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Sunday, 10 May 2026

The Minister Who Saw the Problem After Office: The Curious Case of Adelabu’s Power Legacy

 

The Minister Who Saw the Problem After Office: The Curious Case of Adelabu’s Power Legacy

In a country where electricity supply remains one of the most defining measures of governance, the legacy of any Minister of Power is not written in speeches but in megawatts delivered, homes lit, and industries sustained. It is against this backdrop that the political re-emergence of Adebayo Adelabu invites scrutiny and, inevitably, criticism.

Having presided over a sector long plagued by inefficiency, under investment, and regulatory inconsistencies, Adelabu now appears poised to transition from federal stewardship to state ambition, with reports suggesting interest in the governorship of Oyo State. The question is not whether he has the constitutional right to contest he does but whether his record justifies the confidence such ambition demands.

A Record That Raises Questions

Nigeria’s power sector is a notoriously difficult terrain, no doubt. From generation constraints to transmission bottlenecks and the often-criticized performance of distribution companies (DisCos), the system is layered with structural challenges. Yet leadership, especially at ministerial level, is measured by the ability to navigate precisely such complexity.

During his tenure, tangible, transformative reforms were expected, reforms that would move the sector beyond cyclical blame games into sustainable progress.

Instead, what many observers note is a continuation of familiar patterns: persistent grid instability, tariff controversies, and limited visible improvement in service delivery.

Now, in a striking turn, Adelabu has reportedly called for government action against distribution companies, even suggesting licence revocations. While this position may resonate with public frustration, it raises an uncomfortable question: why now?

The Politics of Blame

Blaming DisCos is neither new nor entirely unfounded. Many Nigerians have long criticized them for estimated billing, poor infrastructure, and inadequate customer service. However, to elevate this argument after leaving office risks sounding less like reformist clarity and more like retrospective distancing.

Policy leadership requires ownership not selective attribution. If DisCos were indeed the central obstacle, then the period in office presented the most potent opportunity to confront, regulate, or restructure them decisively. To do so after the fact risks undermining the credibility of both past governance and present advocacy.

From Power to Politics

The transition from technocratic responsibility to electoral ambition is not unusual in Nigeria’s political landscape. Yet it demands a bridge built on demonstrable results. Voters, particularly in states like Oyo, are increasingly attentive to performance history rather than rhetorical promise.

Ambition, in itself, is not the issue. What is at stake is accountability the willingness to subject one’s public record to the same scrutiny one applies to others. When a former minister pivots quickly to gubernatorial aspirations while simultaneously redistributing blame, it creates the impression of unfinished business rather than earned progression.

A Democratic Test

Ultimately, democracy offers its own mechanism for judgment. The electorate will decide whether Adelabu’s stewardship of Nigeria’s power sector reflects the competence required for state leadership.

But as that moment approaches, one principle remains essential: public office is not merely a platform for future ambition; it is a test of present responsibility. And in the court of public opinion, records not rhetoric carry the final verdict.

From Darkness to Déjà Vu: Adelabu’s Reinvention Tour.

There is a peculiar genre of Nigerian politics one where yesterday’s steward of failure returns today as tomorrow’s redeemer. It is a script so familiar that it no longer shocks, only exhausts. The latest protagonist appears to be Adebayo Adelabu, a former Minister of Power now reportedly warming up for a governorship bid in Oyo State.

It would be comedic if it were not consequential.

During his time at the helm, Nigeria’s electricity sector did not suddenly collapse it simply continued its stubborn tradition of underperformance. Blackouts persisted. Consumers groaned under erratic supply and controversial billing. Businesses adjusted, as always, by turning to generators  the unofficial backbone of the Nigerian economy.

Yet, in a twist that would make even seasoned political dramatists pause, Adelabu has now found his voice directed squarely at distribution companies (DisCos). Licences, he suggests, should be revoked. Accountability must be enforced. Standards must improve.

