges need to be fixed to move the Press Centre from where we met it to where it should be by the time the Chairman Dauda Ilya led executives will finish their first term in office. And one of those is the provision of steady electricity supplies beyond the national grid. And to do this, solar panels have been one of the options on our campaign plan B which I believe many of us will be excited about. It must be done quickly before the heat season heads for its peak. As a matter of fact, this is the only reason why colleagues will become regular visitors to the main hall or any study corner to relax or work as expected. The chairman of this 5,6 or 7 men committee from the 7 chapels does not need to ask a kobo from congress to work after a take off grant. The greatest support they need is capacity to do the job and not been spoon fed with honorarium from congress. Any one who doesn’t know how to think outside the box should not be allowed to be a member of the press Centre committee as if it’s job for the boys because we worked for the victory of the current exco.

Job for the boys syndrome is the most disgusting thing to keep in your mindset if you want to work for everyone say in the area of security. You must think outside the box and get solar panels to boast electricity in the place.
The Yola electricity is obviously the plan A and we must do whatever we can to make a plan B happen. We must look for a digital meter for instance which I learnt from the zonal manager will be installed free of charge. We must also extricate our power consumption from that of the shop owners outside the building. They must get their meters too. These are some of the duties of the committee which must be stamped.

It’s up to the exco to work on the plan on ground to have a permanent shopping complex that will outlive all of us. The plan is already on ground as created by chairman Baba Shek and his exco, so we don’t need to look further for a plan. All we need is to start saving towards building our shopping complex.

More food outlet is another plan and the earlier we do something about good quality food the better. Not excessive maggi from indomie noodles. If you want to know why people don’t go there regularly it’s because of the lack of “variety” of food. It’s really dumb and insulting for anyone to sit down in his corner and assume that we already have enough food outlets. Other press Centres have up to 20 or 30 food outlets which has turned their Centres to variety point for civil and the military society to patronize them. This is the only way we can have competition. The essence for increasing the food outlets is to bring the standard and quality we are being served by creating competition. Even when the Nawojians take over, they must be given competitions so that they do not drop their guards and start taking us for granted. That is how business is run. You don’t piety people in businesses. You take proactive steps to safeguard the future. Good food is beyond painting the buildings and putting Ac. It goes beyond maggi poisoning that we relish now as food. How can we be productive if we don’t have good food? And who says it’s only in your home you should get good food devoid of all these poisons we eat?
Create a variety for food and watch the difference in the crowd flow from members to non members.

Partner with Hebron and other food vendors people visit in town and the pool of customers at our backyard in the UN hub who leave us to Hebron and Co will begin to stop by and we will begin to see the fruits of our turnaround. If you want the coolest drinks in town the best partner to look for is “today’s” and you will be glad we did. Gentlemen it’s time for us to think outside the box so that our exco do not begin to loose capacity steam thinking of how to please us besides their primary duties in their various media houses. I agree that some colleagues are mere lame ducks without capacity to back their certifications but most are loaded with ideas but are inhibited because nobody will listen to the right thing.

As for our dear pepper soup varieties, we are yet to get it right not to talk of snacks. Life at the press Centre is not just about beer drinking. It’s a variety of good food and clean people with clean brand new toilets at the beck and call of our visitors from outside. Think about this gentlemen as we prepare for the first press week organized by the Dauda Ilya led council of Borno State.

Let me use this opportunity to sympathize with many of our colleagues who have friends and relatives who lost out in the Monday market tragedy. May God console them even as the government and stake holders plan to bring them back to their feet. Amen.

Nuj Borno council, post election thoughts, functional committees of progress and the need to hurry up

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OPINION: Seven Terror Commanders Returned from Hajj. The Bigger Question Is: Who Cleared Them?

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OPINION: Seven Terror Commanders Returned from Hajj. The Bigger Question Is: Who Cleared Them?

By Zagazola Makama

Seven suspected Boko Haram and ISWAP commanders reportedly completed one of the world’s most scrutinised international pilgrimages, boarded aircraft, travelled across international borders, landed at an international airport in Nigeria, and were only arrested upon arrival.

Pause for a moment. This is not merely another counterterrorism success story. It is also a frightening story about possible institutional failure. The obvious question should not only be how they were arrested. The more important question is: how did they get there in the first place?

