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Ex-President Jonathan mourns Dokpesi, describes DAAR founder as a humane entrepreneur, bridge builder
By Bonaventure Melah
Former Nigerian President, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, has expressed sadness over the passing of the founder of DAAR Communications, High Chief Raymond Dokpesi, stating that the country has lost a true patriot and fair-minded nation builder.
In a condolence message to the Dokpesi family and DAAR Communications, which Nationwide Reports have seen, the former President described him as a successful entrepreneur, media mogul and philanthropist who took the art of giving to a new level and made significant contributions to human progress.
The statement which was signed by Mr. Ikechukwu Eze, Special Adviser to the former President, said that Jonathan, who was one of the early sympathisers to visit the Dokpesi family in Abuja Monday, noted that he cultivated the kind of friendship with Dokpesi that stood the test of time.
Dr. Jonathan said: “He was a humane businessman and philanthropist who took the art of giving and human relations to a new level.
“As a patriot and politician, he exemplified the virtues of loyalty, justice and service. A team player and bridge builder, High Chief Dokpesi played the kind of politics that promoted friendship, ethnic cohesion and national unity.
“High Chief Dokpesi will be remembered for his works of charity, devotion to his faith and inspiring leadership, especially serving as a trailblazer who pioneered private broadcasting and played a major role in advancing media freedom in Nigeria,” Dr. Jonathan concluded
News
MTN Group: South Africa is nothing without Aftica
The Group Chairman of MTN, Mcebisi Jonas, has condemned the ongoing attack on foreigners in South Africa , saying the country’s economic growth would suffer without the rest of Africa.
Delivering a deeply political eulogy at the funeral of Zimbabwean-born activist and public servant Thokozani Damasane, the former South African Deputy Minister of Finance turned private-sector leader issued one of the most direct interventions by a major African business figure on the country’s immigration crisis.
He pushed back against the narrative that removing foreign nationals would solve South Africa’s socioeconomic woes, attributing the crisis instead to state failure and cynical political exploitation.
“Foreigners can leave tomorrow – inequality will be with us,” Jonas told the congregation. “Foreigners will leave tomorrow – unemployment will be with us. Foreigners will leave tomorrow – our police will remain corrupt. Foreigners will leave tomorrow – our politicians will still be concerned with one thing: being elected and re-elected.”
He placed responsibility for the crisis squarely on the South African government, arguing that weak law enforcement and failing systems have created fertile ground for political manipulation. “The problem is the failure of the state. The state doesn’t manage immigration. It doesn’t manage its borders. It doesn’t enforce law enforcement. It doesn’t manage education. What are you expecting?” he asked.
When citizens feel the burn of state failure, Jonas noted, they become vulnerable to opportunists. “When people feel the burn, they become vulnerable to politicians whose sole purpose is to be elected and re-elected. Some of them have no credibility whatsoever. But they lead marches and tell our people that the problem is not us – it is foreigners.”
Beyond immediate political failures, Jonas offered a sharp historical critique of tribalism and ethno-nationalism, describing them as colonial inheritances designed to divide African people. “The tribe is a product of colonial powers,” he argued, noting that ethnic divisions were historically amplified to enforce indirect rule.
He lamented that this colonial logic has mutated into the engine driving contemporary xenophobic violence. “You would see in the streets, it’s no longer about whether you are from South Africa or not from South Africa. It’s about the tribe, it’s about who you are, you are not like us, and you are different, and therefore we have to persecute you. Something fundamental has been lost in our country. Something fundamental has been lost in our nations,” Jonas said.
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News
Nollywood actor joins US army
Nigrrian actor Joseph Momodu has announced his enlistment in the United States Army after completing 10 weeks of Basic Combat Training at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.
In an Instagram post on Friday, Momodu said he had been unreachable for 10 weeks.
“From inception, I have always believed in achievements earned through merit, which is why I constantly push myself beyond limits.”
“Ten weeks of being incommunicado. Ten weeks of learning to find comfort in discomfort,” he wrote.
He is now serving as Specialist SPC J.A. Momodu with 1st Platoon, Charlie Company, 3-10, 3rd Battalion, 10th Infantry Regiment.
“Today, it is official: Specialist (SPC) J.A. Momodu, United States Army @usarmy, 1st Platoon, Charlie Company, 3-10, 3rd Battalion, 10th Infantry Regiment, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.”
He described the training period as demanding, marked by limited communication, physical exhaustion, and mental pressure.
