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Analysis

The Heist in Aniebonam Nwamu’s Mind: A Rejoinder

By Benson Azude

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In the sacred groves of academia, where the pursuit of truth is the highest calling, few acts are as pernicious as the deliberate propagation of falsehood. This sense of grave depravity is further reinforced in an age when misinformation travels faster than truth and half-baked opinions are passed off as investigative reporting. It is against this backdrop that it becomes a civic duty to set the records straight, especially when the integrity of a national institution is at stake. It is with a profound sense of duty to truth and institutional integrity that we address the diatribe by one Mr. Aniebonam Nwamu, titled ‘The Heist at UNN’, an unfortunate piece of sensationalist fiction masquerading as journalism. This write-up, a master-class in malicious speculation, does not merely err in its facts; it actively weaponizes ignorance to undermine a venerable Nigerian institution. The University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN), an institution that stands tall as the nation’s first indigenous university – has, once again, found itself in the crosshairs of a reckless pen driven more by bile than by fact. In effect, the only University of Nigeria therefore, finds it imperative to set the record straight, not with rancour, but with the cold, hard steel of empirical evidence and procedural transparency.

Let us begin with the allegation at the heart of Nwamu’s diatribe: that corruption “walks on eight legs” in Nigeria’s citadel of learning; that admission into Medicine and Surgery at UNN is procured by bribery rather than merit; and that the university’s published cut-off score of 338 is a smokescreen for graft. From this seed of conjecture, he cultivates a jumble of insidious insinuations, alleging a bazaar of corruption where admission is bartered for millions of Naira, and “dunces” are ushered into the hallowed halls of learning. Nothing could be farther from the truth. This is not just false; it is a demonstrable inversion of reality, built on a foundational failure to comprehend the clearly-defined and federally-mandated architecture of university admissions in Nigeria. Indeed, what Nwamu presents as ‘exposé’ is little more than armchair conjecture, unsupported by data and bereft of understanding of how Nigeria’s tertiary admission system actually works.

To begin with, the University’s admission process is not a cryptic art but a science governed by public policy. Generally, admissions into federal universities are not whimsical exercises conducted in some shadowy corners of authority. They are governed by clear, verifiable procedures jointly supervised by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), the National Universities Commission (NUC), and the Federal Ministry of Education. UNN, like other reputable federal institutions, follows the JAMB-approved formula: 45% (Merit), 35% catchment (Locality), and 20% Educationally Less Developed States (ELDS). These three pillars are not administrative inventions of UNN’s Vice Chancellor or Admission Officer; they are national policy instruments designed to balance meritocracy with federal character, ensuring both excellence and equity in access.

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For the avoidance of doubts, this set of criteria is a common thread, which runs through the admission policy of all federal universities. Specifically, Merit (45%) is the baseline of academic excellence. For Medicine and Surgery at UNN, this year’s merit cut-off stands at a robust 338.0, a testament to the highly competitive nature of the programme. In recognition of the University’s founding philosophy and to ensure a diverse intellectual environment, a significant quota is reserved for candidates from the catchment areas (the former Eastern Region). This is a national policy, not a UNN invention. The ELDS’ 20% suffices as a critical tool for national integration and bridging developmental gaps, mandated by the Federal Government to offer opportunities to candidates from states with historically lower educational output. It is this very framework that Mr. Nwamu either misunderstands or willfully misrepresents.

It is within this framework that UNN’s 2025/2026 admission into Medicine and Surgery was processed. The cut-off marks, duly approved and published, stand as follows: 338.0 for merit; locality cut-offs ranging from 314.2 (Ebonyi) to 334.5 (Enugu); and ELDS cut-offs ranging from 280.3 (Kaduna) to 317.3 (Bayelsa). Every discerning observer of Nigeria’s admission landscape understands that scores vary by these federally approved categories — and therefore, it is not only possible but inevitable that some admitted candidates scored below the merit benchmark due to the catchment and ELDS considerations. That is not corruption; it is policy; it is equity codified by law.

