General News
FCT Traditional Rulers Hails President Tinubu’s Developmental Strides, Confers Wike With “Light of Abuja” Chieftaincy Title
By Wumi Tewogbade, Abuja
Traditional rulers in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) have conferred on the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, the Chieftaincy title of “Hasken Abuja” (Light of Abuja), in recognition of his contributions to the development of the territory.
The traditional rulers, who thanked President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, for the infrastructural development in the FCT, especially the satellite towns, asked for more recognition of the indigenous people of the federal capital.
Speaking during an appreciation visit by the FCT Stakeholders Assembly at the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) Conference Hall in Abuja, the Ona of Abaji and Chairman of the FCT Council of Chiefs, Dr. Adamu Baba Yunusa, praised the administration for improving the welfare of traditional rulers and approved projects such as the construction of a new palace in Abaji.
The monarch noted that the honor recognizes Wike’s “visionary leadership” and “commitment to the development of the FCT,” specifically citing his recent approval for the construction of a new Ona Palace in Abaji, the upgrading of the status and welfare of FCT traditional rulers, and structural reforms that have restored dignity to the traditional institution.
Reading out their list of “more work for hard work,” the traditional rulers requested the provision of 17 tractors—one for each of the 17 Chiefdoms—to bolster food security for the territory’s rural agrarian communities.
They also advocated for the elevation of historically significant chiefdoms, such as Garki and Jiwa, to higher statuses.
Responding to traditional rulers demands, Wike promised to protect the interests of the indigenous people, granting several immediate requests:
He directed the Mandate Secretary for Agriculture to provide tractors for each of the 17 Chiefdoms.
Also, he instructed the Council of Chiefs to submit names for the creation of third-class traditional stools, stating, “It is not in my position to write who will be… you people should do the right thing.”
He pledged to resolve issues regarding land certificates based on the numbers submitted by the stakeholders.
”I’m now from here. For me to be the Light of Abuja, I must do everything to protect your interest,” Wike concluded, while maintaining that the FCT’s political future depends on having a “strong voice” in the National Assembly to lobby for the expansion of senatorial seats.
On the 2027 elections, the minister counselled the FCT stakeholders against electing weak or inexperienced representatives, saying that such choices could leave the territory voiceless at the National Assembly.
“The Senate is not an all-comers’ game. Experience matters, ranking matters… you must have a strong voice there,” he said.
The minister expressed concern that past representation had failed to effectively articulate the needs of the FCT, urging stakeholders to make more strategic decisions in future elections.
“You elected a senator you can’t see… a senator who cannot even organise the indigenous community to ask what their needs are,” he stated.
Wike said that repeating such mistakes would further weaken the territory’s ability to attract development and influence national policy decisions.
“If you make a mistake this time, it will be difficult for you. When it was time to help yourself, you didn’t help… don’t expect miracles,” he added as he endorsed Sen Philip Tanimu Aduda.
Beyond electoral choices, the minister linked political alignment with development outcomes, noting that the administration of President Bola Tinubu had continued to deliver infrastructure projects in the FCT despite low electoral support in the 2023 elections.
“In 2023, most of you did not give Mr. President up to six per cent, yet he has done so much for you… now that you know, do not make that mistake again,” he said.
“In 2023, most of you did not give Mr. President up to six per cent, yet he has done so much for you… now that you know, do not make that mistake again,” he said.
He disclosed that several projects, including water supply schemes in rural communities and new road networks, would soon be inaugurated as part of activities marking the President’s anniversary in office.
“Mr. President has touched virtually all the satellite towns… more roads will be constructed to open up our communities,” Wike said.
The minister also charged incoming area council chairmen to focus on governance and address pressing challenges, particularly in the education sector.
“It cannot continue that our children are at home because of strikes. Education is a first priority… without it, there cannot be development,” he emphasised.
Earlier, President of the FCT Stakeholders Assembly, Dr. Aliyu Daniel Bakna Kwali, commended the minister for ongoing reforms and infrastructural development, while presenting key demands including increased representation for the FCT at the National Assembly and the creation of additional area councils.
The event, which opened with remarks from former Federal Commissioner Dr. Aliyu Almakura Abdulkadir, underscored a new era of collaborative governance, with the traditional institution positioning itself as a central pillar in the FCT’s drive for political and economic expansion.
