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Ibadan FHC Judgment: No Recognition of Any Faction, No Cause for Alarm

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By Umar Sani

The judgment delivered on Wednesday by the Federal High Court sitting in Ibadan has been widely misrepresented, prompting unnecessary anxiety and the circulation of misleading claims suggesting that the court recognised a rival faction within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

That narrative is false, mischievous, and deliberately crafted to confuse party members and the general public.

What the Ibadan court decided was narrow, procedural, and entirely predictable in law.

The Kabiru Tanimu Turaki–led National Working Committee (NWC), which emerged from the Ibadan Convention, approached the court by way of an application for an order of mandamus. The relief sought was simple and specific: to compel relevant authorities to recognise the NWC as the lawful leadership of the party.

In its ruling, the court declined to grant that order, not because it recognised any other faction, but because there are subsisting judgments of courts of coordinate jurisdiction touching on the same leadership dispute. The court held that granting the order as requested would amount to sitting on appeal over decisions of courts of equal standing an exercise it lacks jurisdiction to undertake.

In plain terms, the Federal High Court in Ibadan said: only the appellate courts can resolve the conflict arising from existing Federal High Court decisions. That is the full extent of the judgment.

At no point did the court recognise, endorse, validate, or confer legitimacy on the so-called Wike faction or any other group.

Crucially, the Ibadan court was not invited and did not attempt to determine which faction is authentic. Courts are not Father Christmas; they do not grant unsolicited relief. They either grant what is asked for or refuse it. Nothing more.

The suggestion circulating in some quarters that the Ibadan judgment “recognised the Wike faction” is therefore a deliberate falsehood. The Wike-aligned group did not file any process before the Ibadan court seeking recognition as the authentic PDP leadership. Their application seeking such relief is before a different court Justice Joyce Abdulmalik’s court in Abuja and that matter has been adjourned to 20 February.

To conflate these distinct proceedings is either a gross misunderstanding of basic legal process or a calculated attempt at disinformation.

Following the Ibadan ruling, the Kabiru Turaki–led PDP has already briefed its legal team to file an appeal immediately and pursue all lawful steps necessary to protect its mandate and clarify the legal position at the appellate level.

Until the Court of Appeal makes a definitive pronouncement, the NWC that emerged from the Ibadan Convention remains legally intact and operational.

Members of the party are therefore urged to remain calm, resolute, and focused. There is no vacuum, no judicial endorsement of any rival faction, and no setback to the REBIRTH movement.

What occurred in Ibadan was a procedural pause not a substantive defeat.

Anything beyond that is fake news, pure and simple.

Umar Sani is the SA Media to the National Chairman of the PDP

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Police condemn killing of Benue MACBAN chairman

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Benue State Police Command has condemned the killing of the Chairman of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), Benue State chapter, Ardo Rabo Mohammed, and another man, Yakubu Isa, describing the attack as a senseless criminal act capable of undermining ongoing peace and security efforts in the state.

The victims were reportedly attacked by gunmen while returning from a security meeting along the Okwudu-Ogoli Road in Otukpo Local Government Area.

In a statement issued on Saturday, the Police Public Relations Officer, DSP Udeme Edet, said the Commissioner of Police, CP Cletus C.N. Nwadiogbu, condemned the killings and expressed condolences to the families of the deceased.

“The Commissioner of Police strongly condemns in its entirety the brutal killing of the Chairman of Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), Benue State chapter, Ardo Rabo Mohammed, and one Yakubu Isa, who were reportedly attacked by unknown assailants while returning from a security meeting along Okwudu-Ogoli Road, Otukpo,” the statement read.

According to the police, the command has commenced a full-scale investigation into the incident, with tactical and intelligence teams deployed to track down those responsible.

The Commissioner assured residents that the command would leave no stone unturned in ensuring the perpetrators are identified, arrested and prosecuted.

He appealed to members of the public to remain calm, avoid taking the law into their own hands, and refrain from spreading unverified information capable of escalating tensions.

The police also urged anyone with credible information that could aid the investigation to report to the nearest police station or contact the command through its emergency lines.

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Lady identifies bandits that abducted her, leading to their arrested wth N11m recovered

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Three bandits have been arrested in Benue state after a lady who they had kidnapped and released, identified them at a motor park and raised alarm.

The k!kidnappers came to Ihotu park to board a vehicle to Makurdi and were met by the lady they had earlier kidnapped and released after collecting ransom from her relatives.

They were even using a bag they collected from the girl. The girl raised the alarm, held one inside the vehicle, and two took to their heels, but were caught.

They had a ghana-must-go bag at the back of the vehicle. N11m was found inside the bag.

Following the confirmation of their identity by another lady who was also their victim, mob gathered around with the intent to beat them up and possibly set them ablaze.

But the park manager decided to invite the police and soldiers who rescued them and took them to their station.

It was later gathered that the Benue state Governor, Rev. Father Hyacinth Alia called and said he was interested in the case which made the police to take the apprehended bandits to Makurdi, the state capital.

 

 

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Tinubu’s govt ignores IMF, draws additional loan of $2.5b from UAE

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President Bola Tinubu Federal Government has drawn down $1.5bn from a $5bn financing facility arranged with the United Arab Emirates’ largest lender, First Abu Dhabi Bank, despite growing concerns from global financial institutions over the increasing use of complex derivative financing by African sovereigns.

Bloomberg reported on Friday that the latest drawdown represents the first tranche of a $5bn Total Return Swap facility approved by the National Assembly on March 31, 2026, and is expected to support the 2026 budget, finance infrastructure projects, and refinance existing debt obligations.

The report quoted people familiar with the transaction, who asked not to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to the media.

The report read, “Nigeria has accessed the first tranche of a $5bn derivatives deal with the United Arab Emirates’ largest lender, pressing ahead with a transaction that has been scrutinised for being opaque.

“The West African nation drew about $1.5bn in the last couple of weeks from a total return swap transaction with First Abu Dhabi Bank PJSC, according to people familiar with the transaction, who asked not to be identified because they were not authorised to speak to the media.”

The transaction comes at a time when Nigeria is facing higher borrowing costs in international capital markets, forcing the government to seek alternative financing arrangements to shore up its fiscal position and improve access to foreign exchange liquidity.

Under the arrangement, Nigeria is required to pledge Federal Government securities worth about 133 per cent of any amount drawn under the facility. This means that for the full $5bn facility, the government would have to post approximately $6.65bn worth of naira-denominated bonds as collateral.

In return, the Abu Dhabi-based lender provides dollar liquidity to the Nigerian government. The Federal Government will pay a floating interest rate benchmark plus about four percentage points, while the lender receives the returns generated by the underlying government securities.

The transaction effectively allows Nigeria to unlock immediate dollar funding without issuing new Eurobonds or taking on traditional external loans at prevailing market rates, which have become increasingly expensive for frontier economies.

The government has already indicated that the proceeds from the initial $1.5bn drawdown will be deployed to support budget implementation, fund critical infrastructure projects, and refinance costlier domestic and external debts.

However, the financing arrangement has attracted criticism from international financial institutions and market analysts over concerns about transparency and potential hidden liabilities.

In its June 2026 assessment of African sovereign debt markets, the International Monetary Fund warned that derivative financing structures such as total return swaps are often opaque and difficult for investors and creditors to monitor.

The IMF noted that such arrangements are “hard to track, hard to value in real time, and can obscure the true extent of a country’s financial obligations.”

Three days ago, Fitch Ratings warned that Nigeria’s planned $5bn financing arrangement with First Abu Dhabi Bank could increase sovereign debt risks and reduce transparency in public debt reporting.

 

 

 

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