Yet, Mr. Nwamu would have his readers believe otherwise. His rhetorical question – “Did 225 candidates who used UNN as first choice score 338 and above in UTME this year?” – is a disingenuous ploy. The answer, of course, is that fewer than 10 may have crossed that mark; but that is true for every competitive medical programme in Nigeria, not UNN alone. The point, however, is not how many scored 338, but how the admissions formula harmonizes JAMB scores with post-UTME results and national criteria. The claim that parents are made to “bribe some crooks with N3 million or more” for admission is not only scandalous but defamatory, unsupported by any shred of evidence. UNN’s Admission Officer, in a formal response, dismissed the article as “entirely unfounded, baseless, and malicious” — and rightly so.

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For clarity sake, over 600 candidates scored above 300 in Medicine alone at UNN this year. The final admission list was generated by the faculties, vetted by the Admission Unit, and validated at the Committee of Deans meeting. At each stage, due process was followed, transparency ensured, and oversight mechanisms observed. Indeed, JAMB itself must approve and upload the final list before admission letters are issued. How, then, could any individual – or “crooks,” as Nwamu imagines – manipulate such a multilayered process without detection?

What is troubling in Nwamu’s article is not merely its factual emptiness but its moral recklessness – the casual ease with which it maligns hardworking officials and impugns the reputation of a great institution, such as the University of Nigeria. Words matter. When one proclaims that “dunces, expo graduates, and crooks have invaded Nigerian universities,” one indicts not just the system but the dreams of thousands of young Nigerians, who burn the midnight oil in pursuit of excellence. When one suggests that “killer doctors, criminal lawyers, incompetent engineers, and kleptocratic leaders” will emerge from UNN’s corridors, one flings mud at the very ideal of education as a redemptive force.

It is therefore imperative to remind the public that UNN is not a backwater institution limping on moral crutches. It is a university that has, since 1960, produced iconic figures of international repute, technocrats, public servants, and global scholars. Under the able leadership of its 16th Vice Chancellor, Professor Simon Uchenna Ortuanya, UNN has embarked on reforms to enhance transparency, digitalize admissions, and strengthen institutional accountability. The prompt clarifications from the Admission Officer demonstrates a leadership that is responsive, data-driven, and committed to due process. It is an added impetus to merit, integrity, and service, which denominate the new administration’s watchwords – the very antithesis of the caricature Nwamu paints.

To the casual reader, Nwamu’s ‘Heist at UNN’ might appear as yet another crusade against corruption. But in substance, it is an act of vandalism against truth. It confuses anecdote with analysis, slander with scrutiny, and outrage with evidence. Journalism, at its best, enlightens and reforms; at its worst, it inflames and misleads. The tragedy of this particular article lies in its descent into the latter. The article’s venom appears particularly directed at the nascent administration of Prof. Simon Uchenna Ortuanya, the 16th Vice-Chancellor of UNN. To allege a systemic ‘heist’ of this magnitude so early in his tenure is to operate with a presumption of guilt that is both unfair, unprofessional, congenitally wicked.

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Perhaps, it bears repeating that UNN’s 2025/2026 admission exercise was conducted strictly in accordance with national guidelines, subject to institutional vetting, and reflective of federal character considerations. The primary admission list, as released, bears no trace of manipulation. To insist otherwise without proof is to weaponize speculation, a moral crime worse than the so-called ‘heist,’ a ghost raised out of the writer’s vegetative mind. The Fourth Estate wields immense power, and with that power comes the grave responsibility of verification. Mr. Nwamu’s piece is a classic example of what happens when this responsibility is abdicated at the altar of sensationalism. It is a ‘crap of malicious falsehood,’ to borrow the Admission Officer’s apt description, that seeks to impugn an institution’s hard-earned reputation based on nothing more than the writer’s own statistical illiteracy and prejudiced assumptions. UNN’s primary admission list for the 2025/2026 academic session was, as demonstrated, strictly guided by established criteria. There was no heist. The only robbery attempted here by Mr. Nwamu is the one on the truth and the reputation of a thousand young, bright Nigerians who have earned their place through merit and legitimate policy provisions.