Somewhere between the forests and the holy city of Makkah, somebody processed documents. Somebody approved travel. Somebody verified identities.
Somebody stamped passports. Somebody issued clearances. Somebody looked away.

And unless those “somebodies” are identified, arresting seven commanders may only scratch the surface of a much bigger security problem.

Last week, another controversy emerged when security analyst and Convener of the Katsina Security Community Initiative, Dr. Bashir Kurfi, alleged that the Katsina State Government sponsored some bandit leaders to Saudi Arabia as part of peace initiatives, claiming they received travel packages worth about ₦10 million each.

The Katsina State Government has categorically denied the allegation, describing it as false, baseless and politically motivated. Fair enough.
A denial is expected. But is a denial the end of the matter? Or should it be the beginning of a thorough investigation? That is the real issue.

When allegations of this magnitude are made by a known security advocate and they intersect with the later arrest of seven suspected terrorist commanders returning from Hajj, responsible institutions should not simply trade statements.

They should establish facts. Because Nigerians deserve answers. Were any suspected terrorists able to obtain Nigerian passport and other travel documents? If yes, how? Who verified their identities? Were aliases used? Did anyone inside any government institution facilitate the process?were there collaborators?

For years, Nigerians have focused almost exclusively on terrorists carrying rifles in the forests. Perhaps it is time to pay equal attention to insiders in offices. Terrorism rarely survives on guns alone. It also survives on compromised officials. It survives on insiders willing to replace patriotism with profit.

A terrorist cannot manufacture an international passport.He cannot approve immigration records.He cannot clear himself through airport procedures.He cannot erase himself from watchlists without help.Somewhere, someone opens the door.That person is just as dangerous as the man carrying the gun.

If the Interior Minister’s revelation is accurate, then this development should trigger one of the most comprehensive internal investigations Nigeria has conducted in recent years.

Nigeria has spent billions fighting Boko Haram and ISWAP.Thousands of soldiers have paid the ultimate price.Entire communities have been destroyed. Families have been displaced.

To then discover that suspected terrorist commanders were able to complete an international pilgrimage before being intercepted should concern every Nigerian.

OPINION: Seven Terror Commanders Returned from Hajj. The Bigger Question Is: Who Cleared Them?

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OPINION: The Silence After Risku’s Murder Is Dangerous — Benue Must Speak Before Violence Speaks for It

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OPINION: The Silence After Risku’s Murder Is Dangerous — Benue Must Speak Before Violence Speaks for It

By Zagazola Makama

Several hours have passed since the brutal murder of the Chairman of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) in Benue State, Alhaji Ardo Risku, and his son, Ibrahim. Yet, what has echoed louder than the gunshots that ended their lives is the deafening silence from the Benue State Government. That silence is troubling.

According to multiple security sources, Risku was not just another community leader. He was widely regarded by security agencies as one of the most peaceful Fulani leaders in Benue State. A man who consistently stood on the side of dialogue rather than violence. He spent years encouraging restraint, persuading communities to embrace peaceful coexistence, and working closely with security agencies to prevent attacks and reprisals.

Ironically, he was murdered while returning from yet another peace meeting.If there is any definition of dying in the service of peace, this is it.Those who worked closely with him say his efforts played a significant role in keeping many parts of Benue relatively calm over the past several months.

At a time when the state had every reason to descend into another cycle of bloodshed, Risku remained one of the bridges connecting deeply divided communities. That bridge has now been targeted to be destroyed by the enemies of the state who benefits from crises.

Even more heartbreaking is the fact that Risku himself had repeatedly expressed fears that enemies of peace were after him. During previous peace engagements, he openly warned that there were individuals determined to eliminate him because of his commitment to reconciliation. On one occasion, he reportedly cancelled a peace meeting organised by a local government chairman in Benue after receiving credible security concerns about threats to his life.

Sadly, those fears became reality. One senior security official who knew Risku described his death as “disturbing, painful and entirely undeserved.” “He was a good man,” the officer said. “Throughout the years, he was never found wanting in any criminal activity. He never encouraged violence. He consistently supported every peace initiative. Ironically, peace became his death sentence,”

“This man spends years preaching peace. He convinces angry communities to embrace dialogue instead of revenge. He works with security agencies. He attends every peace meetings. He risks his own life trying to prevent bloodshed.Then he is murdered on his way home after honouring another invitation for peace talks.

