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APC crisis deepens : PGF DG writes Buhari, says convention must hold or Caretaker Committee resigns

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…How APC govs begged President to intervene; to meet on Wednesday
…. Aggrieved members ask court to halt February convention

All Progressives Congress (APC) leaders are rallying to keep the party on track for its crucial national convention following Thursday’s warning by President Muhammadu Buhari that the party should keep its house in order ahead of next year’s elections.

Governors elected on the platform of the APC yesterday met with Buhari, 24 hours after his warning as part of the efforts to resolve the logjam holding up the convention.

A follow-up meeting of the governors has been scheduled for Wednesday to pick a definite date for the convention.

The meeting was originally planned for tomorrow.

Buhari personally asked for the convention timetable from the Caretaker and Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) of the party, The Nation gathered yesterday.

This came as some members of the party approached the Federal High Court in Abuja to restrain the Governor Mai Mala Buni-led Caretaker and Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) from holding the national convention next month.

Simultaneously, the Director-General, Progressive Governors Forum (PGF), Salihu Lukman, wrote a memo to the APC hierarchy, asking the CECPC to proceed with the convention plan or resign.

It was learnt that some governors, including an influential one, had reached out to the President in the last one and a half weeks to intervene in the hiccups delaying the convention.

According to investigation, Buhari had received representations from some governors and party leaders on the danger of not holding APC National Convention on time.

It was learnt that the President was no longer comfortable with the delay of the convention.

A top source said yesterday: “The dilly-dallying over APC National Convention may soon end because President Muhammadu Buhari has asked the Caretaker Committee to come up with a timetable for the convention.

“The President’s directive might have been informed by representations from some governors and stakeholders to him in the past few weeks.

“The representations and looming stress in the party made the President to warn APC leaders and members on Thursday of the consequences of disunity in the party.

“If the Caretaker Committee can draw a timeline, there will be less tension in the party. Let us hope something will be done.”

But a Presidency source said: “I have not been told that (the directive)”, while a state governor said he was aware that the President “has taken action and given advisory to the Caretaker Committee to act on a timeline for the convention.”

The governor added: “We have got a notice of a meeting of APC governors on Sunday in Abuja. We will discuss the advisory of the President and agree on a date for the convention.

A governor said: “We have reached a critical point to save the party and the CECPC from rebellion. Some of us are becoming impatient with the conduct of the Caretaker Committee, but we do not want a full blown crisis in APC.

“A few of us have gone to the President to give him the other side of the way the party is being managed and the danger ahead.

“Ordinarily, the Chairman of CECPC, Governor Mai Mala Buni, is a good man who cannot hurt a fly. But some of our leaders are taking advantage of his broad-mindedness to misdirect the Caretaker Committee.

“Even some governors who did not know how APC was formed are neck-deep in trying to hijack the activities of the Caretaker Committee.”
Lalong: APC governors to decide convention date

Governors Simon Lalong of Plateau State yesterday confirmed a planned meeting of the APC governors to decide on a definite date for the party’s National Convention.

Emerging from a meeting with Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Lalong said the President’s Thursday warning to the party was a signal for the APC to have a seamless convention to avert disintegration.

The warning, according to him, was for the APC to redouble its effort and do the right thing.

His words: “You know, when convention is coming, there are fears here and there. Some people will tell you it will work, it will not work.

“I don’t want to jump to conclusion, but the visit to the President has already assured us and you know that there is already a notice that all the governors are meeting on Sunday.

“By Sunday, we will tell you when we’re doing the convention.”

It was learnt last night that the meeting was rescheduled for Wednesday.

“We’ve taken a date already. I think (during) our first date before Christmas, we said we were going to do convention in February and we are still working for convention as far as I’m concerned, except things change from another angle.

“But as far as I’m concerned, we’re working for our convention in February.

“These are the things that the President was raising fears about. But we’ve already given him assurances that nothing will stop us from having a very peaceful election.

“Some parties have done their own. The PDP did their own; nothing will stop APC from doing their own.

“So, all the fears that we’re talking about, which the President also re-echoed, is all about telling the governors ‘please do more, keep the party alive’. So, by God’s grace, we’re going to keep our party alive.

