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Tinubu Sends Amupitan’s Name to Senate for INEC Chair Confirmation

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President Bola Tinubu has officially requested the Senate to confirm Professor Joash Amupitan as the new Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

The letter of request was read by Senate President Godswill Akpabio during plenary on Tuesday, alongside other presidential appointments.

The request aligns with the provisions of the 1999 Constitution, and Akpabio has forwarded it to the committee of the whole for prompt legislative action.

In a separate letter, President Tinubu also sought Senate confirmation for Mrs. Ayo Omidiran as Executive Chairman of the Federal Character Commission and 28 other Federal Commissioners, including Dr. Ibrahim Abdullahi from Kwara State.

Professor Amupitan’s appointment was unanimously approved by the National Council of State during a meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, last Thursday.

He succeeds Professor Mahmood Yakubu, who completed his 10-year tenure in October 2025.

Tinubu highlighted that Amupitan, a 58-year-old law professor from Kogi State, is the first nominee from the North-Central region to be put forward for the INEC chairmanship.

“In compliance with the constitution, President Tinubu has sent Amupitan’s name to the Senate for screening,” said Presidential spokesman Bayo Onanuga in a statement.

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Ejiro Umukoro Emerges Regional Winner at the Young Adult Literature Prize 2025

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The Young Adult Literature Prize (YALP) 2025 has unveiled the regional finalists from a staggering 106 entries, showcasing the best of Nigeria’s emerging literary talent.

Among the standout authors is Ejiro Umukoro, whose thought-provoking novel, “The Distortion of Hardassah,” has been selected as the South South regional finalist.

This prestigious recognition is a testament to Umukoro’s exceptional storytelling skills and solidifies her position as a rising star in African literature.

“The Distortion of Hardassah” is a gripping narrative that follows the journey of eleven young adults across Nigeria as they navigate the complexities of identity, acceptance, and opportunity.

Umukoro’s debut novel, “Distortion,” was a groundbreaking fiction mental health true crime novel that garnered widespread critical acclaim.

The book’s impact extends beyond the literary world, having been approved by the Ministry of Education, Delta State, as a literature textbook for secondary schools.

It was also selected as the Book of Discussion on World Press Freedom Day by the United States Agency for Global Media in 2024.

The novel’s influence is evident in its selection for the Lagos Arts and Book Festival’s CORA Book Trek, which aims to promote literacy and a love of reading among secondary school students.

“Distortion” has received glowing reviews from prominent media outlets, including BusinessDay, News Central, Arise News, TVC, Trust TV, and The Guardian, with mention by the Pulitzer Centre.

Jerry Adesewo, representing TYBLI, congratulated the regional finalists, saying, “We are delighted to announce the regional finalists of the Young Adult Literature Prize 2025.

We received an overwhelming response from talented writers across the country, and the quality of submissions was exceptional.”

Umukoro expressed her satisfaction with the outcome, stating, “This literary honour is indeed an exciting news to wrap the year. It gives me great joy to be selected on the longlist of Young Adult Literature Price (YALP) 2025.”

The regional winners will receive a cash prize of N500,000 each, with the overall winner taking home a whopping N1,500,000 and a publishing deal.

The YALP 2025 competition aims to encourage young adult writers to keep writing, learning, and dreaming, providing a platform for emerging writers to showcase their talent and gain recognition in the literary world.

The other regional finalists include:

  • Ikemefuna Chinenyike Lawrence Ezemagu – Garden of Garget (South East)
  • Sarah Yousuph – When the Road Curves (South West)
  • Adoo Gyuur – Daughters of Ashes (North Central)
  • Daniel Yohanna – A Boy From Far North (North East)
  • Yusrah Bashir Gaga – My Darkest Nightmares (North West)

The Young Adult Literature Prize (YALP) is an annual literary competition that recognizes and celebrates outstanding young adult writers in Nigeria, promoting creative writing, encouraging literary excellence, and providing a platform for emerging writers to gain recognition.

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Umahi’s Dance Around the Figures: The Secrecy and Swagger Behind the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway

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By Babs Daramola

In a democracy, public officials owe citizens not arrogance, but answers. Yet Nigeria’s Minister of Works, Dave Umahi, seems to prefer swagger to substance whenever questions arise about the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway -Nigeria’s costliest road project in history.

Again and again, the Minister is asked one simple question: “What is the actual cost per kilometre of the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway?” And again and again, he dances around it.

Twice, fiery journalist Rufai Oseni of Arise TV confronted him on The Morning Show. Instead of answers, the Minister chose lashing out, trading civility for condescension.

It takes bravery for a journalist to stand firm in the face of government intimidation, and Rufai, in his characteristic element, did just that, refusing to cower.

Most recently, Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde asked the same questions in the interest of public accountability -a bold move, even knowing he would be accused of playing politics.

Rather than engage the queries, Umahi dismissed Governor Makinde as an “electrician” who supposedly knew nothing about roads.

