By Awaal Gata
In his two-part Daily Trust series, Northern Lessons from The Fall of Nuhu Ribadu , the columnist Suleiman A. Suleiman could not have been more wrong. The central error of the essay is that it mistakes an appointment for a burial and misunderstands the currency of power itself. Politics, at its highest level, is not sustained by noise, ethnic panic, or newspaper prophecy. It rests on two rare assets: shared trust and proven competence. Mallam Nuhu Ribadu possesses both. This is why every attempt to read the appointment of a Special Adviser on Homeland Security as a referendum on him collapses under the weight of facts.
Daily Trust, sadly, has increasingly made itself a convenient hub for the practice of character assassination against Ribadu, and one wonders why. This pattern defines much of its coverage of the man. Whenever his name appears, the instinct too often is to search for scandal, inflate disagreement, or stretch political conjecture beyond factual reporting. In recent months, the paper has hosted or amplified a succession of Ribadu-centred narratives: the supposed “fall” of Ribadu, the “poetic irony” of his fall, the alleged confusion between ONSA and the new Homeland Security office, the El-Rufai-Ribadu quarrel, and the sensational reporting around allegations of poison procurement and phone-tapping. A newspaper has the right to scrutinise public officers. It does not have the right to convert scrutiny into obsession.
The first falsehood in Suleiman’s argument is the assumption that proximity to the President is exhausted by bureaucratic exclusivity. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s trust in Ribadu did not begin in 2023. It goes back to the politics of risk, when Ribadu, hounded by the Yar’Adua establishment and driven into a difficult political wilderness, was embraced by the Tinubu-led Action Congress of Nigeria and made its presidential candidate in 2011. That was no casual gesture. It was a political investment in a man whose integrity and courage had already acquired national meaning. Suleiman overestimates the fragility of that trust because he underestimates the long memory of politics.
The Homeland Security appointment is also no proof of displacement. Serious states do not treat complex security emergencies as a one-man theatre. Nigeria inherited a multilayered breakdown: terrorism in the North-East, banditry in the North-West, farmer-herder conflicts, kidnapping syndicates, separatist violence, illegal mining networks, and transnational arms flows. Adding a specialised adviser to strengthen internal security coordination does not abolish the National Security Adviser. It widens the architecture. The real question is whether Nigeria’s security machinery is being adapted to realities too complex for inherited structures.
On that score, Ribadu has not been a ceremonial occupant of office. Under his watch, security agencies have intensified both kinetic and non-kinetic operations. Thousands of hostages have been freed. Bandit leaders in Kaduna, Zamfara and Katsina have been eliminated. Ansaru elements in Kaduna have been arrested. Large groups of abducted citizens have been recovered from terrorist enclaves. These gains do not mean Nigeria is secure. No honest person would say that. They show that the man whom Suleiman declares fallen has remained active in the arena.
The clearest evidence of Ribadu’s continuing value is the recent Nigeria–United States security situation. What could have become a brutal diplomatic confrontation was gradually turned into collaboration. There was massive pressure in Washington to frame Nigeria as a country incapable of protecting Christians and to push punitive responses against Abuja. The situation could easily have hardened into hostility. Ribadu instead led Nigeria’s engagements with Congress, the White House, the State Department, the National Security Council and the Pentagon. By January 2026, he again led the Nigerian side at the first session of the U.S.–Nigeria Joint Working Group. Soon after, the United States pledged to deliver outstanding military equipment, including drones, helicopters, spare parts and support systems. That is not the profile of a discarded official. It is the work of a trusted national security manager with international networks and diplomatic credibility.
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Suleiman’s second error is his attempt to turn the northern political establishment against Ribadu by singling him out as the cause of Mallam Nasir el-Rufai’s travails. This is a hatchet job. El-Rufai is not a helpless victim of Ribadu. He is, largely, a victim of his own words, his own overreach, and his own taste for incendiary politics. When a former governor publicly claims knowledge of phone-tapping involving the National Security…
Read the full article at The Guardian Nigeria →