News
Nigeria @65: A Long Walk To Freedom

By Israel Adebiyi
Sixty-five years. That is how long Nigeria has walked as an independent nation, free from the shackles of colonial rule. On October 1st, 1960, we hoisted our green-white-green flag in jubilant defiance of empire, believing freedom had come at last. We called it independence, and it was. But as we mark our 65th year, we must ask: have we truly been free? Or are we still trapped in cycles of dependence, disillusion, and deferred dreams?
True freedom is not merely the absence of foreign rulers; it is the presence of dignity, progress, justice, and opportunity for all citizens. By this measure, our long walk to freedom remains unfinished.
Nigeria began her independence journey shoulder-to-shoulder with countries like Malaysia, Singapore, and South Korea. But while they transformed into economic giants and innovation hubs, we stumbled, burdened by corruption, bad governance, and short-sighted leadership. In the 1970s, one U.S. dollar exchanged for less than one naira; today, it takes over ₦1,500 to buy that same dollar. Once, our groundnut pyramids, cocoa farms, and palm oil defined agricultural wealth; today, we import even the most basic food items.
Education was once our ladder to dignity. In the 1960s and 70s, Nigerian universities ranked among the best in Africa, drawing scholars from across the continent. Today, classrooms leak, teachers strike endlessly, and children sit under trees to learn. With over 20 million out-of-school children, Nigeria carries the shameful crown of the world’s highest. These are not mere numbers—they are stolen futures. From Yobe to Zamfara, from Benue to Lagos, the dream of literacy is drowned in poverty and neglect.
Songs like Eko Dara Pupo -“Education is very good” -once carried our hope. But what hope do children chant today, when graduates roam the streets jobless and when academic excellence is rewarded with crumbs? We claim education is the foundation of progress, yet treat it as an afterthought. This explains the erroneously conclusion that education is a scam.
MORE FROM THE AUTHOR:[OPINION] Rivers: The Futility Of Power And The Illusion Of Victory
Independence ought to guarantee safety, yet Nigerians live under constant siege. Bandits terrorize the North-West, Boko Haram still prowls the North-East, farmers and herders clash in the Middle Belt, kidnappers prowl highways, and cultists haunt urban streets. Nowhere feels truly safe. Insecurity has displaced millions, destroyed farmlands, and fueled poverty.
What is freedom if children cannot sleep in peace, if farmers cannot till their soil, if investors cannot trust our stability? Freedom without security is bondage by another name.
At independence, Nigeria dreamed of industrial glory. Assembly plants in Kaduna, Enugu, and Lagos produced vehicles and machinery. Textile factories in Kano and Kaduna hummed with activity, clothing millions and providing jobs. Tire factories like Dunlop and Michelin once anchored our industrial drive. Today, those factories are ghosts. We import toothpicks, pencils, and even fuel, though we sit on oceans of crude oil.
While Asian tigers industrialized and built global brands, we clung to crude oil like a curse. Instead of diversifying, we fed corruption, squandered revenues, and left future generations to inherit dependence.
MORE FROM THE AUTHOR:[OPINION] Breaking Bad: The Nigerian Episode
A nation’s greatness rests on its roads, rails, and power. Yet Nigeria limps with broken infrastructure. Roads like Lagos–Benin, Abuja–Lokoja, and Enugu–Port Harcourt remain nightmares of potholes and death. Railway projects crawl at a snail’s pace, leaving us dependent on dangerous highways.
And then, electricity – the eternal shame. Despite spending over $20 billion since 1999, Nigerians still power their homes and businesses with generators, spending billions more yearly on fuel. What other evidence of dysfunction could be more glaring?
Our hospitals remain shadows of themselves. Leaders fly abroad for treatment, while ordinary Nigerians die in poorly equipped wards. Medical tourism drains over $1 billion annually. Our doctor-to-patient ratio stands at 1:4,000, far from the WHO’s recommended 1:600. Doctors strike, nurses leave for better pay abroad, and the poor are left at the mercy of fate. What freedom is this, when the nation cannot guarantee life itself?
At the heart of it all lies corruption. Transparency International consistently ranks Nigeria poorly, not out of bias but reality. Politicians live in obscene luxury while workers struggle on ₦70,000 minimum wage. Security votes vanish into private pockets. Institutions are weakened and laws bend to serve the powerful. Our democracy is too often a game of thrones, where the prize is not service but plunder.