The “jab” landed, but the figures remained missing.Umahi insists road projects have no “cost per kilometre,” only “average costs,” because terrain and design vary.

That’s technically true, but administratively false. Every serious infrastructure project anywhere in the world has a cost per kilometre figure.

That’s how budgets are drawn, contracts are monitored, and public accountability is ensured. To pretend the figure doesn’t exist is not engineering; it is evasion.

For context, consider some other major infrastructure projects where official costs per kilometre were publicly disclosed:

Iseyin–Ogbomoso Road (Nigeria): ₦43 billion for 76.7 km, giving an officially announced cost of about ₦500 million per kilometre.

T3 Road, Chingola–Kasumbalesa (Zambia): $1.2 billion for 320 km, about $3.7 million per kilometre, officially recorded.

Uganda–Kenya Standard Gauge Railway: 273 km at about $2.25 billion, giving $8.2 million per kilometre, officially published in planning documents.

If it can be done for roads and railways across Africa, why is the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway suddenly “mystical” in cost?

Cost is not the only cloud hanging over this coastal behemoth. In a press briefing last year, Arise TV correspondent Laila Johnson asked the Minister about the project’s Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA).

Instead of answering, Umahi claimed he could not understand the question because of her “foreign accent”, a staggering display of dishonesty and evasion.

Months later, on The Morning Show, Rufai Oseni pressed the Minister on the same EIA issue. Till today, neither he nor his ministry has been forthcoming, leaving serious questions about transparency unanswered.

Perhaps the most immediate source of public outrage was that the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway contract appears never to have gone through open, competitive tendering, as required by Nigeria’s Public Procurement Act.

Instead, it was quietly awarded to a favored consortium under terms shrouded in discretion, not disclosure.

Nigerians raised this issue, and in response, the Minister offered flimsy, dodgy, and ultimately controversial excuses.

That secrecy deepens suspicion that this is less about concrete and asphalt, and more about connections and access.

Let’s get this straight: the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway is as laudable as it is ambitious.

As the world’s largest black nation, Nigeria deserves infrastructure of this scale and vision.

The highway, which will stretch across nine states, reclaim swathes of shoreline, and transform communities and livelihoods, could be a game-changer for national connectivity and commerce.

Yet the timing raises concerns: embarking on such a massive project when the country’s economy is at one of its worst and citizens are struggling to survive fuels public anxiety.

Layered on top of this are serious issues of transparency and accountability, which must be addressed if the project is to earn the public’s trust.

When journalists like Rufai and governors like Makinde demand numbers, they are not playing politics; they are upholding the principles of integrity, service, and public stewardship.

Calling them ignorant or unqualified doesn’t strengthen the ministry’s case; it simply confirms Nigerians’ worst fear: that something is being hidden behind technical jargon and political theatrics.

From “it’s an EPC + F arrangement” to “we are still negotiating costs”, Umahi’s explanations have become an art form of avoidance: a choreography of ambiguity on the stage of public accountability.

You cannot spend trillions of public naira and claim not to know, or not to disclose, how much of it builds a single kilometre of road.

Whether it’s ₦5 billion or ₦25 billion per kilometre, the figure exists. Nigerians are footing the bill; they deserve the truth.

Dave Umahi may be a fine engineer, but governance is not civil engineering; it is public stewardship.

And stewardship without transparency is corruption by another name.If the Lagos–Calabar Coastal Highway is being built in good faith and at fair cost, the easiest way to prove it is simple: publish the numbers: cost per kilometre, EIA details, and procurement records.

Until then, the Minister’s performance remains what it looks like: a grand dance around the figures, choreographed to the rhythm of secrecy and arrogance, while the taxpayers pick up the tab.

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President Tinubu Celebrates son Seyi with Stirring Message

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President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has penned an emotional tribute to his son, as the younger man marks his 40th birthday today.

In a touching personal statement issued from the State House, President Tinubu praised his son’s character, accomplishments, and commitment to service.

Tinubu described Seyi as “a man of focus, courage, and humility” who continues to walk the path of impact and leadership.

He wrote: “You have walked your path with focus, courage, and humility, and you have done so with a heart that seeks to build, serve, and uplift others.

”The President while recalling Seyi’s early ambition and entrepreneurial spirit, he commended his son’s transformation of “ideas into institutions” and “challenges into opportunities”, citing his work in both business and service as evidence of a life built on substance and purpose.

“True success is not measured by wealth or power but by the impact we make and the lives we touch,” Tinubu said.

Describing 40 as a pivotal age, Tinubu extolled Seyi’s integrity, work ethic, and devotion to his own young family, including his wife Layal and their children.

He said, “Our entire family is proud of you.

“You have carried your name with honour and have remained faithful to the values of discipline, integrity, and hard work.

”President Tinubu concluded his message with a prayer for continued wisdom, peace, and good health for Seyi, urging him to keep inspiring others and making Nigeria proud.

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