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Documents Reveal Senator Aishatu Dahiru Ahmed’s Secret Contract Deals Worth Over 200 Million Naira While Serving in the 9th Assembly, Violating the CCBT Act

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Senator Aishatu Dahiru Ahmed

PAUL UTEBOR

When those entrusted with the law begin to bend it, the cracks in a nation’s integrity widen. In a system where public office is meant to embody accountability and honour, the actions of powerful individuals who knowingly break the rules do more than violate legal provisions. They erode public trust. Recent revelations show that even the corridors of authority are not immune to the temptations of impunity, as Senator Aishatu Dahiru Ahmed of the 9th Assembly, who is saddled with the responsibility of upholding due process, has been found to involve herself in contract racketeering while in office. An action that goes against the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act.

The Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB), established to promote transparency, accountability, and integrity across the public sector, sets strict limits on the private business interests of public officers. Specifically, the Act forbids full-time public servants from owning or managing private companies, with only farming enterprises exempt from this rule. This safeguard was designed to prevent conflicts of interest and to curb the culture of self-enrichment that has plagued Nigeria’s public institutions.

Despite these clear provisions, evidence showed that Senator Aishatu Dahiru Ahmed, while listed as a director of Binani Publishing Limited, received contracts worth 227,965,679.8 naira from government agencies through the company as a sitting senator.

On December 28th, 2022, the Universal Basic Education Commission made the payment of N167,786,293.60 to Binani Publishing Limited for the renovation of nine (9) blocks of two (2) classrooms at Government Girls Secondary School, opposite Government House, Jimeta, Yola North LGA, Adamawa State.

Moreso, documents showed that on March 25th, 2021, the Universal Basic Education Commission made the payment of N20,306,249.91 to Binani Publishing Limited for the reprocessing of payment on the supply of instructional materials to Old Gra Primary School, Jimeta, Yola North LGA, Adamawa State.

Lastly, on 24th March 2022, the National Commission for Refugees made the payment of N39,873,136.290 to Binani Publishing Limited for the supply of relief materials (food & non-food items) to IDPs in Kumo town, Gombe state.

The company Binani Publishing Limited, with registration number 298167, was registered on 18 May 2015 with registration number 1261475.
The company has three key directors/shareholders, among whom is Senator Aishatu Dahiru Ahmed. She was a senator who represented the people of Adamawa Central at the 9th Senate Assembly.

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Politics

Political Rascality: FCT Minister of State Mahmoud Media Aide Bin Usman Rano Appoints Six ‘Special Advisers’ and One PA To Run His Office

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Secrets Reporters

Political arrogance does not always arrive with noise. Sometimes, it comes dressed as a press statement, carrying official language, decorated titles and the quiet assumption that public office can be stretched beyond its lawful boundaries.

This was the case with a recent statement issued by Hon. Bin Usman Rano, media aide to Dr. Mariya Mahmoud Bunkure, the Honourable Minister of State for the Federal Capital Territory, announcing the appointment of seven persons to assist in running his office.

Rano, who is himself an aide, appointed Abubakar Alhassan Muhammad Lale as personal assistant. He also named Umar Bashir Umar as Special Adviser on Protocol; Abdullahi Muhammad Ghali as Special Adviser on Media; Bashir Ibrahim Sisay as Special Adviser on Student Matters; Najeeb Garba Lawan Rano as Special Adviser on Youth and Sports; Yusuf Tijjani YT Rano as Special Adviser on Special Duties; and Muhammad Uzairu as Special Adviser on Religious Affairs.

It was not the appointment of a personal assistant that raised issues. Public officers often work with assistants. The concern is the audacity of a ministerial aide appointing six “special advisers” to assist in running his own office, as though the office of a media aide had suddenly become a ministry inside a ministry, a caucus inside a caucus.

The statement did not cite any law. It did not cite approval from the president, the FCT minister, the minister of state, the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, the head of service or any recognised public service authority. It did not state whether the appointees would be paid from public funds. It did not say whether they would receive official identification, allowances, office space, protocol privileges or any benefit from the FCT Administration.

Instead, it simply announced them as “newly appointed officials” expected to strengthen the operational capacity of the office. That phrase alone should worry every Nigerian who still believes that public office must have boundaries.

Under Nigeria’s constitutional structure, the title “Special Adviser” is not a decorative label to be handed out for political convenience. It is a public-office designation tied to lawful authority, approval, remuneration and responsibility. Section 151 of the 1999 Constitution places the appointment of special advisers within the authority of the president, with their number and remuneration subject to lawful prescription.

Public office is not a personal estate. It is not a reward centre for loyalists. It is not a place where every aide creates his own aides, and those aides carry titles that suggest government authority.

At a time Nigerians are being told to endure economic hardship, reduce waste and accept the high cost of governance as unavoidable, a ministerial aide cannot casually announce six special advisers and expect the public to remain silent.

