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7 Facts About Former Kwara Governor Cornelius Adebayo

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7 Facts About Former Kwara Governor Cornelius Adebayo

Cornelius Olatunji Adebayo was a former governor of Kwara state, Senator and Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. He died Wednesday, 25 June 2025 at the age of 84.

Below are facts about Cornelius Adebayo:

1. Cornelius Olatunji Adebayo was born in Igbaja, Kwara state on 24 February 1941. He attended All Saints Anglican School, Oke-Onigbin, Provincial Secondary School, and Barewa College in Zaria.

2. He also attended Ahmadu Bello University from 1964 to 1967. Afterwards, he proceeded to the University of Ghana from 1967 to 1969.

3. He became a lecturer in 1969 at Obafemi Awolowo University then was appointed as the head of the English Department at Kwara State College of Technology in 1973.

4. From 1975 to 1978, he became the Commissioner for Education and Commissioner for Information and Economic Development in Kwara state.

5. Cornelius Adebayo was elected in 1979 as a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and in 1983, he was also elected governor of Kwara state but was overthrown by the military on 31 December 1983.

6. Adebayo was appointed the Minister of Communications in 2003 by the president at the time, Olusegun Obasanjo. He pushed for the privatisation of NITEL in which he sold stakes to Huawei, Celtel, MTN, Vodacom and Orascom.

7. Cornelius Adebayo became the Minister of Works in 2006. He was able to contribute to the educational development of Kwara state by building classrooms and other infrastructural facilities.

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Senators Under Fire As Aisha Yesufu Makes Explosive Allegations

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Human rights activist, Aisha Yesufu, has criticized members of the Nigerian Senate, accusing them of helping President Bola Tinubu carry out actions she believes are harmful to the country.

Naija News reports that Yesufu shared her views in a post published on her verified 𝕏 account on Friday.

She argued that senators should stop presenting themselves as helpless, insisting that they are part of the system that gives the President the backing to act.

Her reaction followed comments by the senator representing Kebbi South, Garba Maidoki, who recently said he appealed to Nigerians for support because bandits were killing people in his constituency.

Responding to the senator’s remarks, Yesufu said lawmakers should not see themselves as victims of the country’s security and political problems.

According to her, they have the authority and responsibility to influence decisions made at the national level.

She maintained that members of the National Assembly are responsible for approving and supporting government actions, adding that they should be held accountable for the direction the country is taking under the current administration.

She wrote: “Senators should stop infantilizing themselves! They are not victims. They are enablers of whatever evil Tinubu is carrying out in this country.

“They are the ones giving him the power to do all the shenanigans he is currently doing.”

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Politics

BREAKING: Court Stops NDC Registration

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A recent ruling by a Federal High Court in Lokoja has overturned a previous judgment that required the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to officially register the Nigeria Democratic Congress as a recognized political party.

The decision, delivered on Friday by Justice Isah Dashen, has significant implications for the political landscape in Nigeria.

The court’s announcement was communicated on the same day via a social media update by Lere Olayinka, who serves as the media aide to Nyesom Wike, the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory.

This ruling arrives at a critical juncture for several established opposition parties in Nigeria, many of which are grappling with profound internal challenges. Notable among these parties are the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and the Accord Party, both of which have been struggling to maintain their political relevance.

In a related development, POLITICS NIGERIA reports that a different Federal High Court in Abuja recently issued orders for the deregistration of the ADC, the Accord Party, and three additional political associations.

This directive was a result of a lawsuit initiated by the National Forum of Former Legislators, which asserted that these parties had failed to meet the constitutional requirements necessary for their continued registration.

According to Nigerian electoral law, political parties are mandated to secure a minimum of 25 percent of the votes in at least one state during presidential elections or to win at least one elective position at the national, state, or local government levels in order to remain registered with INEC.

The court found that these identified parties had underperformed, failing to meet these crucial benchmarks during both the 2023 elections and subsequent by-elections, which raises questions about their future viability in the country’s political arena.

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Presidency Confirms New Minimum Wage Review for Workers

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Nigeria, Benin Sign Integration Pact

The presidency has officially confirmed that plans are underway to alter the current national minimum wage configuration because the current economic situation has made the baseline salary unsustainable.

Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, made this disclosure while speaking in Abuja on Thursday during an event organized by a group called Working People United.

According to the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, the present N70,000 threshold established under President Bola Tinubu’s administration in 2024 is no longer capable of meeting the practical economic demands faced by citizens across the nation.

Addressing the gathering, the president’s representative pointed out that the current fiscal environment necessitates a thorough re-evaluation of what constitutes a living baseline for Nigerian workers. Nigerian Business Directory

He noted that the “N70,000 wage, which was a milestone in 2024 must be honestly reassessed against today’s realities,” signaling a strong commitment from the executive arm to reopen discussions surrounding statutory labor compensation.

Gbajabiamila assured organized labor groups that the administration does not view workers as adversaries but rather as key contributors to the progress of the country.

He emphasized that the government plans to approach the upcoming negotiations with a high level of empathy and cooperation.

“I can confirm to you that when the time comes to begin the process of reviewing the national minimum wage, this administration will approach that endeavor not as an adversary of Labour, but as a partner,” he said.

He further re-iterated the commitment of the president to human capital development and fair treatment of the workforce.

“President Tinubu has said time and again that the custodians of the nation’s machinery deserve a fair and commensurate wage, and as you all well know by now, this is the president who means precisely what he says and does exactly what he means,” Gbajabiamila stated, defending the president’s record on labor issues.

While urging trade unions and workers to maintain a peaceful posture, the Chief of Staff maintained that sustainable national growth requires an ongoing collaboration rather than perpetual conflict.

He mentioned that “It must be said that good governance is not a performance stage by government for the benefit of a passive audience, it’s a partnership between those who govern and those who are governed.”

He also emphasized that the relationship between the ruling political class and the working population remains the most crucial foundation for industrial harmony.

“No where is that partnership more vital than the relationship between government and the working people of Nigeria,” he added.

Concluding his address, the former lawmaker appealed directly to union leaders to choose the path of dialogue over strikes and industrial actions, which often cripple the national economy.

“It is with this understanding in mind that I ask the leaders of organized labour and the members of working people united to remain what you have so often been at your finest, partners in progress rather than antagonist in perpetuity, let us choose to dialog over disruption, because as we have proved again and again, we achieve far more when we visit together than when we retreat, retreat to our separate corners,” Gbajabiamila remarked.

In a related development, Politics Nigeria earlier reported that civil servants under the umbrella of the Joint National Public Service Negotiating Council (JNPSNC) have already intensified pressure on the government, demanding a substantial increase to cushion the effects of inflation.

Organized labor has repeatedly argued that the current purchasing power of public servants has severely deteriorated, making an early review of the minimum wage structure inevitable. Nigerian News Subscription

 

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