“Well, these are things we’re going to discuss. But I’m not drawing any conclusion. I always tell you that a political party is a cumulation of interests. The interests may be the same, they may not be the same, but at the end of the day, what we’ll do is that we are going to elect people who are going to represent you.”

Lalong said tomorrow’s meeting would address all the contending issues affecting the conduct of the convention.

“When we meet, we’ll harmonise all interests and we’ll come out as one APC, and that’s what we’re hoping that whatever will be the interests that we’re going to discuss, I have a very great hope that at the end of the day, our goal is to elect people who will take care of our party, because that will be the beginning of the process towards electing those who will take over from the present government.”

Asked if the many court cases pending against the party and its leadership would not scuttle the planned convention, he said: “There are procedures to holding court processes.

“Many of the court processes were there when we set up the caretaker committee, but up to this moment, if you go to take a census of some of the court proceedings, you will realise that a lot of them have been resolved out of court.

“So, it’s still the duty of the party; it’s still part of the functions of the party to resolve.

“But we must not wait to resolve all court processes before we go for convention. I don’t think so, because there are also machineries for resolving court process, even after convention.

“I had a court process in my state; that did not stop me from going on, and at the end of the day, we resolved the court process and we’re still going on, preparing and waiting for convention.”

On whether the APC could meet the speculated date of February 5 for the convention in view of the need for a mandatory 21-day notice to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Lalong said: “Well, I’m not the chairman of the convention committee, but I want to assure you that we’ve called a meeting for Sunday, and if there is a meeting on Sunday, and you’re thinking about next Friday, just wait and see what will happen before next Friday. I don’t want to draw conclusion now.

“You’re already talking of litigations, you draw conclusions, somebody will go and file a case tomorrow. So, I don’t want us to draw a conclusion on that. But I want to assure you that we are meeting.

“We’re meeting and we’re very hopeful that we’re going to keep and then with the admonition given by the President, it’s a warning signal to all of us to sit up and ensure that we have a seamless, very clean, fair and transparent convention so that our party will not get disintegrated,” he said.
Aggrieved APC members ask court to stop convention

Some aggrieved members of the party are asking the Federal High Court in Abuja to restrain the Governor Mai Mala Buni-led Caretaker-and Extraordinary Convention Planning Committee (CECPC) from holding the party’s national convention next month.

The members are Suleiman Usman (from Nyanya ward, Federal Capital Territory -FCT), Muhammed Shehu (Banga ward, Kaura Namoda Local Government Area, Zamfara) and Audu Emmanuel (Furfuri ward, Bungudu LGA, Zamfara State).

The plaintiffs in suit FHC/ABJ/CS/3/2022, filed by their lawyer, Olusola Ojo, claim that the APC would be violating its constitution if allowed to proceed to hold the convention in February.

According to them, having not conducted congresses in all the 36 states and the FCT, the APC could not legitimately hold a national convention.

Defendants in the suit are the APC, the Chairman of the CECPC and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

The plaintiffs, in a supporting affidavit, said the APC held its state congresses on October 16, 2021 in 34 states, with the exclusion of Anambra and Zamfara states.

The plaintiffs raised five questions for the Court to determine and also sought eight declarative reliefs.

They asked for an order of the court “restraining the 1st and 2nd defendants from organising and conducting the national convention of the 1st defendant unless state congresses of the 1st defendant were first concluded in all the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory.

They sought for an order directing the APC and the Chairman of the Caretaker Committee to first conduct state congresses of the 1st defendant in Anambra and Zamfara states before the national convention of the 1st defendant can be scheduled and conducted.

They urged the court to restrain INEC from giving effect to any action of the APC and the Chairman of the Caretaker Committee to organise and conduct national convention unless state congresses are conducted or concluded in all the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory.”

No date has been fixed for the hearing of the suit.
PGF DG: Caretaker committee must hold convention or give way

In a memo to governors elected on the platform of the APC, the Director General of the Progressive Governors Forum (PGF), Salihu Lukman, drew their attention to the danger of further delay in holding the convention.