General News
Collaborative Journalism and Building Community Resilience Against Crimr
Distinguished colleagues,
We are gathered at a time when the meaning of safety in Nigeria especially in the North Central region here, has become deeply uncertain. In our communities across Benue State, insecurity is no longer discussed as a possibility; it is a lived daily reality. It is experienced on farms that can no longer be accessed, on roads that can no longer be trusted and in homes that no longer guarantee protection.
In recent years, Benue State has witnessed repeated violent attacks on rural communities, especially in Guma, Kwande, Agatu, Ukum, Logo and Gwer West Local Government Areas (Reuters, 2026; Premium Times, 2024). These attacks have resulted in loss of lives, destruction of property and mass displacement of residents into internally displaced persons (IDP) camps. The pattern remains consistent as armed groups enter communities, often at night, carry out coordinated assaults and withdraw with little immediate resistance. Survivors recount not just the violence itself, but the absence of timely intervention.
The insecurity is not confined to rural settlements. Major roads have become increasingly dangerous. The Makurdi–Otukpo road has been the site of repeated incidents of abduction (Daily Trust, 2024). In April 2024, reports confirmed that passengers traveling along this axis were attacked by gunmen, with several passengers taken away. Similar incidents have continued to occur on that route up to April this year with the abduction of a Benue Links bus passengers by gunmen on the 15th April 2026. Such incidents are not isolated, they form part of a recurring pattern that has altered how people move, trade and even seek education.
Beyond Benue, similar realities unfold across the North Central zone. In Plateau State, particularly in Bokkos and Mangu Local Government Areas, attacks on communities have led to significant casualties and displacement (Al Jazeera, 2024; Premium Times, 2024). These incidents have drawn national attention, not only because of their scale, but because of their persistence. Each episode is reported, condemned and then followed by another.
Across these spaces, one thing is clear, that insecurity has become organized, repetitive and deeply embedded within the social fabric. Yet, the responses to it especially in the information space remain largely fragmented.
Journalism, by its very nature, is expected to serve as the conscience of society. It documents, it questions and it informs. In Nigeria, journalists have consistently reported these barbaric incidents naming places, counting losses and relaying official responses. But the dominant pattern of reporting has remained largely reactive. An attack occurs, it is reported and attention shifts until the next incident. What is missing is not effort, it is structure. It is coordination. It is the deliberate pooling of journalistic capacity to move from isolated reporting to collective impact.
The scale and complexity of insecurity today cannot be effectively addressed by individual journalists or single newsrooms working in isolation. The networks behind these crimes are organized. The responses to them must be equally organized. This is where the idea of collaborative journalism becomes critical. Not as a theory, but as a practical necessity. This paper explores how collaborative journalism can be strengthened as a tool for building community resilience against crime.
Patterns of Journalism Practice in Security Reporting in Nigeria
For decades, journalism in Nigeria has stood at the frontline of national crises, including conflict, insurgency and communal violence. In the face of insecurity across Benue State and the wider North Central region, journalists have not been absent. Reports have been filed, headlines have been written and voices have been amplified. Yet, despite this visible presence, the structure and impact of security reporting reveal clear limitations that must be confronted honestly.
The dominant tradition has been incident-driven reporting. When attacks occur, whether in Guma, Kwande, Agatu, Ukum, Logo, or Gwer West, journalists arrive, gather accounts and publish details of casualties, destruction and official reactions.
These reports serve an important purpose as they inform the public and preserve records of events. However, they often exist in isolation. One attack is reported, then another, with little sustained effort to connect these events into a broader, investigative narrative. As a result, patterns of violence remain underexplored and systemic issues are rarely exposed with the depth they require.
There is fragmentation of media efforts. News organizations operate largely within their own institutional boundaries, competing for exclusives and breaking news. While competition can drive speed and visibility, it has also limited cooperation. In practical terms, multiple journalists may cover the same attack in Makurdi, yet no structured collaboration exists to jointly investigate recurring incidents along the Makurdi–Otukpo axis, despite the frequency of reported abductions along that route. The absence of shared databases, coordinated fieldwork, or pooled investigative resources has meant that journalism often mirrors the fragmentation seen in the broader national response to insecurity.
Another defining feature has been the heavy reliance on official sources. Security agencies such as the police, military and government spokespersons remain primary sources of information, especially in the immediate aftermath of attacks. While these sources are necessary, over-dependence on them has shaped the tone and depth of reporting. Journalists frequently relay official statements that may confirm incidents but offer limited insight into underlying causes, operational failures, or long-term implications. In many cases, there is little follow-up questioning and even less sustained investigation into discrepancies between official accounts and community testimonies.