Yet, Nigeria is not a hopeless land. We are a paradox of pain and promise. Our people shine everywhere they are given fair opportunity. Nigerian immigrants in the U.S. and U.K. rank among the most educated and accomplished. Nollywood is the world’s second-largest film industry, and Afrobeats has conquered global charts. Tech start-ups like Flutterwave, Paystack, and Andela are billion-dollar ventures. Even in adversity, Nigerians innovate, endure, and excel.
MORE FROM THE AUTHOR:[OPINION] House Agents: The Bile Beneath The Roof
We are a nation that refuses to die.
At 65, the question is not whether Nigeria can change, it is whether Nigerians will demand change. Leadership matters, yes, but good followership is equally critical. Citizens must rise to hold leaders accountable, to resist the lure of handouts, to demand policies that prioritize education, healthcare, industrialization, and security. We cannot continue to mortgage our future for bags of rice, wads of cash, or empty promises.
Freedom must become more than a flag or anthem. It must be felt in working schools, safe streets, thriving factories, reliable electricity, accessible healthcare, and strong institutions. Until then, independence is a shell, and freedom a mirage.
Nigeria at 65 is both triumph and tragedy. We have survived civil war, dictatorship, poverty, and terror. We have endured storms that could have broken weaker nations. But survival is not enough. To truly walk in freedom, we must move beyond endurance to excellence, beyond survival to significance.
The journey is long, but the choice is ours. Shall we continue to limp in circles, or will we march with intent into the destiny our forebears dreamed of in 1960?
Nigeria is too great to be ordinary. At 65, the time has come to prove that our independence was not in vain.
News
Insecurity: Former NYSC Director Tasks Corps Members On Self, Environmental Consciousness
A retired Director, Information and Public Relations, National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) Directorate Headquarters, Eddy Megwa, has called on all corps members serving in the country to take their personal security seriously, always be self and environmental conscious.
The former Director made the call at the Bauchi NYSC permanent orientation camp, Wailo, Ganjuwa Local Government Area of the state on Monday.
He warned that the times were evil, therefore vigilance, self consciousness and consciousness of the environment were of paramount importance.
He also called on them to serve the nation with loyalty, commitment and zeal for patriotism, adding that no nation grew without the selfless service of the citizens and called on the corps members to rise up and make the desired change.
READ ALSO:FG Enlists NYSC Members In Campaign To Fight Small Arms, Light Weapons Proliferation In Northeast
“I want to urge you all to deliberately work towards building a great nation of our collective dreams.
“This is because if we have a country that is working very well, the youths will not be desperate about relocating to other countries of the world for greener pastures,” he said.
Megwa further discouraged the youth from illegal migration, describing it as a suicide mission as many of such ‘desperate people’ ended up losing their lives in the Sahara desert in the most gruesome manner.
The former NYSC Spokesman encouraged the corps members to strive for excellence in all they do and achieve even what their forebears could not achieve.
“There are a whole lot of opportunities you have now and can leverage on which the older generation never had.”
READ ALSO: FG Approves New NYSC Mandatory Regulations
He told his audience not to put their names and their families into disrepute by getting themselves involved in crimes and other unwholesome activities.
“The Skill Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development programme of the NYSC is the panacea to graduate unemployment.
“I want to, therefore, advise you to take advantage of the programme by learning skills that will be useful to you in the future.”
Earlier, Mr Umoren Kufre, the state’s Coordinator of NYSC, appreciated the retired Director for the visit and words of motivation to both camp officials and corps members.
He described the former Director as a living legend that shaped the NYSC Public Relations Unit to what it is today and left his footprints boldly.
News
NiMet Predicts Three-day Sunshine, Cloudiness From Monday
The Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) has predicted sunshine and haziness from Monday to Wednesday across the country.
NiMet’s weather outlook released on Sunday in Abuja envisaged sunny skies over the entire northern region throughout the forecast period on Monday.
It envisaged sunny skies with patches of clouds over the entire central region.”For the southern region, cloudy atmosphere with sunshine intervals is anticipated over the region with slim chances of isolated thunderstorms over parts of Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, and Cross River during the afternoon to evening hours,” it saidAccording to NiMet, dust haze is anticipated over Kebbi, Zamfara, Sokoto, Katsina, Kano, Jigawa, Borno, and Yobe on Tuesday throughout the forecast period.It anticipated sunny skies with cloud patches over the entire central region.