In the end, his fears proved justified. The enemies of peace found him. But where were the voices of leadership? Still searching for the right press release? Or perhaps someone was calculating the political cost of condemning the murder of a Fulani man. Because these days, it appears that condemning the killing of an innocent citizen has become a political risk rather than a moral obligation.

Let’s ask the uncomfortable question. Would the condemnation have taken this long if the victim belonged to another ethnic group? That question alone should trouble every Nigerian.
Since when did ethnicity become the deciding factor in determining whose life deserves immediate sympathy?

Risku had lived in Benue for decades. He invested his energy in promoting peaceful coexistence. Security agencies trusted him enough to involve him in every peace initiatives.
Yet after his murder, official silence became louder than the bullets that killed him. What exactly are we telling other peace advocates?

Infact, hypocrites who tried to justify the killing are saying that he was killed by his own people in order to truncate the relative peace in the state.

The greatest beneficiaries of this silence are not grieving families. They are those who profit from conflict. Every peacemaker removed from the equation creates more room for extremists to recruit, manipulate and divide communities.

This is how wars are sustained, not only by those who pull triggers, but sometimes by those who cannot find the courage to condemn those who do. The murder of Ardo Risku is not simply about one Fulani man. It is about whether governments will speak only when it is politically convenient.

Governor Hyacinth Alia should rise above political calculations. He has an opportunity to demonstrate leadership at this critical moment.
Leadership is not measured by how loudly one speaks during campaign rallies. It is measured by how quickly one stands with every victims, even when doing so attracts criticism. Justice has no tribe. Condemnation has no religion. Empathy should have no ethnicity.

Is every Fulani man now to be judged solely by his ethnicity? If Risku whose record of peaceful engagement was acknowledged even by security agencies could become a victim simply because of who he was, then Nigeria is travelling down a road that no responsible society should ever accept.

Criminals should be identified by their crimes not by their ethnicity. Justice must remain individual. Collective guilt has never solved insecurity anywhere in the world. It only creates new victims and fresh cycles of revenge.

This is precisely why the Benue State Government must act, not tomorrow, not next week, but now. A clear public condemnation, reassurance to all communities, and a transparent investigation would send the message that every innocent life matters equally under the law. More importantly, security agencies must move swiftly to identify and arrest those responsible. There should be no sacred cows, no excuses and no delays.

Every security formation operating in Benue, troops of Operation Wirld Stroke, Police, the Department of State Services, the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps and other relevant agencies, must immediately heighten surveillance in vulnerable communities. Intelligence gathering should be intensified, confidence-building measures strengthened, and every effort made to prevent revenge attacks.

Intelligence operations should be intensified immediately because history has shown that when respected community leaders are murdered, retaliation often follows. Stopping the next killing is just as important as investigating the last one.

Benue has bled enough. If the objective of those behind this killing was to destroy the fragile peace that had held for months, then government silence only risks helping them achieve exactly that.

Zagazola is a Counter Insurgency Expert and Security Analyst in the Lake Chad Region

OPINION: The Silence After Risku’s Murder Is Dangerous — Benue Must Speak Before Violence Speaks for It

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OPINION: USAID, Elon Musk, and Why Nigeria Must Demand Full Transparency from Foreign-Funded Organizations

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OPINION: USAID, Elon Musk, and Why Nigeria Must Demand Full Transparency from Foreign-Funded Organizations

By: Zagazola Makama

When Elon Musk and President Donald Trump’s administration moved to dismantle large portions of USAID’s operations in February 2025 through the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), the reaction across the world was immediate and deeply polarized.

To some, it was an attack on humanitarian assistance and development programmes that support vulnerable populations across Africa, Asia and Latin America. To others, it was a long-overdue attempt to expose what they viewed as an opaque international funding network operating beyond effective public scrutiny.

At the time, many Nigerians rushed to defend USAID and other international development organizations. Critics of the DOGE initiative accused Trump and Musk of targeting political opponents and undermining humanitarian work. Few were willing to entertain questions about how billions of dollars in foreign aid are distributed, monitored and accounted for.