There is also the challenge of limited field penetration. In high-risk areas, including remote communities in Benue State, access is often restricted by insecurity itself. Journalists face real dangers such as ambushes, kidnappings and lack of protective infrastructure. As a result, many reports are built from second-hand accounts rather than prolonged, on-the-ground engagement. This affects not only the depth of reporting but also the ability to capture the lived realities of affected populations in a consistent and human-centered manner.
Journalism in this space has largely remained reactive rather than preventive. Coverage begins after violence has occurred.
There are few structured mechanisms for early warning reporting, risk mapping, or proactive engagement with communities to identify emerging threats. This reactive posture limits the ability of journalism to contribute meaningfully to prevention or resilience-building and these patterns reveal a system that is active but not fully effective. Nigerian journalism has documented insecurity extensively, but it has not yet maximized its collective strength. The challenge, therefore, is not the absence of journalism, but the absence of coordination, continuity and collaboration.
Notable Emerging Forms of Collaboration and Their Limitations.
Despite the structural limitations already identified, it would be inaccurate to suggest that collaboration is entirely absent within journalism in the landscape of Nigeria. In reality, forms of collaboration do exist, but they are often informal, inconsistent and insufficiently institutionalized to match the scale of insecurity confronting communities in Benue State and across the North Central region.
One of the most visible forms of collaboration is found in informal information-sharing networks among journalists. In most cases, reporters frequently rely on WhatsApp groups and professional contacts to exchange leads, confirm incidents and circulate breaking developments. When attacks occur, whether in rural parts of Gwer West or along major routes, information often spreads first through these peer networks before formal publication. This has improved the speed of reporting and, in some cases, helped to verify basic facts in fast-moving situations.
However, this form of collaboration remains limited to immediacy, not depth. It facilitates reporting, but it does not extend into joint investigation, shared analysis, or coordinated follow-up. Once stories are published, the collaboration typically ends.
There are also instances of engagement between journalists and security agencies, particularly through press briefings and official updates. Police commands, military spokespersons and state authorities periodically provide information on attacks, arrests, or rescue operations. In Benue State, for example, security agencies have, at different times, issued statements following attacks in local communities, outlining their responses and ongoing operations.
While these interactions are important, they are largely one-directional. Information flows from security agencies to journalists, with limited opportunity for deeper collaboration.
Journalists are informed, but not integrated into any structured system of intelligence sharing, early warning, or joint problem-solving. As a result, reporting remains reactive to official disclosures rather than contributing to proactive security awareness.
Another emerging area is collaborative investigative journalism at the national level, particularly among major media organizations and independent investigative platforms. There have been notable instances where journalists have worked together across institutions to expose corruption, financial crimes and governance failures. These efforts demonstrate that collaboration is possible and effective when properly structured.
Yet, this model has not been fully extended to security reporting at the subnational level, especially in states like Benue. Investigations into recurring attacks, patterns of displacement, or the operational structures of armed groups remain largely fragmented and underdeveloped. The absence of sustained, multi-newsroom investigations into insecurity leaves critical gaps in public understanding.
Engagement between journalists and communities also exists, though often in unstructured forms. Reporters depend on local sources such as community leaders, residents and eyewitnesses to gather information from affected areas. In many cases, these relationships are built on trust and are essential for accessing locations that are otherwise difficult to reach. However, these interactions are typically transactional rather than strategic. Information is gathered for immediate reporting, but there is little effort to develop long-term community–journalist partnerships that could support early warning systems, continuous monitoring, or collaborative storytelling.
Communities remain sources of information, but not active participants in shaping the narrative or response.
In terms of safety, journalists operating in high-risk environments often rely on personal experience and informal support systems. There is some level of peer guidance, advice on which routes to avoid, which areas are volatile and how to navigate certain situations. But there is no widely adopted, structured framework for shared safety resources, coordinated field coverage, or emergency response mechanisms for journalists working in dangerous zones.
These realities put together, point to the presence of foundations of collaborative journalism, but they are weakly developed and largely informal. There is communication, but not coordination. There is interaction, but not integration. There is effort, but not structure.
The implication is that, what exists today cannot adequately respond to a security crisis that is itself organized, persistent and evolving. To move forward, collaboration must shift from being incidental to being intentional, structured and sustained.