Lukman, in the January 3, 2022 letter entitled ‘Plausibility of February 2022 APC Convention’ said the governors and others in the party risked being damaged politically if the needful was not done immediately.

“Once things go wrong with the party, the governors and especially the leadership of the Forum will be damaged politically,” he said.

“More worrisome is the fact that we would have all succeeded, both leaders and members, to have contributed to damaging the political credentials of President Muhammadu Buhari.

“APC leaders should imagine the consequences of ruining the electoral potentials in 2023 such that beyond losing the Federal Government, self-implicated legal challenges are created to weaken the party simply because of actions or inactions of HE Buni and Secretary, John James Akpan Udoedehe.

“Already, some media reports are suggesting that the work of Sen. Abdullahi Adamu’s Reconciliation Committee will determine whether the convention should hold in February or not.

“Senator Adamu himself has argued that they will conclude their work and reconcile those that can be reconciled by the end of January 2022. It needs to be stated that so long as the party exists, there will always be leadership disputes.”

Buhari, in his Thursday television interview, had urged APC leaders to put their house in order to enable the party retain power in 2023.

He warned against the persistent differences, disunity and lack of agreement, which he said could put the platform in jeopardy during election.

“We have a timeframe we have to work because the four-year tenure is constitutional. It cannot be interfered with by anybody. So, if the APC can’t agree, then the opposition will naturally take over,” he said.

Continuing, he said: “What did the PDP do? They said the opposition could not come together. But when ACN, ANPP, CPC, APGA came together, before PDP realised it, they were off. They are still off. They can see it.

“My position is simple. I think I succeeded in trying to get my position understood in the sense that I said, we start from bottom upwards; from polling units to wards, to local governments, to states and then, to Abuja.

“So, the party, because I’m concerned about my party, the party, in all constituencies, they will know their leaders, coming up. Therefore, when they come to Abuja, they are likely to work together.”

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TUNJI BELLO – THE GIFT THAT BUILDS FUTURE, Says Segun OLULADE

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In a world where celebrations are often measured by extravagant parties and fleeting moments of applause, Mr. Tunji Bello, an illustrious son of Lagos and proud alumnus of Lagos State University (LASU), has chosen a different and far more meaningful path.

His decision to donate a befitting auditorium to LASU’s Epe Campus is not just an act of generosity—it is a gift of legacy, one that will serve generations and continue to echo long after the music of birthday celebrations has faded.

As an indigene of Epe and fellow alumnus of LASU, I, Hon. Segun Olulade, feel an overwhelming sense of pride and gratitude for this uncommon gesture. In choosing to immortalize his milestone birthday by giving back to his alma mater, Mr. Bello has shown the world what it means to truly live for others.

He could have spent lavishly on personal celebrations, but instead he turned the spotlight away from himself and placed it firmly on education, youth development, and community growth. That is the mark of true greatness.

What makes this story even more inspiring is the sacrifice behind the scenes. Mr. Bello did not simply write a cheque. He converted birthday gifts into seed funding, sold his own property to sustain the vision, and held firm to his conviction that education is the best legacy one can bequeath.

This is not charity—it is vision, it is leadership, it is a demonstration of courage to prioritize posterity over personal comfort.

For us in Epe, this auditorium is more than brick and mortar. It is a beacon of hope, a symbol that greatness often rises from within our own soil.

For LASU, it is an enduring platform that will nurture leaders, thinkers, and innovators who will shape the destiny of our nation. And for Lagos State, it is another shining example of the transformative power of giving back.

I therefore celebrate and commend Mr. Tunji Bello for this act of uncommon generosity. His name is now etched not only in the history of LASU but in the hearts of every student who will pass through that hall, daring to dream and achieve.

Egbon Tunji Bello, you have written your name in gold.

Hon. Segun Olulade Eleniyan
Executive Director Customer Centricity and Marketing Galaxy Backbone Ltd.

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TINUBU’S ECONOMIC REFORMS: WHEN FACTS SPEAK, PROPAGANDA TREMBLES- SEGUN OLULADE

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It is becoming increasingly difficult for even the most hardened critics to deny that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s economic reforms are working. In fact, one wonders how long they will continue to close their eyes while respected global voices and real-time results keep pointing to the obvious truth.