In conclusion, the public and the media are hereby implored to rise above such baseless and corrosive narratives. Let us critique our institutions constructively, armed with facts and a genuine desire for reform, not with the poison of unsubstantiated allegations. The University of Nigeria, Nsukka, remains steadfast in its commitment to excellence, equity, and transparency, and stands undaunted by the storm of falsehood. It will not be derailed by the fickle fantasies of naysayers, but will continue its noble mission of building minds and shaping the future of the nation, in truth and in honour.

To Mr. Nwamu and his ilk, one can only offer a simple admonition. Criticism is noble when rooted in truth, but reckless when watered by malice. Let us, therefore, defend the sanctity of facts, for in an era of viral falsehoods, truth remains the last citadel of learning. As the Lion roars from the Den of Nsukka, one message resounds clear. You can malign the messenger, but you cannot silence the truth!

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Analysis

𝐄𝐥𝐝𝐞𝐫𝐥𝐲 𝐕𝐨𝐭𝐞𝐫 𝐃𝐞𝐧𝐢𝐞𝐝 𝐑𝐢𝐠𝐡𝐭: 𝟗𝟔-𝐘𝐞𝐚𝐫-𝐎𝐥𝐝 𝐄𝐥𝐢𝐳𝐚𝐛𝐞𝐭𝐡 𝐎𝐧𝐢𝐤𝐞 𝐂𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐬 𝐎𝐮𝐭 𝐢𝐧 𝐀𝐧𝐚𝐦𝐛𝐫𝐚

DDM News

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Mrs. Elizabeth Onike, a 96-year-old voter, lamented bitterly after being denied the right to cast her vote in Anambra State.

The elderly woman said she arrived at her polling unit early, determined to perform her civic duty despite her age, but was turned away by officials for reasons yet to be made clear.

Diaspora Digital Media (DDM) gathered that the incident occurred in one of the polling units in Awka, where several elderly citizens also complained about similar challenges.

Eyewitnesses said Mrs. Onike, visibly emotional, expressed disappointment that despite enduring long hours and braving the heat, she was prevented from voting.

Observers have called on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to investigate the incident and ensure the rights of senior citizens are respected in future elections.

Many social media users have since rallied around her, describing her experience as “heartbreaking” and “a sad reflection of voter disenfranchisement.”

#AnambraDecides2025 #DDMReports #VoteNotFight

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Analysis

AKBC: Awakening the sleeping giant

By Ofonime Honesty

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By Ofonime Honesty

Let us speak truth to power. The Akwa Ibom Broadcasting Corporation (AKBC) has been on life support in recent years.

We have watched the infrastructural retrogression of that great breeding ground where the finest crop of broadcasters in this region cut their teeth. They were drilled in excellence, and their voices informed, educated, and united us.

This was not just a mere decline; it was a monumental failure we all witnessed unfold. AKBC wobbled even as newer broadcast stations lured her talents away.

But wait. Pause the lamentations!

Governor Umo Eno has signed an agreement with Media Guru Consultant, LLC, of Dubai, for the transformation of the station into a “world-class broadcasting entity.” This is no mere project; it is a rescue mission. It represents the political will to snatch a vital asset from the greedy jaws of oblivion.

This partnership with Media Guru Limited covers consultancy, design, procurement, and installation of advanced broadcast equipment, which will position AKBC to compete favorably with leading broadcast stations within and outside Nigeria.

For context, Media Guru is not a faceless consultant. Independent checks by yours truly indicate that it is a global media services company offering solutions in content digitization and preservation, turnkey technology projects, and digital media, with physical offices in the UAE, Singapore, South Africa, and India.

With over 21 years in service, over 64 projects completed, and successful jobs in over 20 countries, the firm possesses the qualifications and expertise for this project.

TVC, Huawei, Bloomberg Africa, Raj TV, Daily Independent, ConSat TV, News Live TV, and several others are notable clients of the firm.

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In this age of digital journalism, a feeble broadcaster is a mute spectator. AKBC cannot tell the Akwa Ibom story properly with a broken microphone, a broken camera, and dilapidated transmitters.
Its employees cannot counter toxic narratives while operating from a studio that leaks rain.