Reimagining Collaborative Journalism for Security and Resilience.
If the current moment has exposed anything with clarity, then, it is that insecurity in Nigeria has evolved, but journalism has not equally evolved at the same pace. The threats are coordinated. The responses must be coordinated. Anything less will continue to produce the same cycle of attack, report, forget and repeat.
What is required now is not a minor adjustment in practice, but a deliberate rethinking of how journalism operates in times of crisis.
First, collaboration must move from the margins to the center of journalistic practice. It must no longer depend on personal relationships or informal communication channels. There is a need for structured collaboration across newsrooms, where journalists deliberately work together to investigate recurring patterns of violence. When attacks continue along corridors such as recurring abduction of travelers on the Makurdi–Otukpo road, the story should not end with individual reports of each incident. It should trigger joint investigations that ask deeper questions: Why does this keep happening here? Who benefits from the persistence of these attacks? What gaps in response remain unaddressed?
Second, the relationship between journalists and security agencies must be redefined, not abandoned. Independence must be preserved, but isolation must end. There is room for structured engagement that allows journalists access to timely and relevant information, while still maintaining the critical distance required for accountability. Security cannot be treated as a closed system and journalism cannot operate effectively in the dark.
Third, communities must no longer be treated simply as sources of information. They must become partners in the process of reporting and resilience-building. The people who live in Guma, Logo and Gwer West understand the patterns of these attacks better than anyone else. Their knowledge is not incidental, it is essential. Building sustained relationships with such communities can transform journalism from a tool of documentation into a tool of early warning and prevention.
Fourth, journalism must embrace shared responsibility for safety. The risks faced by reporters in conflict-prone areas are real and increasing. No journalist should be left to navigate these dangers alone. There is a clear need for pooled safety resources, coordinated field strategies and collective support systems that protect those who bring these stories to light.
Finally and most importantly, there is a need for a coordinated national response within the journalism profession itself. The Nigerian Union of Journalists is uniquely positioned to lead this shift. What is required is a framework that brings journalists together during moments of crisis not as competing voices, but as a unified force for truth, accountability and public interest. When the nation faces insecurity, the media must not sound fragmented. It must speak with clarity, consistency and purpose.
Conclusion
The realities confronting Benue State and the wider North Central region are not abstract. They are lived daily in interrupted journeys, in abandoned homes and in communities that continue to endure repeated violence. Journalism has documented these realities, but documentation alone is no longer enough.
This is a call to journalists, editors, media owners and the Nigerian Union of Journalists as we are seated here today, to move beyond routine reporting, to build structures that outlive individual efforts, and to commit to a model of journalism that is as organized as the challenges it seeks to confront. If insecurity has become systemic, then journalism must become strategic. And the time to begin is now.
Presented by Dr. Hangeior Degarr,
Department of Journalism and Media Studies,
Moses Orshio Adasu University, Makurdi on Thursday, 30th April, 2026 during the Benue NUJ’s Dinner, Awards and Lecture Ceremony at NUJ House, Makurdi.
General News
Soludo’s 16.4km Road Project Ends Years of Suffering, Opens Up Anambra Communities
By Wumi Tewogbade,Abuja
Vice President of Boardwalk Group and Abuja-based real estate developer, Chief Obiageli Okwubanego, on Wednesday, commended the Governor of Anambra State, Prof. Charles Chukwuma Soludo, for completing the 16.4-kilometre Nawfija–Ajali–Ufuma–Ogbunka Road in Orumba South Local Government Area.
She gave the commendation while speaking with journalists in Abuja.
She said residents in that area testified that the project has transformed transportation, agriculture and economic activities across the axis.
Okwubanego described the road project as a major infrastructure breakthrough that has drastically reduced travel time and eased movement for motorists and residents within the affected communities.
She recalled that the appeal for the road was first made in 2019 when Soludo attended the funeral mass of her mother, Chief Mrs. Agnes Igwenagu Okeke.
According to her, the deplorable state of the road at the time made movement extremely difficult for mourners and guests attending the burial ceremony.
“When Professor Soludo later declared interest in contesting for governor, I went back to my people and urged them to support him with the assurance that the road would be done. I also appealed to him to extend the road project to Ogbunka, my mother’s hometown,” she said.
She noted that the newly completed road has reduced travel time by about two hours and now serves as an alternative route to the traffic-prone Umunze Roundabout.