More than a year later, however, the debate has not disappeared. Instead, it has intensified and gained tractions.

In Washington, lawmakers, researchers, journalists and policy analysts continue to debate whether U.S. foreign assistance programmes have, intentionally or unintentionally, financed organizations, projects or networks that later became linked to instability, extremism or political interference in foreign countries.

Supporters of the move argued that DOGE was simply demanding accountability and transparency for billions of dollars in U.S. taxpayer-funded foreign assistance. According to them, legitimate lifesaving programmes were not eliminated but were instead transferred to the U.S. State Department for continued administration. Critics, however, argued that the cuts risked disrupting humanitarian programmes that millions of vulnerable people depended upon around the world.

The controversy quickly expanded beyond budgetary concerns and evolved into a broader debate about the true purpose of USAID and the role of foreign aid in advancing U.S. interests abroad.

One of the most significant allegations came from U.S. Congressman Scott Perry, who claimed during a congressional hearing that some U.S. foreign aid funding had found its way, directly or indirectly, to terrorist organizations including Boko Haram, ISIS, Al-Qaeda and ISIS-K. Perry cited concerns over oversight failures and questioned whether American taxpayers were unknowingly financing extremist networks through aid programmes operating in unstable regions.

The session, titled “The War on Waste: Stamping Out the Scourge of Improper Payments and Fraud,” focused on alleged misappropriations of taxpayer funds.
“Who gets some of that money? Does that name ring a bell to anybody in the room? Because your money, your money, $697 million annually, plus the shipments of cash funds in Madrasas, ISIS, Al-Qaeda, Boko Haram, ISIS Khorasan, terrorist training camps. That’s what it’s funding,” Perry

Perry further cited USAID’s reported funding of $136 million for building 120 schools in Pakistan, alleging that there was “zero evidence” of the schools’ construction.
Perry added, ” If you think that the programme under Operation Enduring Sentinel entitled Women’s Scholarship Endowment, which receives $60 million annually, or the Young Women Lead, which gets about $5 million annually, is going to women who, by the way, if you read the Inspector General’s report, is telling you that the Taliban does not allow women to speak in public, yet somehow you’re believing, and American people are supposed to believe, that this money is going for the betterment of the women in Afghanistan. It is not.

You are funding terrorism, and it’s coming through USAID. And it’s not just Afghanistan, because Pakistan’s right next door.
“USAID spent $840 million in the last year, the last 20 years, on Pakistan’s education-related programme. It includes $136 million to build 120 schools, of which there is zero evidence that any of them were built. Why would there be any evidence? The Inspector General can’t get in to see them.

But you know what? We doubled down and spent $20 million from USAID to create educational television programs for children unable to attend the physical school. Yeah, they can’t attend it, because it doesn’t exist. You paid for it. “Somebody else got the money. You are paying for terrorism. This has got to end.”he said.

The allegations attracted international attention, particularly in Nigeria, where Boko Haram and ISWAP insurgencies have caused widespread devastation over the past decade. However, the allegations remain disputed, and no definitive public investigation has yet established that USAID intentionally funded Boko Haram or other terrorist groups.

The debate also extended to USAID’s involvement in various countries around the world. Critics argued that USAID had long served as a tool of American political influence, pointing to its activities in countries such as Serbia, Georgia, Ukraine, Venezuela, Bolivia, Cuba, Egypt, Tunisia, Lebanon, Haiti and Kyrgyzstan. According to critics, USAID-funded programmes often coincided with political transitions, opposition movements or so-called “color revolutions.”

Documents released over the years, including diplomatic communications and investigative reports, have fueled claims that aid programs sometimes served broader geopolitical objectives beyond humanitarian assistance.

Supporters of USAID reject these claims and maintain that the agency’s programmes were designed to promote democracy, civil society development, governance reforms and economic growth rather than regime change.

Another major controversy involved USAID’s partnership with EcoHealth Alliance and research collaborations involving the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China. Critics alleged that U.S.-funded research contributed to gain-of-function experiments that may have played a role in the emergence of COVID-19. Some commentators have argued that funding routed through EcoHealth Alliance helped support coronavirus research at the Wuhan laboratory.

