Opinion
FUHSTHO: The Baton in Safe Hands
By Samuel Adikwu
In a plausible and rancor-free relay race, where batons are exchanged with the next runner for continuation, if the baton proceeded well to an equipped athlete with a track record of achievements, then huge success is assured.
In consonance with the succinct assertion and reality conception derived from the context is the successful handover of baton from Prof. Silas Ochejele, the acting Chief Medical Director (CMD) of Federal University of Health Sciences Teaching Hospital (FUHSTHO), Otukpo, Benue State to Prof Teddy Eyaofun Agida as the substantive Chief Medical Director (CMD) of the hospital which is quite a lofty strategy and in tandem with fixing the round peg in a round hole, putting the baton in a sublime realm for further productivity.
Prof. Teddy Eyaofun Agida is a renowned professor of O&G and a well cultured and consummate intellectual who was born on 21st November, 1965 and hailed from Ogoli in Ugboju district of Otukpo local Government, Benue state.
The polymath of repute started his early education at Wesley Primary School, now LGEA Primary School, Ogoli and obtained First School Leaving Certificate in 1977.
He obtained his GCE O’Level Certificate from Mount Saint Gabriel Secondary School, Makurdi in June 1982 and was the best graduating student of the set.
Thereafter, he gained admission into the University of Ibadan in October 1982 and graduated with MBBS degree in July 1988.
He did his one-year Housemanship with the then General Hospital Makurdi (now Federal Medical Centre), from September 1988 to September 1989.
National Youth Service program followed with the Nigerian Airforce Medical Center, Maiduguri from October 1989 to October 1990.
The result-oriented Doctor commenced his residency training with the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital from 1991 to 1998.
Prof. Agida obtained the Fellowship Certificate of the West African College of Surgeons (FWACS), qualifying him as a Consultant Obstetrician and Gynecologist in October 1998.
He has worked as Consultant Obstetrician and Gynecologist with the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, Maiduguri (January 1999 – October 1999), Federal Medical Centre Makurdi (November 1999 – October 2007) and University of Abuja Teaching Hospital (November 2007 till the new deserved appointment).
The meticulous mentor has trained many Obstetricians and Gynecologists in these Institutions and made indelible marks to identify with.
Some of his students are already Professors and others are Chief Executive Officers of Public Tertiary Hospitals in Nigeria.
The Academic firmament acquired a certificate in Assisted Reproductive Technology (Cert.ART) from Al-Azhar University, Cairo Egypt in 2010, and trained as a Fertility Specialist with the West African College of Surgeons between 2021, and in 2022, he acquired the Post-Fellowship Certificate in infertility and Assisted Reproductive Technology of the West African College of Surgeons [PF_IART(WACS)], thereby qualifying him as a Fertility Expert.
With this ample experience, Professor Agida has been putting smiles on the faces of couples who have difficulties to conceive and bearing children of their own.
Professor Agida is a reputable academic scholar who rose through the ranks and has been an Associate Professor with the College of Health Sciences, University of Abuja since October 2019.
He was recently appointed as a full Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology by the Federal University of Health Sciences, Otukpo, Benue State.
The mental investor has attended several local and international scientific conferences where he also presented professional papers. He has published over sixty papers in both local and international scientific Journals, and also contributed creditably in many chapters of medical textbooks.
Between 2015 and 2019, Professor Agida has worked as a Consultant to various International Agencies such as Marie Stopes International Organization Nigeria (MISION), Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI), John Hopkins Program for International Education in Gynecology and Obstetrics (JHPIEGO) and the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) Sierra Leone as a Master Trainer in areas of Reproductive Health.
The Laurel has also consulted for the Federal Ministry of Health in areas of Reproductive Health and Family Planning.
Administratively, he has held positions as; Head, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Makurdi (2000 – 2005.
Deputy Head of Clinical Services, FMC Makurdi (2003 – 2005), SERVICOM Nodal Officer, FMC Makurdi (2004 – 2007) – Chairman, Medical Advisory Committee/Director of Clinical Services and Training, University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Abuja (2010 – 2012)
– Head, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Abuja/University of Abuja Teaching Hospital (2019 – 2023)
He was appointed a member of the Governing Board of the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital by President Muhammadu Buhari from March 2018 to June 2023.
Professor Agida is a devout Catholic. He is a member of the Order of the Knights of St. Mulumba (KSM) Nigeria.
The empathic and brilliant consultant is married with Children.