Travellers heading towards Umuaku in Abia State, as well as Okigwe and Ndi-Iziogu areas of Imo State, now use the route to avoid traffic congestion.
“For Christmas, Easter, August meetings, marriages and other celebrations, people can now travel home with ease and in large numbers,” she stated.
Okwubanego described the project as part of Soludo’s broader infrastructure and economic transformation agenda across Anambra State.
According to her, the road has enhanced the movement of goods and services within the communities and improved economic activities in the area.
“Governor Soludo’s solution agenda has positively impacted our communities and brought remarkable transformation to the entire Orumba South Local Government Area,” she said.
She further noted that residents of Nawfija community had never experienced a tarred road before the intervention of the Soludo administration.
“Since I started visiting Nawfija community years ago, the residents had never enjoyed a tarred road. Soludo, through compassionate and selfless leadership, has now provided the people with their first properly constructed road,” she added.
Highlighting the economic importance of the project, Okwubanego said the road has significantly boosted agricultural activities in the area, especially palm oil production.
She explained that the adjoining communities are predominantly farming settlements responsible for a substantial share of palm oil production in Orumba South Local Government Area.
“The famous Onuoigbo palm plantation, which spans over 20 hectares, is located along this road corridor in Nawfija, and the improved road network will greatly support the movement of farm produce,” she explained.
On tourism potential, she said the road would also increase access to the popular Ozi Stream, known for fishing and irrigation activities, thereby attracting more visitors and commercial activities.
“With easier access to the famous Ozi Stream, human and business activities in the area will rise significantly,” she noted.
Okwubanego also reaffirmed her emotional attachment to Nawfija community, saying her passion for the people inspired her continuous commitment to their welfare and development.
“My dear Nawfija community means so much to me, which is why I personally pleaded with His Excellency to give us this road. My passion for the community will always push me to look out for their welfare,” she said.
General News
Ekiti Church Attack: CAN Demands Action Over Killing, Abduction of Worshippers
By Wumi Tewogbade, Abuja
The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) on Wednesday, condemned the attack on a church gathering in Eda Oniyo Ekiti, where gunmen reportedly killed a Pastor and abducted several worshippers during an open-air crusade.
This was stated in a statement issued by President, CAN, Archbishop Daniel Okoh, in Abuja.
The Christian body demanded for immediate arrest and prosecution of the culprits and rescue of those kidnapped.
He described this latest attack as a brutal assault on shared humanity and the sanctity of life.
And it is deeply disturbing and unacceptable.
He mourned with the family of the slain Pastor and stand in full solidarity with the victims and the entire Christian community in Ekiti State
The statement reads, “We condemn this heinous act in the strongest possible terms. People had gathered peacefully to worship God, and they were met with violence. This is not just an attack on a church; it is a brutal assault on our shared humanity and the sanctity of life.
“We mourn with the family of the slain Pastor and stand in full solidarity with the victims and the entire Christian community in Ekiti State. Our thoughts and prayers are with those who have been taken, and we call for their immediate and safe release.
“This latest tragedy comes amid a disturbing pattern of attacks. Only recently, gunmen struck communities in Yagba West Local Government Area of Kogi State, abducting residents including clergy, their families, and other community members. These repeated incidents underscore a deepening security crisis that can no longer be ignored.
“This attack further heightens concerns about the safety of lives and the protection of communities. No one should have to live in fear, and no place of worship must ever become a hunting ground for criminals.
“We must be unequivocal: the protection of lives and property is the primary responsibility of government. We call on the authorities and security agencies to act swiftly, decisively, and transparently. Those responsible for this atrocity must be apprehended and brought to justice without delay. Every necessary effort must be made to rescue those abducted unharmed.
“We also urge the government to immediately strengthen security presence, especially in vulnerable and rural communities, and to deploy proactive intelligence measures to prevent further attacks”.
He noted, “At the same time, we must all speak out firmly. The killing of a Pastor and the abduction of worshippers gathered to commune with their Creator is deeply troubling. It reflects a grave disregard for life, for faith, and for the moral fabric of our society.
“We have a duty to communicate these concerns clearly, firmly, and without equivocation to the appropriate authorities. Nigeria must not normalise the killing of worshippers or the abduction of innocent citizens in places of refuge.
“May God comfort the bereaved, protect those in captivity, and restore peace and security to our land”.
