Tanker Drivers Suspend Loading Over Lekki-Epe E-Call-Up Fee

The Petroleum Products Retail Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria (PETROAN) has directed its members to halt the programming and loading of trucks destined for the Lekki-Epe Corridor from June 16, 2025, in protest against the recently introduced ₦12,500 E-call-up system by the Lagos State Government.

In an internal memo signed by its National President, Billy Gillis-Harry; and the National Secretary, Adedibu Aderibigbe, PETROAN criticised the fee as economically insensitive and far above the ₦2,500 per truck charge earlier proposed by industry stakeholders.

The association maintains that its proposed amount is more realistic in light of prevailing economic challenges.

Despite several engagements with the Lagos State Government and other authorities, PETROAN said no agreement had been reached, prompting the decision to suspend activities along the corridor until a “mutually agreeable resolution” is secured.

READ ALSO: Dangote Refinery Offers Marketers Free Delivery Of Petrol, Diesel

The association called on all zonal and state chairmen to enforce the directive and urged members to remain united while consultations with the state government continue. It also emphasized the need for a “fair and sustainable outcome” for industry operators and the public.

Expert Blames Benue Killings On Porous Borders, System Failures

The killing of scores of people in Yelewata, Benue State, over the weekend has been linked to porous borders and systemic failures in Nigeria.

The killings have since sparked nationwide concerns over a breakdown of the country’s security architecture.

Speaking on Channels Television’s breakfast show, The Morning Brief on Monday, the Managing Director of Beacon Security & Intelligence Limited, Kabiru Adamu, said the root problem lies in the failure to properly diagnose the challenge, adding that relevant actors should be held accountable.

READ ALSO: 17 Benue LGAs Were Under Siege, FG’s Efforts Reduced It To Three – Gov Alia

Adamu explained that Benue’s location at the intersection of Nasarawa and Taraba, two states grappling with their security troubles and their international border with Cameroon, increases its vulnerability to external threats and foreign intruders.

According to him, public security in Nigeria has become ineffective, as attackers continue to strike communities, killing dozens, and displacing hundreds, without consequence.

“Threat elements come in, they attack, they kill, sometimes over 100 people in one go. They are not arrested, not prosecuted. That deterrence element in our system is not functioning,” he said.

He further identified the presence of multiple violent groups and militiamen in the state. He warned that some of these groups have been co-opted into the public security architecture by politicians for personal but sinister objectives.

“There’s an absence of intelligence. To have 100 people killed in three days and no video, no voice recording, no evidence, we must admit that our public security system is failing,” Adamu emphasised.

He noted that while public security structures exist in Benue, such as the police, military, civil defence, the Department of State Service, and Operation Zenda, many of them are thinly spread, particularly in rural areas.

According to him, some local governments have fewer than 10 security personnel, a trend not unique to Benue but common nationwide.

“Benue may soon have four separate state-level security outfits, including the evolving Forest Security Guards,” he warned, adding that while numbers look adequate on paper, the real problem is accountability.

Analyst Blames Security Failures For Benue Killings

A public affairs analyst, Nick Agule, has blamed the Nigerian security architecture over the failure to stop the incessant killings in Benue State.

The latest incident over the weekend in Yelewata, a border between Benue and Nasarawa states, claimed the lives of over 50 persons, sparking widespread fear and outrage across the country and beyond.

Agule, who was a guest on Channels Television’s breakfast programme, The Morning Brief, on Monday, described the situation as tragic and alarming, lamenting the failure of the security operatives to prevent the attacks.

READ ALSO: What Tinubu Told Me And Akume At Private Meeting – Benue Gov

“There are two aspects to security: one, to prevent attacks using intelligence; and two, to respond effectively when attacks happen. Sadly, neither seems to be happening,” Agule said during the show.

Some of the burnt houses in the Benue attack on April 15, 2025

He questioned how heavily armed attackers could penetrate deep into Nigeria, carry out deadly attacks, and escape without consequences.

“It’s difficult to understand how this happens without any form of timely security response,” he said. “The question then becomes why is the government not going after those killing Nigerians, but is quick to tear gas citizens who are weeping, wailing, and lamenting about the situation?”

Following the attack, President Bola Tinubu directed security chiefs to implement his earlier directive to bring lasting peace and security to Benue State.

In his reaction, Tinubu charged Governor Hyacinth Alia with convening reconciliation meetings and dialogue among the warring parties to end the incessant bloodshed and bring lasting peace and harmonious coexistence between farmers, herders, and communities.

Pope Leo XIV has also condemned the killings in Benue State, describing the incident as a “terrible massacre” in which mostly displaced civilians were murdered with “extreme cruelty”.

‘Mindless Barbarism’, Akume Condemns Benue Killings

The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), George Akume, has expressed shock and horror at the magnitude of the attacks by terrorists on the people of Yelewata in the Guma Local Government Area of Benue State last weekend.

A state by his spokesperson, Terrence Kuanum, said, “The SGF, who remains in a deep state of mourning over the incident denounces it as mindless barbarism, and says it is totally unacceptable that over 200 hundred innocent persons, mostly women and children, will have their lives cut short in such cruel manner.”