These allegations gained traction after the COVID-19 pandemic, which killed millions of people globally and caused unprecedented economic disruption. However, the origins of COVID-19 remain the subject of ongoing scientific and political debate, and there is no universally accepted conclusion linking USAID funding directly to the creation of the virus.

Additional allegations raised by critics include claims that USAID funded controversial programmes in several countries, supported organizations later accused of misconduct, and operated projects that aligned closely with broader U.S. foreign policy objectives. Critics have also pointed to reports concerning Afghanistan, Cuba, Venezuela and other countries as evidence that aid programmes sometimes served strategic geopolitical purposes.

This is where Elon Musk’s intervention changed the conversation. Whether one admires him or opposes him, Musk forced public attention onto questions that many institutions preferred to avoid. He challenged long-standing assumptions about foreign aid. He questioned bureaucratic structures that had operated for decades with limited public scrutiny.

Supporters of DOGE and Elon Musk argue that these controversies justified a comprehensive review of USAID operations. They credit Musk with exposing weaknesses in oversight systems and forcing public scrutiny of foreign aid expenditures that had long escaped widespread attention.

In Nigeria, the debate gained further relevance after the House of Representatives established an ad hoc committee to investigate allegations that foreign aid funds may have been diverted to support Boko Haram activities. The committee’s work became controversial after civil society organizations and development partners criticized its demands as excessive and intrusive. Following consultations with stakeholders, the leadership of the House reportedly forced to halt further actions by the committee and encouraged a more collaborative engagement process.

The decision represented a missed opportunity to thoroughly investigate allegations involving aid funding, terrorism funding and national security, even when the civil society organizations sees it as a necessary step to protect legitimate humanitarian actors from undue interference.

Nigeria has suffered enormously from terrorism over the past two decades. Thousands of soldiers have been killed. Thousands of security personnel have been wounded. Entire communities have been displaced. Millions have lost homes, livelihoods and loved ones.

According to various estimates, insurgency-related violence across the Lake Chad Basin has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives either directly or indirectly. Given those realities, no responsible nation can afford to ignore questions about funding networks that may influence security dynamics.

What remains clear is that the controversy surrounding USAID has evolved into a much larger discussion about transparency, accountability and oversight of international aid programmes. While many allegations remain unproven, the debate has prompted renewed calls for stronger monitoring mechanisms, greater disclosure of funding flows and more rigorous auditing of aid programmes operating in conflict-affected regions.

The issue is particularly significant. Regardless of where one stands on the USAID controversy, many Nigerians agree that all organizations operating in conflict zones whether governmental, international or local should be subject to appropriate transparency and accountability measures. This does not mean every NGO is guilty. Far from it.

Many humanitarian organizations operating in Nigeria perform lifesaving work every day. They provide food, healthcare, education, water and protection services to populations that would otherwise face unimaginable hardship. Their contributions should be acknowledged and respected. However, acknowledging their work does not exempt them from scrutiny.

Transparency should not be feared by legitimate organizations. Any organization receiving millions of dollars in foreign funding and operating within Nigerian territory should be prepared to demonstrate where funds originate, how they are spent and who ultimately benefits.

The same standards should be applied to government agencies, private companies, political organizations and international development partners. Nigeria must move beyond the outdated assumption that every organization carrying a humanitarian label automatically deserves immunity from examination.

History has shown that international aid systems are not immune from abuse. Around the world, there have been documented cases of aid diversion, corruption, procurement fraud and programme manipulation. Today in Nigeria, we are witnessing how foreign funding are being used to promote FALSE narratives designed to destabilized the country.

In an age of information warfare and geopolitical competition, money often shapes outcomes long before weapons appear. Nigeria should therefore not wait for foreign governments to determine whether concerns about aid transparency deserve attention.

The ultimate goal should not be to shut down humanitarian assistance. The goal should be to ensure that every dollar, naira or euro entering the country serves the people it was intended to help and never becomes a tool for instability, manipulation or violence.

The lesson from the ongoing USAID debate is not that all aid is bad. The lesson is that all aid must be accountable. Nigeria must wake up to that reality. Our national security, sovereignty and future depend on it.

Zagazola Makama is a Counter Insurgency Expert and Security Analyst in the Lake Chad Region

OPINION: USAID, Elon Musk, and Why Nigeria Must Demand Full Transparency from Foreign-Funded Organizations

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