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Fani-Kayode Kicks Against Buhari’s No-Visa-Policy

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Femi Fani-Kayode, former Minister of Aviation, has opposed the visa on arrival policy for all visiting Africans announced by President Buhari yesterday December 11th.

President Buhari while speaking in Egypt, said starting from 2020, Africans who intended to come to Nigeria would no longer need to apply for visas as they would be issued visas on arrival.

In a post shared on his Facebook page, FFK said the policy is a dangerous, self-serving and self-seeking policy which will ultimately result in great conflict, carnage, racial and religious strife and total catastrophy.

Read the post below

A visa free policy for Africans to come into Nigeria is a shameless and subtle attempt to alter the racial and religious demographics of our country and open our front door for mass Fulani, Berber, Taureg and Arab migration into our shores.

By the time they come here from all over north and west Africa and settle down, we the indigenous people of Nigeria will be a tiny minority. The next thing they will do is to implement RUGA to the letter and take our land and insist on sharia law being implemented all over the country.

It is a dangerous, self-serving & self-seeking policy which will ultimately result in great conflict, carnage, racial and religious strife and total catastrophy. In an attempt to implement an ancient agenda of Fulani hegemony and turn us into a conquered and enslaved people Buhari, his born to rule co-travellers and their vast legion of slavish sympathisers and supporters are likely to set Nigeria on fire.

You will not believe me now just as you did not believe me when I warned about the true nature of Buhari in 2015 and the grave consequences of electing him as President.

Yet my words have proved to be prophetic and just as I have been vindicated on Buhari I shall be vindicated on this matter of the grave and dangerous consequences of visa-free mass migration by vagrant, stateless and nomadic Africans into our shores.

With this irresponsible, unpatriotic, dangerous and self-serving policy, I repeat, we are playing with fire and sitting on a keg of gunpowder which will eventually explode. It will be the final nail in the coffin of a united Nigeria. May God deliver us from the coming evil.

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FG begins ASUU salary, allowance payments

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The Federal Government has begun implementing key welfare components of its renegotiated agreement with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

The Minister of Education, Dr Tunji Alausa, in a directive issued to Vice-Chancellors of federal universities on Monday, announced a 40 per cent increase in the Consolidated Academic Allowance (CAA) for ASUU members, effective from Jan. 1, 2026.

Alausa reaffirmed President Bola Tinubu’s commitment to the welfare of academic staff and the stability of the university system.

He said some federal universities had already reflected the increase in salary payments.

He directed all federal universities to ensure full compliance, integrating the approved increment into their payroll structures so all eligible academic staff benefit.

The Minister also stressed strict adherence to the implementation of the Consolidated Tools Allowance (CATA), noting that its payment has been captured and circularised by the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission (NSIWC) and included in the 2026 budget.

He urged university management to use available resources to ensure prompt payment of CATA in line with NSIWC guidelines.

Alausa said timely implementation of both the CAA increase and CATA would strengthen the academic environment, enhance staff morale, and improve teaching, research, and learning outcomes.

He reiterated the Federal Government’s resolve to honour agreements with education stakeholders and remain committed to constructive engagement, transparency, industrial harmony, and continuous improvement of quality education in Nigeria.

(NAN)

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Make real-time transmission of election results mandatory -NGE Tells NASS

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The Nigerian Guild of Editors (NGE) has expressed concern over the Senate’s position on the transmission of election results ahead of the 2027 general elections, warning that the controversy could erode public trust in the electoral process.

In a statement signed by Eze Anaba, its president, and Onuoha Ukeh, general secretary, on Monday, the Guild said it was troubled by the uncertainty generated by the Senate’s adoption of provisions in the proposed 2022 Electoral Act that allow the transmission of election results “without making it mandatory and immediate.”

According to the editors, “this development is already creating room for doubt and mistrust in the electoral process among Nigerians.”

The NGE noted that the Senate’s position runs contrary to the “widely held position of most Nigerians and many lawmakers,” adding that the backlash has “pitted citizens against the Senate and could potentially discourage voter participation in future elections.”

The Guild described the move as “a missed opportunity to strengthen transparency and accountability in Nigeria’s electoral process,” warning that it “undermines ongoing efforts to deepen democratic governance and ensure credible elections.”

Citing global best practices, the Guild stated that “mandatory electronic transmission of election results has become a standard for improving electoral credibility and efficiency,” stressing that “Nigeria should not be an exception.” It urged the National Assembly, as it reconvenes to harmonise positions with the House of Representatives, to approve “mandatory and immediate transmission of election results from polling units to the INEC central server and collation centres.”

The editors argued that digitalisation anchored on real-time transmission would “enhance transparency, efficiency, accuracy, and voter confidence,” while also helping to “reduce disputes, minimise controversies, and significantly curb electoral fraud.”

They cautioned that “anything short of this will be out of step with contemporary and progressive electoral practices,” adding that mandatory and immediate transmission “will not only enhance free and fair elections but also give Nigerians the confidence that their votes will truly count.”

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It’s Possible For Senate To Vote Publicly On Real-Time E-Transmission Of Election Results — Ningi

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Senator representing Bauchi Central at the National Assembly, Abdul Ningi, on Monday said the Senate could make the adoption of the votes and proceedings on the electronic transmission of election results public amid ongoing controversy over the issue.

Ningi stated this on Channels Television’s Politics Today ahead of the upper chamber’s emergency plenary session scheduled for Tuesday, following ongoing debates over the e-transmission of election results after the Electoral Act amendment bill passed the third reading at the Senate.

Asked during the interview whether it was possible for the voting process at the Senate to be made public so that Nigerians could know which senator voted for or against the real-time transmission of election results, Ningi said, “I think it’s possible. It depends on the presiding officer because the law provides that.

“You can stand up and say, ‘I, Ningi, I accept e-transmission in real time.’ I sit down. It’s recorded every other senator, and that is the only way we need to move forward.”

“One thing that is very important is that the votes and proceedings have not been captured. So tomorrow, we need to look at what the votes and proceedings captured are. Is it a transfer?

“There was a motion for amendment by Manguno, and then the question was put. Who asked the question? Why was the question raised?

“Was it discussed? It is important that when you bring a motion on something that you have no idea of, one of the reasons why maybe people are not so happy is that the Senate President should have asked us as a committee, ‘Please, educate us on this issue that this Moguna has raised,” the Bauchi lawmaker added.

Ningi stated that the issue was not about one political party or the other.

“I’m here, and I’m telling you with all sense of responsibility that this is not a party thing. It has never been seen as a party thing up to the moment we went into the committee of the whole.

“If tomorrow the Senate President decides to say, ‘Is it transfer or transmission, and the gavel was sealed on transfer. They (the majority) have their way,” he said.

The federal lawmaker also expressed displeasure over what he described as the condemnation of the Senate “in its entirety” over the matter.

“I feel so sad and outraged myself when I see the condemnation across this country condemning the Senate in its entirety. And that’s why for us, we need to tell the story.

“And I can tell you 98 per cent of the senators are in agreement with the submission made by the House. I don’t know how they are trying to make it a party affair. I don’t think so.

“As I told you, APC governors have presented their submission, PDP…, and they are all saying e-transmission,” Ningi stated on the programme.

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