Akume, who was Benue State governor from May 1999 to May 2007, consoled the families of the victims and extended his sympathies to the survivors, even as he called for an immediate end to such dastardly acts everywhere in Nigeria.

READ ALSO: IGP Arrives Benue, Deploys More Tactical Teams To End Killings

He said, “As a former state governor, I understand the complexities involved in combating insecurity, and I enjoin all political, religious and traditional leaders to unite on the task to end all forms of insecurity, not just in Benue State, but in Nigeria as a whole.”

The SGF expressed optimism that the directive by President Bola Tinubu to the Service Chiefs of the Armed Forces of the Federation to end insecurity in Benue State will yield the desired results.

IGP Visits Benue, Deploys More Tactical Teams To End Killings

The Inspector General of Police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, on Monday, arrived Benue State in North Central Nigeria where ferocious marauders wreaked havoc last Friday, killed scores and displaced hundreds of people.

Egbetokun arrived the state in company of other senior management team and ordered for the immediate deployment of additional tactical teams.

The police chief would meet with Governor Hyacinth Alia and other state actors before departing for Abuja.

Benue State has been under heavy attacks by suspected herdsmen for some time. The killings have lingered for years, with some linking it to inter-communal conflicts as well as the quest for land dominance between the autochthonous agrarian dwellers and nomadic cattle rearers.

However, the killings in the last few weeks have been without a break. At least over 160 residents were confirmed killed in a series of attacks by suspected herdsmen who wreaked havoc in different communities in the food-producing state.

READ ALSO: 17 Benue LGAs Were Under Siege, FG’s Efforts Reduced It To Three – Gov Alia

Youths protesting the killings in Benue

On Sunday, President Bola Tinubu directed security chiefs to implement his earlier directive to bring lasting peace and security to Benue State.

“The latest news of wanton killings in Benue State is very depressing. We must not allow this bloodletting to continue unabated. Enough is now enough.

Tribal Voting Over Competence Will Prolong Pains, Obi Warns

The Labour Party’s 2023 presidential candidate, Peter Obi, has warned that Nigeria will keep facing failed leadership if citizens continue to vote along tribal lines rather than based on competence and capacity.

Obi maintained that where competence, capacity, character and compassion are non-existent, there is no magic one can do to improve the leadership of any nation.

The former Anambra State governor, who said this in a post on his official X handle on Monday, noted that Nigerians have seen what leadership without these qualities has done to the country.

“Leadership of a nation is such that it’s either succeeding or failing, none can be hidden. There are critical areas of leadership that must exist for a nation to move forward, and these are summed up in four Cs: Competence, Capacity, Character and Compassion. Where these four are non-existent, there is no magic you can do.

“It’s in this line that I have always maintained that we must move away from voting based on tribe and religion, and begin to vote for people with competence, capacity, character, and compassion, because we have all seen, painfully, what leadership without these qualities has done to our country,” Obi’s post read.

Further emphasising the importance of the aforementioned qualities, Obi stressed that Nigeria today needs a leader who understands the issues, who has the knowledge, experience, and clear ideas to solve them.

“Competence because Nigeria today needs a leader who understands the issues, who has the knowledge, experience, and clear ideas to solve them. Capacity because it is not a ceremonial position; it requires strength, stamina, and the mental energy to confront our complex challenges.

“And above all, leadership must be rooted in character and integrity because without “integrity, public trust collapses, corruption thrives, and selfishness takes over. But perhaps most importantly, we need compassion, because when a leader lacks compassion, human lives are treated as statistics, and suffering is ignored.”

READ ALSO: Nigeria Not In A Democracy Under Tinubu — Obi

He refenced the recent flood in Niger State and attack in Benue State by suspected herdsmen as occasions where these qualities were needed but was lacking from the leader of the country whom he lamented never visited those areas.

In contrast, the former governor gave an example of how both India and South African leaders were quick to visit the scene of plane crash and flooding in their respective countries, saying that was leadership with compassion.

He lamented that President Bola Tinubu failed to visit the affected areas. In contrast, he cited examples of leaders in India and South Africa who promptly visited the scenes of a plane crash and flooding, describing such gestures as demonstrations of compassionate leadership.

“Sadly, the evidence is right before our eyes. Recently, we witnessed severe flooding in Niger State that claimed nearly 200 lives, with many still missing. Yet, not even a single presidential visit, this, in a nation where the scene of the tragedy is less than an hour away by helicopter.

“Just days ago, over 200 Nigerians, innocent men, women, children, and even soldiers were massacred in Benue State. Again, no presidential visit. No physical presence at the scenes of pain. No genuine national mourning. No leadership face to comfort the grieving or give hope to the people.

“Yet, we have seen what true leadership looks like elsewhere: In India, after a plane crash killed nearly 200 people, the Prime Minister was physically at the scene within hours.

“In South Africa, when floods claimed 78 lives, the president went personally to the affected communities, stood with them, and took responsibility.

“That is leadership with compassion. That is leadership that understands the value of human life. But here in Nigeria, we have normalised leadership without empathy, without accountability, and without a human face.