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General News

Ekiti Decide 2026: Inside the Election, Vote Buying, BVAS Lapses and Voter Register Discrepancies Cast Shadow Over APC Landslide

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Secrets Reporters

The overwhelming victory recorded by the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Saturday’s Ekiti State governorship election is coming under increased scrutiny as emerging evidence points to widespread vote buying, voter inducement, BVAS irregularities, and discrepancies in voter turnout calculations that have cast a shadow over the credibility of the landslide win.

While election authorities praised the poll for improved logistics, early deployment of personnel, and the peaceful conduct of voting across much of the state, investigations reveal that beneath the orderly process were significant integrity concerns that may have influenced voter behavior and public confidence in the outcome.

According to SecretsReporters findings, vote-buying operations were widespread across several local government areas, with political agents allegedly distributing cash and other inducements to voters in exchange for electoral support. Field operatives reported witnessing coordinated efforts around polling centres where voters were allegedly monitored and rewarded after casting their ballots. The scale of the inducement activities has raised concerns that financial influence, rather than genuine voter preference, may have played a decisive role in shaping the APC’s commanding victory.

SecretsReporters findings also reveal that concerns over ballot secrecy further complicated the integrity of the election. In several polling units, overcrowding and poor crowd control reportedly made it possible for individuals to observe how voters marked their ballot papers. In some locations, voters were allegedly required to display their marked ballots to party operatives before receiving promised payments, reinforcing fears that the election environment may have enabled coercion and compromised the principle of secret voting.

The credibility of the process was also challenged by accreditation anomalies. Reports from the field indicated that some individuals presenting printed voter details were accredited and allowed to vote without physical Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), while other eligible voters were denied accreditation after the BVAS failed to authenticate their fingerprints or facial biometrics. Technical glitches involving the BVAS were also reported in several polling units before corrective measures were taken.

Adding to the controversy are questions surrounding the voter turnout figures announced after the election. Investigations revealed discrepancies between the voter register used for turnout calculations and the updated register for the 2026 governorship election. The inconsistency has fueled concerns about transparency and accuracy in the management and communication of election data.

Although the official results fell within the expected statistical range of polling-unit returns, suggesting that the final figures may not have been manipulated during collation, election observers argue that the integrity of the process extends beyond result tabulation. The widespread reports of vote buying, voter inducement, accreditation irregularities, and voter data inconsistencies raise fundamental questions about whether the APC’s landslide victory reflected the unfettered will of the electorate.

With attention already turning to the 2027 General Election, the Ekiti governorship poll is likely to reignite national debate over the growing influence of money politics, weaknesses in electoral safeguards, and the urgent need for stronger enforcement against electoral offences.

For many observers, the central question emerging from Ekiti is no longer whether the votes were counted correctly, but whether voters were truly free to make their choices without inducement, pressure, or systemic irregularities.

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General News

Vote Buying Scandal Erupts in Ekiti Election Despite Improved Logistics and Early Voting Turnout

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‎Secrets Reporters

Allegations of widespread vote buying have significantly overshadowed what observers describe as improved election logistics during the ongoing Ekiti State governorship election, raising fresh concerns about the credibility of the process.

‎Investigative field observations from multiple monitoring sources indicate that while the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) recorded notable progress in the timely deployment of materials and early commencement of voting across most polling units, the election day has been heavily tainted by reports of financial inducement of voters in several locations.

‎According to findings by SecretReporters, the election witnessed multiple instances of alleged vote buying across different polling units, where voters were reportedly offered cash and other incentives before and during the voting process. The report noted that these practices appeared to be more visible in areas with high voter concentration, raising concerns about the integrity of voter choice.

‎SecretReporters
further observed that despite improved logistics and faster polling unit openings compared to previous elections, the scale of alleged vote trading significantly undermined the credibility gains recorded in election administration.

‎The findings also suggested that enforcement against electoral malpractice appeared weak in several locations where such incidents were reported.

‎Despite these allegations, observers noted that election logistics represented a clear improvement compared to previous cycles, with a significantly higher percentage of polling units opening early and voting commencing on schedule in most locations.

‎However, the contrast between improved operational efficiency and persistent electoral malpractice has raised questions about enforcement and deterrence mechanisms on election day, particularly in hotspot areas where tensions and isolated violence were also reported.

‎Security presence was deployed across several local government areas, including Ikole, Oye, and Ilejemeje, where sporadic disruptions were recorded, although the general atmosphere was described as largely peaceful.

‎Attention has also focused on INEC’s use of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) and electronic result transmission tools designed to improve transparency and reduce manipulation during collation.

‎While these reforms are widely seen as steps forward in electoral management, stakeholders caution that systemic issues such as vote buying continue to undermine gains made in logistics and technology deployment.

‎As collation continues, concerns remain that the integrity of the final outcome may be shaped as much by electoral conduct on the ground as by technological improvements introduced by the commission.

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