Recently, the Director-General of the World Trade Organization, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a Harvard-trained economist, lauded President Tinubu for stabilizing Nigeria’s economy. According to her, there can be no growth without stability, and Tinubu has laid that crucial foundation.

She further revealed that Nigerian women stand to benefit immensely from the WTO-ITA women’s economic funding opportunities — another dividend of a government that knows where it is going.

As if that validation was not enough, former CBN Governor and first-class economist, Prof. Charles Soludo, also declared that Nigeria is moving in the right direction under Tinubu. Even CNN could not resist admitting on August 4, 2025, that Nigeria is experiencing its best economy in a decade under this administration. These are not APC praise-singers, but global voices with credibility that propaganda merchants cannot wish away.

Yet, while intellectual heavyweights and international institutions are affirming Nigeria’s progress, some opposition figures keep playing the role of comedians in the marketplace of ideas.

One wonders how a man whose only credential is being a “petty trader” and second-class philosophy graduate believes he is better placed to lecture Nigeria on economics than world-renowned experts. But then again, mischief has always thrived where knowledge is scarce.

Beyond these validations, Nigerians themselves are speaking loudly at the ballot box. The just-concluded bye-elections tell the story better than any press release. APC defeated Atiku right in his backyard, Adamawa.

The party consolidated victories across Jigawa, Edo, Ogun, Kogi, Niger, and Kaduna, even gaining new ground in Southern Kaduna. In Kano, APC held firm, and in Zamfara, the victory margin already in the bag is more than enough to deliver the state. These are not coincidences — they are a political referendum on Tinubu’s leadership.

Those peddling the fantasy that 2027 will be APC versus Nigerians need a serious wake-up call. Unless Nigeria suddenly decides to abandon the very gains of democracy it has long anticipated, the ruling party will once again coast to victory — loud and clear.

Nigerians cannot afford to return to square one, throwing away years of sacrifice on the altar of reckless experimentation with individuals who have nothing new to offer.

The truth is simple: the people are embracing Tinubu, and the opposition is losing. It’s not complicated — Nigerians know exactly where their future lies.

President Tinubu’s reforms are not just working; they are winning hearts, winning minds, and winning elections. Facts, as they say, are stubborn things.

By Hon. Segun Olulade Eleniyan
Executive Director Customer Centricity and Marketing Galaxy Backbone Ltd

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2027 Election : Tinubu,Delivers in the North: Rail Expansion, N20bn for 4,300 PHCs, and an End to ‘Briefcase’ Farmers – Northern Leaders Applaud

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The North yesterday rated the performance of the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu Admistration high.

The rating came after submissions by members of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and key government officials.

They include the National Security Adviser (NSA) Nuhu  Ribadu, Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) Gen. Christopher Musa, and governors, such as Chairman Northern States Governors’ Forum, Inuwa Yahaya (Gombe) and host Governor Uba Sani (Kaduna).

Part of the communiqué made available after the sessions said participants:

     Called for substantial investment in education to address the out-of-school children crisis, especially in the North.

Summing up the outcome of the event, Minister for Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, said: “The verdict from most northern opinion leaders, technocrats, and academics, amongst others, is that the Tinubu Administration is a pro-North in all ramifications – from appointments to spending on the region in infrastructure, health, education, agriculture, livestock, housing, and the unprecedented opportunity it offers for the northern youth.

“The ministers and heads of parastatals who attended the event performed creditably in communicating the achievements of President Tinubu.”

Four ministers – Atiku Bagudu (Budget and National Planning), Muhammad Ali Pate (Coordinating Minister, Health and Social Welfare), Saidu Alkali (Transportation) and Aliyu Abdullahi (Minister of State for Agriculture and Food Security) took turns yesterday to reel out what the government had done.

They provided proof that the North had fared well under the Tinubu Administration.

The event served as a platform to assess the administration’s performance and renew calls for more inclusive and transparent governance.

The communiqué reads: “In line with its objective of deepening dialogue between critical stakeholders and the public to drive inclusive decision-making, the Sir Ahmadu Bello Memorial Foundation (SABMF) hosted a two-day interactive session on Government-Citizen Engagement themed ‘Assessing electoral promises: Fostering Government-Citizen Engagement for National Unity’  at the Arewa House, Kaduna, from 29th to 30th July 2025.