READ ALSO:NiMet Forecasts Rain, Flash Floods Nationwide
“For southern region, cloudy skies are expected over the region with slim prospects of isolated thunderstorms over parts of Cross River during morning hours.” Isolated thunderstorms are anticipated over parts of Delta, Ogun, Ondo, Lagos, Bayelsa, Rivers, Akwa Ibom and Cross River later in the day,” it said.
The agency predicted dust haze over the northern region throughout the forecast period on Wednesday.NiMet anticipated a sunny and hazy atmosphere over the entire central region.”For the southern region, cloudy atmosphere are over the region in the morning hours.
“Later in the day, isolated thunderstorms with moderate rains are anticipated over parts of Lagos, Ondo, Oyo, Osun, Ogun, Ekiti, Edo, Delta, Bayelsa, Cross River, Akwa Ibom, and Rivers ” it said.
READ ALSO:NiMet Forecasts Rain, Flash Floods Nationwide
NiMet urged the public to drive under the rain with caution and to take necessary precautions as dust particles would be in suspension over the northern region.
NiMet advised people with asthmatic health conditions and other respiratory issues to be cautious of the present weather conditions.
”Airline operators are advised to get airport-specific weather reports (flight documentation) from NiMet for effective planning in their operations.” Residents are advised to stay informed through weather updates from NiMet – visit our website – www.nimet.gov.ng.
News
MOWAA: Why I Will Not Appear Before Edo Assembly Panel — Obaseki
The immediate past governor of Edo State, Godwin Obaseki, has given reasons he would not appear before the Edo State House of Assembly Ad-hoc Committee set up to investigate funding and ownership of the Museum of West African Arts (MOWAA) and the Radisson Blu Hotel.
The Edo Assembly set up the panel following a request by Governor Monday Okpebholo that the Assembly should probe funding and ownership of the projects.
Amongst what the governor requested the Assembly to investigate is the state government’s N3.8bn investment in the MOWAA and N28bn in Radisson Hotel.
Former Governor Obaseki is scheduled to appear before the Committee on Thursday, December 4th, 2025.
READ ALSO:Edo Assembly Invites Obaseki, Others For Questioning Over MOWAA
The Committee, had in a letter signed by its Secretary, Bekisu Oshone Wilson, said attendance by Obaseki and others were required as part of the committee’s investigation.
Obaseki, who spoke through his media adviser, Crusoe Osagie, said it was offensive and laughable for the Assembly to invite him over a matter that was already in court.
He said the Edo Assembly should learn to know how the law works.
The former Edo Governor said he could not be subjected to answering separately on the same issue.
READ ALSO:MOWAA Authorities Shun Edo Assembly Committee, Give Reason
“It is subjudice for the former Governor to appear before the Edo Assembly in a matter already in court.
“Why subject him to another round of questioning on the same issues?”
Management of MOWAA had also refused to appear before the Edo Assembly Ad Hoc Committee.
Its Counsel, Olayiwola Afolabi, said the Assembly could only make recommendations but that the Court would make the final decision on the issues.
-
Metro4 days ago
JUST IN: One Dead As Ngige Escapes Assassination
-
News5 days ago
BREAKING: Tinubu Declares Nationwide Security Emergency, Orders Armed Forces To Recruit More Personnel
-
News4 days ago
Guinea-Bissau Coup: FG Gives Update On Ex-President Jonathan
-
News4 days ago
Okpebholo Fires EDOGIS Managing Director
-
Metro4 days ago
BREAKING: Bandits Abduct Teenage Boy, Six Girls From FCT Community
-
News5 days ago
Tinubu Appoints Non-Career Ambassadors For US, UK, France
-
Metro5 days ago
Train Attack: Terrorist Leader Gave Mamu N50m From Ransom — DSS Operative
-
News4 days ago
BREAKING: NNPCL Reduces Fuel Price After Dangote Refinery, Depot Owners Cut Rates
-
Metro4 days ago
Bandits Demand N500m As Ransom To Release 13 Kaduna Locals
-
Metro4 days ago
Man Flees After Lady Dies In Ondo Hotel