Look around you. Our airwaves are being invaded by content that erodes our identity.
Our people are being fed junk content while the rich banquet of our own heritage gathers dust. AKBC was supposed to be the gatekeeper of our stories, the guardian of our values. Instead, it became a sleeping giant while others came in and colonized our narrative space. The Akwa Ibom story must now be told by AKBC. That task is compulsory!

The Governor has thrown a lifeline. Funding will not be a problem. The burden now falls squarely on AKBC’s management and staff. The management must undergo a mental revolution. They must purge the system of deadwood and complacency. Training and retraining are essential. The modern gadgets and facilities must not be destroyed by analogue hands.

We cannot pour new wine into old wineskins. They must recruit fresh talent with fire in their bellies and innovation in their blood. Anything less would be a betrayal of this second chance.

This new studio must become a fortress of truth, a hub of cutting-edge programming, and a stage for the next generation of trailblazers. AKBC has to move with the times. Archaic or out-of-fashion programming must cease.

We are watching. The people are watching. History is watching. The contract is signed. The gauntlet has been thrown. AKBC, a Lazarus, must rise!

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Analysis

Trump, Christian Genocide, and Terrorism in Nigeria

By Farooq Kperogi

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President Donald Trump of the United States versus President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of Nigeria
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Nigeria’s online and offline discursive arenas have been suffused with frenetic, impassioned, and intensely heightened dialogic exchanges in the aftermath of President Donald Trump’s designation of Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” and this threat to militarily invade the country to stop what he called a “Christian genocide.”

Nigerians are predictably divided largely along the country’s familiar primordial fissures. But beyond the surface disagreements, there’s actually a deeper congruence of opinions we miss in moments of hyper-aroused emotions. And this revolves around the recognition that Nigeria faces an inexcusable existential threat from the intractable murderous fury of terrorists and that the earlier it is contained by any means necessary, the better Nigeria’s chances of survival.

The major areas of disagreement among conversational sparring partners (i.e., whether, in fact, there’s a Christian genocide; what really actuates Trump’s intervention; the question of what foreign intervention means for Nigeria’s sovereignty) actually have a convergence point.

For example, Muslims who question the factual accuracy of the existence of a Christian genocide in the central states point to the continuing mass slaughters of Muslims (both at home and in mosques) in the far north. But they don’t deny that the nihilistic, blood-thirsty thugs who murder both Christians and Muslims in their homes and places of worship identify as Muslims, even if they are a poor representation of the religion they identify with.

I honestly struggle to fault Christians who perceive the episodic mass murders in their communities by people who profess a different faith from them as deliberate, systematic, premeditated acts designed to exterminate them because of their faith.

If the situation were reversed, it would be perceived the same way. If murderous outlaws who profess the Christian faith (even if they don’t live by the precepts of the religion) continually commit mass slaughters of both Christians and Muslims, Muslim victims of these slaughters would instinctively read religious meanings to the murders.

As I noted in my April 12, 2025, column titled “Selective Outrage Over Mass Murders in Nigeria,” human beings derive their sense of self from belonging to collective identities, so when members of an out-group attack that collective, it provokes a powerful emotional reaction.

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Even in such states as Zamfara, Sokoto, and Katsina, where more than 90 percent of the population is Muslim and where clashes between sedentary farmers and itinerant herders are age-old, the persistence of mass slaughters has ruptured the centuries-old ethnic harmony between the Hausa and the Fulani that Nigerians had taken for granted. BBC’s July 24, 2022, documentary titled “The Bandit Warlords of Zamfara” captures this dynamic powerfully.

It doesn’t matter if people in the Middle Belt perceive the homicidal ferocity of the terrorists as “Christian genocide” or people in the Northwest see it as “ethnic cleansing.” What matters is that they shouldn’t be allowed to kill anyone.

I understand Muslim anxieties behind the “Christian genocide” narrative. It unwittingly exteriorizes the crimes of a few outlaws to the many who are also victims of the outlaws’ crimes. But if it takes calling these blood-stained bastards “Christian genocidaires” to eliminate them, the accuracy of the description is immaterial. If an equal-opportunity murderer of Christians and Muslims is killed only because he kills Christians, it still benefits Muslims because the murderer won’t be alive to kill Muslims.