Congratulations on your well-deserved lofty heights and compendium of remarkable academic performance.
As he settles down for more onerous task of providing offices for the doctors, construction of administrative blocks, transformer, internal solar lights, internal Road Network, water reservoir, modem toilet facilities, provision of quality services to patients etc., we are appealing to donors for medical equipment, partnership, grants and fervent prayers to God Almighty to grant him the courage, more knowledge and wisdom to transform the hospital to greater heights. Amen!
Adikwu Samuel Ebo
Public Affairs Analyst, Abuja adikwusamuelebo@gmail.com
News
Why President Tinubu Must Reject Media Trial of His Ambassadorial Nominees
By Amb. Gbara Awanen
On 26th November, 2025, President Bola Tinubu, GCFR,forwarded a list of three ambassadorial nominees to the Senate for confirmation, obviously the first instalment of a much anticipated and longer list to follow. Among the nominees is Ambassador Ayodele Oke, CFR, former Director General of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) who headed the Agency between 2013 and 2017. During this period, he faced allegations of corrupt enrichment, which turned out to be unproven.
Predictably, political buccaneers and some misinformed elements in the civil society are beginning to push back against Ambassador Oke’s nomination, referencing the unproven allegations. While understandable, those seeking to deny this celebrated national intelligence chief and outstanding international public servant are ignorant of the basic facts of this unfortunate saga. Here are the facts. Ambassador Oke was accused, duly investigated, and ultimately cleared of any wrongdoing. On 9th June, 2023, Justice C. J. Aneke of the Federal High Court in Lagos, struct out all charges against him on grounds of national security imperatives and mutual agreement between the prosecution and defence teams to discontinue a case that should never have happened in the first place. The termination of the charges against Ambassador Oke received political validation following President Muhammadu Buhari’s concurrence with the legal and national security dimensions of the case.
The cornerstone of any just and democratic society is the principle of the presumption of innocence until proven guilty. A formal, final exoneration, whether an acquittal, dismissal, or quashing of charges, is the ultimate declaration of legal innocence. To continue treating an accused “guilty,” despite a final legal verdict affirming innocence is to subvert the constitutional process and the authority of the judiciary. In our democracy, innocence, once established by law, must be upheld. Ambassador Oke’s exoneration means there is no current legal or constitutional barrier to his holding public office again because his past indictment was based on allegations that have now been legally disproven. In this moment, Ambassador Oke’s legal standing is the same as any other citizen of Nigeria with a clean record.
Society and the government have a moral obligation to treat citizens fairly, especially those who have been subjected to the most severe allegations of public misconduct. Allowing a vile and orchestrated media campaign to succeed would establish a dangerous precedent where accusation alone turns to permanent punishment, regardless of the facts or legal outcome. This would be profoundly unfair. A government should be free to appoint the most qualified individuals to high office and few come close to this eminently qualified nominee in national security and diplomatic governance.
To withdraw the nomination or disqualify the nominee due to recycled, disproven allegations would politicize the outcome of judicial proceedings. Worse, this would send a dangerous message that one can always weaponize unproven allegations against an accused, effectively overriding the judiciary’s fact-finding role. It goes without saying such an outcome will encourage detractors to mount similar campaigns against any perceived political enemy, regardless of evidence.
By standing firm, the government will be demonstrating its confidence in the justice system and its own nominating authority. It holds detractors, the ignorant and the misinformed accountable to the facts of the legal outcome, not just emotional rhetoric. Standing firm demonstrates strength and stability in governance. After a verdict of complete innocence, the conversation ought to focus on a public official’s current suitability, vision, and future contributions to his country, not on past allegations that have been disproven.
The decision to stand by the ambassadorial nomination of this fine public officer is a powerful affirmation that in a state governed by law, the legal verdict must prevail over public opinion and political pressure. After all, Ambassador Oke’sexoneration fully restores his legal and moral right to public service. To surrender to a media campaign based on disprovenallegations is to undermine the rule of law, perpetuate a grave injustice, and erode the integrity of the public service nominating process.
The nomination of Ambassador should stand because anaccusation is neither guilt nor conviction. After a final and decisive verdict of innocence, the nominee is legally innocentand morally vindicated. His fitness for office must be judged on his current merit and the final judicial outcome, not on the weaponization of past, failed accusations. His current legal standing is the same as any other citizen with unblemished record. It would therefore be grave injustice to subject Ambassador Oke to a misguided media trial on the same disproven charges. This outstanding public servant has paid his due to the system by enduring a lengthy and traumatic legal process. He should not be forced to relive the punishment after being declared innocent.