All valid points. All painfully late. Because if the diagnosis is so clear today, what stayed the hand yesterday?

A Convenient Epiphany: There is something deeply unsettling about post-office clarity. It suggests that either: the problems were known but not acted upon, or, they were not understood at the time an even more troubling admission.

In either case, the sudden urgency now feels less like leadership and more like repositioning. Nigerians have seen this film before: officials who discover courage only after surrendering power.

The Blame Carousel

To be fair, DisCos are far from innocent actors in this saga. Their inefficiencies, opaque billing practices, and chronic underinvestment have rightly drawn public anger. But governance is not a spectator sport. A minister does not merely observe dysfunction, he is expected to confront it.

Shifting the spotlight entirely onto DisCos risks turning a systemic failure into a selective narrative. It is easier to point fingers than to explain why those fingers did not move levers of reform when it mattered most.

The Governorship Gambit

Now comes the next act: a gubernatorial ambition dressed in the language of renewed purpose. But elections, especially in a politically aware state like Oyo, are no longer won on aspiration alone. They are increasingly referendums on past performance.

The question voters may quietly ask is simple: If the lights did not come on under your watch then, why should we expect illumination now?

A Democracy That Remembers

Nigeria’s democracy has its flaws, but it possesses one enduring strength—memory, however slow, eventually catches up with rhetoric. Political reinvention is not a crime. But reinvention without reckoning is an insult.

There are many ways to describe this unfolding spectacle ambition, optimism, even audacity. But perhaps the most fitting is this: a performance that mistakes public frustration for public forgetfulness. And if history is any guide, that is a gamble rarely rewarded.

Air Peace: From Domestic Giant to Strategic Aviation Player

 


Air Peace, founded by Allen Onyema, has grown into Nigeria’s largest airline, operating across domestic, regional, and intercontinental routes.

But beyond passenger flights, the airline has built influence through high-profile contracts, partnerships, and symbolic assignments including one that brought global attention, the transportation of Prince Harry during his Nigeria visit.

The Prince Harry moment: branding meets diplomacy

In May 2024, Air Peace secured one of its most symbolic assignments transporting Prince Harry and Meghan Markle during their visit to Nigeria.

The royal couple and their entourage flew on an Air Peace charter flight from Abuja to Lagos. The aircraft used was one of its new Embraer 195-E2 jets. The airline also handled return logistics for the visit

This wasn’t just a flight, it was a prestige contract

It positioned Air Peace as a trusted carrier for international VIP movements,  It boosted its global visibility and brand credibility, It reinforced Nigeria’s ability to use local airlines for diplomatic-level logistics. 

In aviation terms, this is soft power, a branding win disguised as a transport job.

Other key deals and strategic engagements

1. International interline agreements: Air Peace has signed interline partnerships with major global carriers like: Emirates,  Hahn Air  

These agreements allow: Seamless ticketing across airlines, Passenger connections from Nigeria to global destinations. This is a commercial contract type that expands reach without owning more aircraft.

 2. Government and emergency operations: Air Peace has repeatedly stepped in for national assignments, including: Evacuation flights during the South Africa xenophobia crisis, where it airlifted Nigerians back home some free of charge. These missions: Strengthen its relationship with government, Position it as a national carrier in practice (if not by law)

3. Charter and special mission services

 Outside prince Harry Chartered flight, Air Peace regularly handles: VIP charters, Government delegations, Religious pilgrimage logistics (e.g., Hajj/Umrah support roles indirectly via routes). These are high-margin contracts, compared to regular ticket sales.

 4. International route rights (quasi-contracts), Air Peace has secured approvals and launched routes to United Kingdom (London), Caribbean (Antigua, Barbados), Middle East and West Africa These route rights are critical because: They function like bilateral aviation agreements, they unlock foreign revenue streams (in dollars). Brand positioning as Nigeria’s flag bearer, even though Nigeria has no strong national airline, Air Peace is gradually acting like one: Flying international dignitaries, Supporting national emergencies, Expanding global routes

3. Competitive advantage over rivals

But there’s a reality check

Not all is smooth:

a. High fuel costs still affect operations

b. Managing a large fleet creates complexity

c. Past regulatory and legal controversies around leadership remain a reputational factor, So while it secures big opportunities, execution risk remains high.

