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Oyedepo’s jet can’t leave private airstrip without clearance – Festus Keyamo

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Oyedepo’s jet can’t leave private airstrip without clearance – Festus Keyamo

Ekwutosblog has gathered that the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, on Sunday said there was no way the private plane of privileged Nigerians, including the Founder and Presiding Bishop of Living Faith Bible Church Worldwide, Bishop David Oyedepo, can leave the country directly from their airstrips without first securing clearance from relevant authorities.

Keyamo made the clarification when he was featured as a guest on Channels Television’s Politics Today.

His statement comes barely two months after members of the House of Representatives called for a revocation of airstrip licences issued to certain individuals and private organisations, citing security reasons.

The House also called for an immediate halt to new airstrip licences for individuals and organisations.

But Keyamo insisted that there was no way a plane or drone, even if it belongs to the military, can leave or come into the country without first getting a nod from the agency.

When asked if the airstrip of Oyedepo also passed through the same due process, Keyamo nodded.

He said, “Oh yes, absolutely. That’s no problem. They were only concerned about the fact that they thought that somebody can take off from a private airstrip and fly out of Nigeria or fly into Nigeria. It is not possible.

“You must land in an international airport first. Then the Customs, immigration and NDLEA will process you before you take off from there to your private airstrip. If you are also flying out, you must land at an international airport. You will go through Customs, immigration and all the normal process before flying out.

“So nobody uses an airstrip for any such purpose without seeking clearance. At every point in time, the authorities must approve.”

When quizzed on how many airstrips the country is operating at the moment, Keyamo said they are in the range of 40.

“We have a number of them, more than 40. For the federal airport, we have 23. The state airport has about eight or nine now.

“And then the airstrips are about 40 or thereabouts. I have been there myself,” he stated.

 

Politics

PDP Constitutes Caretaker Committees for Enugu, Delta and Rivers States

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By Our Correspondent

The Peoples Democratic Party has announced the formation of caretaker committees for its chapters in Enugu, Delta and Rivers states, marking a new phase in the party’s effort to strengthen its internal structures and ensure effective administration ahead of upcoming political activities.

According to the party leadership, the decision follows the expiration of the tenures of the previous state executive committees and the need to maintain uninterrupted organizational stability. The newly appointed caretaker teams are expected to oversee party affairs, coordinate administrative functions and prepare the ground for fresh congresses that will eventually produce substantive state executives.

Party officials explained that the committees were selected to reflect broad representation, balance and experience, ensuring that the party remains cohesive during the transition period. They added that the appointments are part of ongoing reforms aimed at promoting transparency, unity and strategic planning within the party.

The national leadership called on members in the affected states to cooperate fully with the caretaker committees. It assured them that the interim structures will work closely with stakeholders to sustain party activities, mediate internal disputes where necessary and strengthen engagement at the grassroots level.

The PDP restated its commitment to internal democracy and expressed confidence that the temporary leadership arrangements will support a smoother and more inclusive process as preparations continue for electoral and organizational programs across the country.

 

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INEC HARBORING DEREGISTERED APP PARTY WOULD TRIGGER NATIONAL CRISIS — NGOFORO-LED GROUP RAISES ALARM

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By Fred Adekunle, Abuja

The Civic Action for Democracy (CAD) on Thursday raised alarm over what it described as a grand conspiracy to derail the 2027 general elections through the illegal retention of the Action Peoples Party (APP) by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), warning that the situation poses an existential threat to Nigeria’s democracy.

Speaking at a world press conference in Abuja, the group’s Executive Director, Mazi Franklin Ngoforo, presented meticulously documented evidence of institutional corruption and electoral manipulation involving INEC officials and corrupt politicians.

According to CAD, the APP was among 74 political parties lawfully deregistered by INEC on February 6, 2020, for failing to meet constitutional requirements under Section 225 of the 1999 Constitution and provisions of the Electoral Act after the 2019 general elections. The group noted that the Supreme Court in March 2022 upheld INEC’s powers to deregister political parties, affirming the validity of the 2020 exercise.

However, Ngoforo stated that INEC fraudulently claimed APP had obtained an interim court order restraining its deregistration, a claim the group insists is completely false as no suit number, court documents, or evidence of such an order has ever been produced despite repeated requests over five years.