President Bola Ahmed Tinubu made the right call to recognize Ambassador Oke’s sterling qualities by nominating him with two other distinguished personalities as his principal personalrepresentatives in key partner countries in a time of grave national security emergency. What our country needs in this moment are steady, mentally acute, and strategic thinkers, as Ambassador Oke is, to help the government navigate the uncertainties, risks and opportunities in a rapidly shifting and dangerous geopolitical landscape.
The government must be resolute and reject a media trial that could rob our country of the services of one of its finest diplomats. By standing firm and guiding Ambassador Oke’snomination through the confirmation process, the government will be making a powerful statement that it favours meritocracy, respects the rule of law, values public service, and is willing to stand by an individual who has been unjustly accused. In times like this, our government must showpolitical and moral courage in the face of an emotional, but factually bankrupt, media frenzy.
Amb Gbara Awanen, PhD, mni is a retired Career Ambassador and Mene Eedee 1 Bera in Gokana Local Government, Rivers State.
Opinion
Engr. Kawu: A Heroic Homecoming for a Man of the People
By Adegboyega Ajadi
Ilorin was thrown into rare jubilation last week. Not because of a political rally, nor because a sitting governor commissioned a project, but because a man of destiny returned home after a meritorious career in the public service. The outpouring of love for Engr. Suleiman Bolakale Kawu Agaka was spontaneous, overwhelming, and instructive. It was a message from the people to the political class: we know who has stood with us, and we know those who only remember us when elections draw near.
From Abuja to Ilorin, the narrative was the same. Stakeholders across party lines, community leaders, Islamic scholars, friends, associates, and ordinary people celebrated a man whose works have silently reshaped lives and whose character has earned him uncommon respect. In both cities, the events were not sponsored jamborees. They were not financed with state resources. They were genuine tributes by those who have seen, touched, and felt the impact of Engr. Kawu.
At the Abuja event organised by the Ilorin community, two voices stood out in their testimonies, his boss and his subordinate.
Abba Abubakar Aliyu, his former Managing Director at the Rural Electrification Agency, confessed he had yet to come to terms with the reality of Kawu’s retirement. With emotion in his voice, he declared: “No problem within the Agency that Engr. Kale was unable to resolve. He performed every assignment with utmost dedication and commitment, even spending his own resources to achieve targets. This is unprecedented in the history of the Agency.” That is not the usual flattery of a superior; it was the acknowledgment of a colleague who had seen him go above and beyond for the institution.
On her part, Ojua Omodara, who worked directly under him, gave a subordinate’s perspective: “Engr. Kawu is a goal-getter. He gives assignments and follows through until results are achieved.” Between these two voices, superior and subordinate, lies a portrait of leadership: diligent, selfless, and result-driven.
If Abuja offered professional testimony, Ilorin presented a moral verdict. From the airport to the heart of the city, unprecedented crowds lined the streets. People came in unimagined numbers, not lured by patronage, but drawn by affection. They came with their hearts, with their voices, and with their prayers.
The Chief Imam of Ilorin led other Islamic scholars in offering supplications for his continued success, affirming what the people already knew, that his record is not only professional but spiritual, not only official but human. The prayers were thanksgiving for a man who had already touched lives in ways politics rarely does.
Here lies the prosecution: one after another, communities testified in ways more compelling than any campaign manifesto could promise. Villages spoke of how they were lit up, not by political promises, but by transformers facilitated through Kawu’s intervention. Students recalled scholarships that kept them in school when hopelessness beckoned. Families gave witness to medical support received at critical times when their loved ones would otherwise have been abandoned to fate. Villages pointed to mosques standing tall in their midst, built through his generosity. Imams bore testimony that for the past 15 to 20 years, they had been receiving salaries from him, a quiet, consistent support that kept religious institutions alive.
This was not philanthropy performed with television cameras rolling. This was not the noise of politics. These were silent deeds of service, done without the inkling of seeking political office. And yet, those who benefited never forgot. The Ilorin outpouring was their verdict: this is the kind of leadership we trust, this is the kind of leadership we deserve.
Nigeria is in search of leaders who embody the values Engr. Kawu has lived: integrity, service without expectation, empathy, and selflessness. His story demonstrates that true leadership is not the pursuit of power for its own sake but the capacity to impact lives, often quietly and sacrificially.