“The Chairman of the Governors’ Forum, HE Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq, represented the President, HE Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, while Dr. Aliyu Modibbo Umar, Special Adviser to the President on Special Duties (Office of the Vice President), represented HE Vice President Kashim Shettima, GCON.

“The Kaduna State Governor, HE Senator Uba Sani, served as the chief host. The Chairman of the Northern States Governors Forum (NSGF), HE Inuwa Yahaya, was also in attendance as a special guest.

“The engagement featured representatives of the Federal Government, led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Senator George Akume and included the National Security Adviser, members of the Federal Executive Council, heads of federal agencies, Chief of Defence Staff and security chiefs from the Northern part of the country.

“The event brought together government officials, security agencies, civil society organisations, academics, traditional and religious leaders, private sector representatives, and development partners to deliberate on electoral promises, governance, and strategies to strengthen citizen engagement for national unity.

“In attendance, also, were the leaderships of the Sir Ahmadu Bello Memorial Foundation, led by HE Muazu Babangida Aliyu, CON and the Arewa Consultative Forum, led by Alhaji Bashir Dalhatu,

“In addition to opening remarks and goodwill messages, the Foundation acknowledged the graciousness of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in sending a high-powered delegation to the interaction, continuing the tradition of engagement that began with the October 17, 2022 session, as part of engagement with the 2023 presidential candidates.

“The keynote address, delivered by Prof. Tijjani Mohammed Bande, GCON underscored critical regional and national challenges, which, he said, were not in isolation from international events.

“Citing examples with other countries, he said Nigeria has shown resilience in tackling insecurity, poverty, and educational deficits. He advised the North to develop a mechanism for negotiating its interests within Nigeria that should be anchored on holistic national development goals.

“The interactive session reflected Northern Nigeria’s position, emphasising the region’s central role in sustaining Nigeria’s political stability and economic growth, and recognising its overwhelming electoral support for the victory of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

“The session also featured plenary discussions across thematic areas of national security, governance and economy, agriculture and food security, infrastructure development, and human capital development.

“Stakeholders commended the government’s high and commendable performance in fulfilling many of its electoral promises, particularly in security, infrastructure, and economic reforms.

“At the end of the exhaustive and frank conversations over the two days, the summit makes the following observations and resolutions:

•The government demonstrated openness to dialogue and continuous citizen engagement.

•The administration’s delivery of electoral promises in security, infrastructure, and economic reforms was high and commendable.

•Northern Nigeria contributes significantly to national stability, development, and electoral outcomes.

•The problem of Almajiri and out-of-school children remains a key concern of Northern Nigeria.

•Equitable resource distribution is essential to address regional imbalances.

•Major infrastructure projects are advancing, including highways, gas pipelines (AKK), oil exploration (Kolmani), and rural irrigation schemes.

•Agricultural value chains and rural industrialisation are crucial for employment and food security.

Ongoing economic and security reforms require inclusive and non-kinetic approaches.

•Strengthened federal-state collaboration is essential for regional prosperity.

•Made a case for institutionalised periodic government-citizen dialogue platforms at the national and state levels.

•Commended the government’s high performance in delivering electoral promises in many areas, especially security, infrastructural development

•Praised the increased equitable resource availability to

•Urged substantial investment in education to address the out-of-school children crisis, especially in the North.

•Called for increased and accelerated infrastructural development in Nigeria; strengthening of agricultural value chains, livestock development, and establishing agro-allied industries for economic diversification;

•Continued support for economic and security reforms with inclusive, community-driven, non-kinetic methods.

•Engage civil society, traditional, and religious leaders in policy advocacy and public mobilisation.

•Promote responsible media practices to enhance public trust and national cohesion.

•Foster regional collaboration among Northern states to drive greater interface with the federal government.

“The summit concluded that Northern Nigeria acknowledges and commends the administration’s high performance in fulfilling its electoral promises in many areas and also appreciates subsisting challenges.