Of course, people who question Trump’s motive are justified. In 2016, Trump enthusiastically endorsed Ann Coulter’s book Adios America, which claimed that the growth of Nigerians in the United States from virtually zero to 380,000 was problematic because, in her words, “every level of society [in Nigeria] is criminal.” Most Nigerians in the United States are Christians.

By December 2017, in his first term, Trump was reported to have said that people from Haiti and Nigeria should be denied visas because “15,000 Haitians who received U.S. visas all have AIDS,” and that 40,000 Nigerians who visited the U.S. that year would never “go back to their huts” after seeing America.

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In January 2018, he was widely quoted as saying he didn’t want immigrants from “shithole countries” like Nigeria and Haiti but preferred “more people coming in from places like Norway,” a statement that made clear his racial preference for white immigrants.

That same racial logic was evident when he described white South Africans as victims of “white genocide” and offered them asylum but has not extended the same offer to Nigerians he claims are facing “Christian genocide.”

Unsurprisingly, by 2019, toward the close of his first term, Nigeria experienced the steepest decline in visitors to the United States of any country, according to data from the National Travel & Tourism Office.

Given this record, skepticism about Trump’s sudden concern for Nigeria is entirely warranted. Anyone familiar with his long-documented hostility toward Black people would reasonably question why he now professes to care enough about them to “intervene” on their behalf.

His intervention is probably the product of three forces: powerful lobbying from Nigerian Christian groups who got through to the right people, a way to get Nigeria to scale down its embrace of China in the service of rare earth mineral exploration in the country, and an appeal to his evangelical Christian base even if he himself isn’t a believing, churchgoing Christian.

But given the direness of the depth and breadth of bloodletting in the country, who cares what his motivations are? If Trump’s intervention causes the Nigerian government to more seriously take its responsibility to protect all Nigerians, I would salute him. In fact, if direct, targeted hits at terrorist enclaves become inevitable because the government is either unwilling or unable to act, most people (Muslims, Christians, southerners, northerners, supporters or critics of the government, etc.) who are genuinely worried about the unchecked expansion of the theaters of insecurity in the country would be happy.

When it comes to questions of life and death, we can’t afford the luxury of pointless partisanship and primordial allegiances. Most Nigerians I know would accept help from Satan if that were what it would take to stop the unending blood-stain communal upheavals in the country.

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What is the point of our sovereignty if we can’t stop perpetual fratricidal bloodletting? In any case, most Nigerian governments and opposition politicians in my lifetime have not only routinely sought America’s intervention in Nigeria’s internal affairs when it suits them, they serve as willing informants to America, leading me to once posit that the CIA doesn’t need secret agents.

In a May 20, 2017, column titled, “Xenophilia, Fake Sovereignty and Nigeria’s Slavish Politicians,” I said the following:

“Many Nigerian leaders seem to have an infantile thirst for a paternal dictatorship. The United States is that all-knowing, all-sufficient father-figure to whom they run when they have troubles. We learned from the US embassy cables that our Supreme Court judges, Central Bank governors … and governors routinely ran to the American embassy like terrified little kids when they had quarrels with each other.”

If the undermining of our sovereignty is what it would take to provide peace to everyday Nigerians, most people won’t miss it.

The urgent task, therefore, is not to litigate the purity of motives abroad or to indulge in perfunctory moralizing at home, but to force Nigerian institutions to perform. Whether pressure comes from international actors, diasporic lobbying, or domestic outrage, it must translate into concrete reforms: a security strategy that protects civilians, accountable and professional security forces, transparent investigations of atrocities, and long-term efforts to address the economic, political, and environmental drivers of violence.

Nigerians must insist that any external attention be channeled into strengthening the state’s capacity to protect all citizens and into justice for victims, not into new forms of dependency or political theatre. Only by combining unity of purpose with institutional competence can Nigeria begin to end the killing and reclaim the dignity of its sovereignty.

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