The organization argued that even if such a court order existed, which it maintains it does not, no interim order in Nigerian jurisprudence could remain in force for nearly six years without renewal or extension, calling INEC’s claim “a legal impossibility that insults the intelligence of every lawyer and informed citizen.”

CAD presented evidence including a July 29, 2020 letter from Barr. Mrs. Eunice Atuejide, former National Chairman of the National Interest Party, requesting details of the purported court order, which INEC has never answered. The group also referenced a pending Federal High Court suit (FHC/ABJ/CS/1464/2024) filed by legal luminary Barr. Ukpai Ukairo challenging INEC’s continued recognition of the deregistered party.

CAD alleged that corrupt political actors, including a serving federal lawmaker from Imo State and INEC contractors, have maintained APP in the electoral commission’s database for nefarious purposes.

The group claimed these conspirators orchestrated a fraudulent arrangement in October 2024 where APP was ceded a councillorship seat in Buntusu Ward, Gwiwa Local Government Area of Jigawa State, to create a false impression of meeting constitutional requirements.

Intelligence gathered by the organization suggests a two-pronged strategy to destabilize democracy: either using proxy plaintiffs to seek judicial invalidation of elections involving APP shortly after the 2027 presidential results are announced, or orchestrating a widespread boycott that could delegitimize the entire electoral process.

Drawing parallels to electoral crises in Kenya (2017) and Côte d’Ivoire (2010-2011) that resulted in violence, economic collapse, and civil war, CAD warned that Nigeria’s fragile democratic ecosystem cannot absorb such shocks. Ngoforo emphasized that the matter has transcended electoral administration to become a national security threat, noting that conspirators have established channels to amplify any planned crisis through international media and diplomatic networks. He called on the Office of the National Security Adviser, Department of State Services, Nigerian Police Force, and Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to immediately investigate the financial transactions sustaining the conspiracy.

The group made five specific demands to INEC: immediately announce that APP was lawfully deregistered and has no legal existence; remove APP from the database of registered political parties; publicly release all documentation related to the claimed court order or admit none exists; identify all officials who facilitated the fraudulent exemption; and collaborate with law enforcement to prosecute those involved.

CAD specifically appealed to INEC’s current Chairman, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, noting that while he inherited the problem, he now has the responsibility and constitutional authority to correct it before it destroys Nigeria’s democracy.

The organization called on civil society groups, professional bodies, the National Assembly, the Attorney-General of the Federation, and international observers to join the campaign to address what it described as a clear and present danger to Nigeria’s national security.

Ngoforo warned that failure to act immediately could result in the collapse of Nigeria’s economy, deterioration of security, destruction of international standing, and potential classification as a failed state. “The 2027 elections represent more than a political contest; they are a test of whether our institutions can maintain integrity under pressure,” he declared, urging all Nigerians to recognize the issue as a matter of partisan politics rather than partisan politics.

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Atiku Accuses EFCC of Partisan Agenda, Says Anti-Corruption War Now “Political Witch-Hunt”

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Former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar has strongly criticized the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), accusing the agency of abandoning its core mandate and turning the nation’s anti-corruption campaign into a tool for political persecution.

Atiku said the EFCC’s recent activities demonstrate a troubling pattern in which opposition figures are aggressively targeted, while allies of the ruling party appear to receive preferential treatment.

According to Atiku, Nigeria’s once-credible anti-corruption drive has “derailed into a full-blown political witch-hunt,” undermining both public trust and the integrity of institutions created to uphold accountability. He argued that the EFCC now functions as an “overzealous appendage” of those in power, rather than as an impartial guardian of the law.

The former Vice-President referenced recent high-profile arrests, including that of former Attorney-General Abubakar Malami (SAN), as evidence of selective enforcement. He claimed that such moves fit a broader pattern of intimidation aimed at weakening the opposition while shielding individuals aligned with the ruling party from scrutiny.

Atiku warned that the politicization of anti-graft bodies threatens Nigeria’s democratic stability, erodes confidence in justice processes, and damages the country’s international credibility in combating corruption.

He called on the EFCC to re-establish its independence and refocus on its founding principles to ensure that the fight against corruption is fair, transparent, and free from political interference.

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