Those who thronged Ilorin did not come to repay political favours. They came because they recognised a man whose entire life had been service. In a society drowning in political cynicism, where people believe politicians only remember them when elections approach, Engr. Kawu’s story is a refreshing contrast. He is the reminder that leadership is not about how loudly one campaigns but about how deeply one serves.
This is why his homecoming transcends a mere celebration of retirement. It was, in truth, a referendum on the kind of leadership Nigerians yearn for. In Kwara, it was a clarion call to the political class: the people are watching, the people are keeping records, and when the time comes, the people will speak again.
Without saying it outright, the people of Kwara made a declaration last week: Engr. Suleiman Bolakale Kawu Agaka represents the kind of leadership the state deserves. His track record at the Rural Electrification Agency shows competence, accountability, and sacrifice. His silent philanthropy across Kwara demonstrates empathy, compassion, and vision. His ability to attract people across party lines, as seen in Abuja, reflects the inclusiveness and bridge-building needed in today’s polarised polity.
The heroic welcome he received was not purchased. It was earned. It was not staged. It was organic. It was the people’s way of saying: we know you, we trust you, and we are ready to follow you if you choose to lead us further.
The lesson is simple but profound: in a country where trust in leadership has collapsed, there still exists a model of leadership that works. Kawu’s life proves that service begets loyalty, sacrifice earns trust, and consistency commands respect.
Ilorin’s historic outpouring was not just a welcome home; it was the unveiling of a man of destiny. The people did not just celebrate his past; they proclaimed their hope for the future. They see in him not only a technocrat who served diligently but a leader who can carry Kwara forward with empathy and vision.
In the end, the moral tribute becomes a political lesson: leaders are not made by titles or positions, but by the lives they touch. And in Engr. Kawu, the people have found both their hero and, perhaps, their future governor.
…Adegboyega, a public affairs analyst, writes from Gaa Akanbi in Ilorin
Opinion
Lilian Onoh And Her Endless Wars Of Vendetta
By Moradeke Kolawole
When a person is consistent in one thing, it becomes their identity. In the case of former Ambassador Lilian Onoh, consistency lies in bitterness, vendetta and endless feuds. Her latest attempt to drag Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa into her cycle of accusations follows a well-worn pattern. Onoh is known more for her fights than for any enduring legacy of diplomacy.
The court records from the libel case filed by former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, expose the character behind the loud claims. Under cross-examination, Onyeama’s lawyer described her actions as nothing more than vendetta. Onoh herself admitted in open court that her hostility towards Onyeama was personal. She claimed he had pursued her career because her sister divorced him and went as far as describing the former minister’s supposed “hereditary insanity” and “unhinged psychiatric problem.” These are not the words of a seasoned diplomat. They are the words of someone consumed by malice and family feuds, now weaponised in professional spaces.
This is the same pattern she repeats with Abike Dabiri-Erewa. From a definitely fictional alleged encounter at Aso Villa in 2018, she has manufactured an entire story of Igbo hatred and ethnic vendetta, complete with insults, name-calling and cheap shots about appearance and education. Just like her fight with Onyeama, it is full of venom but empty of evidence. Abike Dabiri Erewa never met Onoh nor had any encounter with her anywhere at all. She is following her pattern of outright lies and venom.
It is ironic that someone accused of financial impropriety and known for dragging colleagues to court is now trying to lecture Nigerians on who is fit for public office. The truth is that Onoh’s record is one of bitterness and litigation, not of service and legacy.
By contrast, Abike Dabiri-Erewa’s record is open and verifiable. She gave voice to the voiceless as a journalist, served three terms in the House of Representatives with bills that cut across ethnic and religious lines, and as Chairman of NiDCOM has championed the cause of Nigerians stranded in Sudan, Ukraine, Libya, China and other troubled spots. She never asked whether they were Igbo, Yoruba or Hausa before intervening. That is the mark of service, not vendetta.
So when Lilian Onoh hurls unprintable words and tries to dress personal bitterness as national interest, Nigerians can see through it. Her own courtroom testimonies have already shown how far she is willing to go in twisting personal grievances into public battles.
Abike Dabiri-Erewa does not need to pay much attention to such manufactured stories because her work speaks for itself. Nigerians know her record and they know Onoh’s record too. One is a record of service, the other a record of quarrels.
So who is beyond redemption? Definitely Lilian Onoh.
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