Final take

Air Peace is evolving beyond a traditional airline into something bigger commercial airline , charter operator, quasi-national carrier. The Prince Harry engagement showed that, Nigeria can rely on local airlines for global-standard operations, Air Peace can compete for high-profile international assignments.

Airpeace has proven that Private sector is better suited in preserving and managing  public infrastructures than the so called government run business



Read also Enugu Air: The ambitious New Comer.

 

 

Saturday, 9 May 2026

Jonathan requests that the lawsuit contesting eligibility be dismissed.


Jonathan requests that the lawsuit contesting eligibility be dismissed.


 Goodluck Jonathan, the former president, officially contested a lawsuit on Friday that sought to bar him from running for president in 2027.


Justice Peter Lifu of the Federal High Court in Abuja was notified by Jonathan's attorney, Chris Uche, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), that the former president had already submitted the required legal documents contesting the lawsuit.

On May 5, the defense filed a conditional appearance, preliminary objection, counter-affidavit, and written address requesting that the court dismiss the case, according to Uche.

He clarified that after learning about the situation through media reporting, Jonathan's legal team moved quickly.

Uche maintained that the matter had previously been resolved by the courts, including the Court of Appeal, and that the lawsuit focused on the former president's eligibility to run for office once again in 2027.

However, Ndubuisi Ukpai, the plaintiff's attorney, informed the court that he had just received Jonathan's response and needed time to review the paperwork and file a reply.

After the submissions, Justice Lifu postponed the hearing on the preliminary objection and the substantive litigation until May 11.

Additionally, the judge ordered the Attorney-General of the Federation and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), who were not present in court, to receive hearing notices.

Attorney Johnmary Jideobi filed the lawsuit, requesting that the court permanently bar Jonathan from running for president in 2027.

The plaintiff specifically asked for an order prohibiting the former president from running for president on behalf of any political party.

Additionally, he requested that INEC not acknowledge or publish Jonathan's name as a legitimately nominated candidate.

Jonathan is listed as the initial defendant in the lawsuit, which was filed on October 6, 2025. INEC and the Attorney-General of the Federation were added as co-defendants.

The central question in the legal controversy is whether Jonathan is still qualified to run for president under Sections 1 and 137(3) of the Nigerian Constitution after taking the oath of office twice.

Emmanuel Agida characterized the plaintiff as a defender of constitutionalism and the rule of law who went to court to stop what he saw as a potential constitutional infringement in an affidavit submitted in support of the lawsuit.

According to the declaration, Jonathan served as vice president until taking over as president on May 6, 2010, after former President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua passed away. It also mentioned that he went on to win the 2011 presidential election and serve out his entire term.

The affidavit stated that Jonathan might be thinking about running for president again in 2027 based on recent media stories.

“That if the court does not intervene in a timely manner, a political party may present the 1st defendant as its presidential candidate in the 2027 general election, thereby breaching the Constitution.”
Additionally, he contended that if the court did not step in, Jonathan might eventually run for office and possibly win, which he claimed could lead to constitutional concerns regarding presidential eligibility and tenure restrictions.

Regarding legal standing, the plaintiff emphasized that the complaint was filed in the public interest and that it was his duty as an attorney to uphold the rule of law and avoid constitutional violations.

In order to uphold Nigeria's constitutional democracy and safeguard the supremacy of the Constitution, he pleaded with the court to grant the requested relief.





The Minister Who Saw the Problem After Office: The Curious Case of Adelabu’s Power Legacy

  In a country where electricity supply remains one of the most defining measures of governance, the legacy of any Minister of Power is not ...