“This particular one was forged through tears, fear of failure, resilience, endless days, short nights, fatigue, rain, and the scorching sun.”
“There were moments of doubt and times I questioned myself, “who sent me a message?” But I never lost sight of the finish line. We trained tirelessly, were broken down and rebuilt”
News
2027: INEC Access Code Does Not Legalize Wike’s PDP Faction
In 2027,INEC password won’t swear in a president. The constitution will….
By Dr Tom Ohikere
Access to INEC’s portal is not the same as access to legality. That is the law, the precedent, and the warning to Nyesom Wike’s faction of the PDP ahead of 2027.
1. What Political Parties Are:
Parties are voluntary associations. They recruit members and leaders under rules written in their constitutions. Those constitutions are subject to the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held: membership, leadership, and administration of parties are internal matters, settled by the legitimate organs of the party — not by whoever grabs a password.
2. The Wike Threat
At a recent Abuja gathering, FCT Minister Nyesom Wike boasted to loyalists that his group has “INEC access code” to upload PDP candidates for 2027. He used it to threaten the PDP Interim National Working Committee [INWC] led by Kabiru Tanimu Turaki, SAN.
But INEC access code is a technical tool. It is not a judgment. It does not cure illegality.
3. Precedents: Zamfara, Plateau, Taraba
Nigeria has seen this movie before:
– Zamfara 2019: APC “won” all seats with candidates uploaded via INEC portal. Courts voided them. The beneficiaries were not the names INEC displayed. They were the parties and candidates who followed due process.
– Plateau 2023: PDP “won” elections. Courts removed them for invalid nomination. Opposition candidates who were never on INEC’s portal before election day became senators and Reps.
– Southern Taraba 2023: APC’s Senator David Jumkuta won against the party’s most popular aspirant, Hon. Danjuma Shiddi, because the nomination process was compromised.
Ask Wike: Were the final winners in those states on INEC’s portal _ab initio_? No. The courts looked beyond the portal. They looked at who had the legal right to nominate. The portal followed the law. The law did not follow the portal.
4. Who Legally Runs PDP Today?
Since 4th May 2026, the only PDP national structure with legal cover is the 13-man Interim National Working Committee chaired by Kabiru Tanimu Turaki, SAN. It was constituted by the PDP Board of Trustees and 2/3 of NEC members at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja.
Why? Because:
1. 1st November 2025, The legitimate PDP NWC under Amb. Damagum Umar Iliya suspended a bloc of national officers, including former Legal Adviser Chief Kamaldeen Ajibade, SAN.
2. 3rd November 2025.. Those suspended officers illegally announced a “Caretaker Committee” led by Abdulrahman Mohammed and shared offices among themselves.
3. March 2026 The same suspended group held an illegal “national convention” and returned themselves to the offices they were suspended from.
4. 30th April 2026 The Supreme Court reiterated that compliance with court orders is mandatory and that parties’ legitimate authorities control membership and administration.
5. 3rd June 2026, The Court of Appeal affirmed that Ajibade SAN was legally suspended and had no authority to act for PDP. It said Justice Agomoh of the Ibadan Federal High Court acted _ultra petita_ in ordering INEC to recognize Wike’s faction, but did not set aside the order. So INEC complies — for now.
5. The Case in Court
The PDP BOT and 2/3 of NEC are now before the Federal High Court, Abuja, asking it to:
a. Interpret the Supreme Court and Appeal Court judgments on PDP leadership;
b. Compel INEC to recognize the Turaki SAN-led INWC;
c. Direct INEC to issue the INWC access codes to upload 2027 candidates.
The matter comes up Tuesday, 30th June 2026. It will likely end at the Supreme Court again.
6. The Bottom Line
INEC’s recognition of the Wike-backed Abdulrahman Mohammed group is administrative obedience to a subsisting Ibadan order. It is not validation. The Supreme Court said you must obey orders — even bad ones — until set aside. That’s why INEC is dealing with them. Not because they are legal.
If the Turaki INWC wins in court, its candidates win in 2027 — whether they are on the portal today or not. If Wike’s group wins, its candidates win. The portal is a servant of the judgment. Not the other way round.
7. To PDP Members.
Have faith in due process. Going to court is not desperation. It is democracy. Zamfara, Plateau, and Taraba prove that notorious actors can upload names today and lose everything tomorrow.
The law, not the login, decides.
Dr Tom Ohikere is a public affairs analyst and former commissioner for information Kogi State.
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