“Participants called for more commitment to transparency, fairness and equity as elements that would foster national unity and sustenance of our democracy.

“They further call for continued collaboration among government, citizens, and all stakeholders as the surest path to peace, justice, and prosperity in Nigeria.”

It was signed by Director General SAMF Abubakar Gambo Umar.

Chairman of the Foundation’s Board of Trustees, former Niger State Governor Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, called on the North elite to rise above political differences and reclaim their collective responsibility toward regional progress.

He lamented the erosion of shared values and fragmentation of leadership voices in the region, noting that, unlike in the past, today’s political class has failed to speak with one voice or uphold the legacy of unity and vision exemplified by leaders like Sir Ahmadu Bello.

Dr. Aliyu acknowledged the significant presence of Northerners in the current administration, stressing the need for the region to rally behind those in government and reminding them that they represent broader Northern interests, not just personal ambitions or party lines.

“No politician from the North can claim today that we don’t have people in government.

“What we need is to own them, guide them, and ensure they act in our collective interest,” Aliyu said.

N20b spent on 4,300 PHCs in North

Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Pate, said:  “The Federal Government, through the Basic Health Care Provision Fund, had disbursed over N20 billion for the funding of 4,362 PHC centres across the 19 Northern states and FCT, over the last two years.

“At least 274 projects had been executed across 35 tertiary hospitals in the Northern part of the country, serving over 4.5 million outpatients and 1.6 million inpatients.

“The President Bola Tinubu-led administration is committed to improving national health outcomes and matched words with action, with the provision of health infrastructure across all levels of healthcare delivery nationwide.”

Kaduna–Kano Rail project ready next year

Transportation Minister Alkali described the North as one of the biggest beneficiaries of the Tinubu Administration’s infrastructure drive.

He assured that the Kaduna–Kano standard gauge rail project, which was at 15 per cent stage in May 2023,  would be completed next year.

According to him, the Kano–Maradi rail line had also seen massive progress, moving from five per cent to 61 per cent completion, with sections of the Port Harcourt–Maiduguri narrow gauge rail corridor also underway.

He added that the ministry has also begun the rehabilitation of the Lagos–Kano narrow gauge line to support freight movements and bring the inland dry ports into full use, particularly in Kano and Kaduna.

The minister described the Sokoto–Badagry Superhighway, a 1,068-kilometre  stretch linking Sokoto, Kebbi, Niger, Kwara, Oyo, Ogun, and Lagos states, as one of the signature projects of the government.

“The North is not left out. It is reaping big from this government’s infrastructure revolution. From roads and rail to inland ports and power, the evidence is on the ground,” Alkali said.

No more briefcase farmers, says Senator Abdullahi

Minister of State for Agriculture and Food Security Aliyu Abdullahi said the Tinubu Administration met the food crisis in the country but responded with bold, data-driven initiatives.

“We are ensuring that only genuine farmers benefit from government programmes. No more briefcase farmers,” he declared.

The minister added that the declaration of a state of emergency on food security was still in effect, as the government continues to deploy measures aimed at increasing production, stabilising prices, and improving access to food.

“Our priority is simple: ramp up production, reduce food prices, and ensure equitable access to support.

“We met a food crisis and responded with data-backed, targeted actions,” Abdullahi said.

He said that the Agro-Pocket initiative alone cultivated over 133,000 hectares of wheat across 15 states in the North — exceeding the initial target of 130,000 hectares — with Jigawa accounting for over 50,000 hectares.

According to him, rice farmers have also been supported through a plan targeting 44,500 producers, and this is being backed by robust extension services to address the unacceptable extension-to-farmer ratio of 1 to 25,000.

Abdullahi said one of the key steps taken was  the development of a farmer data audit and registry to eliminate middlemen and “briefcase contractors.”

In the livestock sector, he said, government interventions included the development of grazing reserves, livestock villages, transit shelters, and the ongoing formulation of a national dairy policy.

Abdullahi called on North’s leaders and communities to reject impostors who manipulate the system and short-change real farmers.

Minister of State for Works, Bello Muhammad Goronyo, described the Sokoto–Zaria Highway as a vital economic corridor.

He said four contractors were currently on site along the stretch.

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