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Emeka Enechi

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Emeka Enechi
2 小时

Pre-election Macroeconomic Management - Optics or Durability?

Currencies, in election years, are seldom left to markets. In Nigeria, they are drafted into politics. As 2027 approaches, the naira is being asked to perform a familiar trick: look stable long enough for voters to believe everything else might be too.

Under Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Central Bank of Nigeria appears poised to rediscover its pre-election vocation; defending the currency not because it can be defended, but because it must be seen to be. In an economy where the exchange rate is the closest thing to a nominal anchor, even a modest slowing of depreciation buys something precious, the illusion of control. Prices rise less quickly, expectations soften, and the government acquires a temporary sheen of competence.

But illusions are expensive. Nigeria’s structural weaknesses, thin exports, fiscal strain, chronic FX scarcity, do not disappear because the naira is held in place. They accumulate. Defending the currency in such conditions is less a policy than a postponement, financed by reserves, administrative pressure and the ever-fickle patience of foreign portfolio investors.

Those investors, unlike voters, do not require convincing. By mid-2026, they are likely to begin leaving, quietly at first, then all at once. By the final quarter, the exits may look crowded. In a shallow market, it does not take much to move the price; it takes even less to move it quickly. What follows is rarely a glide. It is a snap.

The political logic is straightforward.; before the election, stability is staged. After it, reality is permitted. Should Mr Tinubu win again, the incentive to indulge the naira evaporates. Adjustment, deferred, denied, disguised, returns with interest.

Investors would be wise not to wait for the final act. Keeping the bulk of one’s assets in dollars is not pessimism; it is pattern recognition. Nigeria has seen this play before. The only novelty is how often it is restaged, and how eagerly it is believed each time.

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Emeka Enechi
7 小时

The Referee Who Became the Match


Nigeria has a talent for turning guardians of order into symbols of disorder. The latest performance features two once-revered Senior Advocates: Mike Ozekhome and Joash Ojo Amupitan.

Start with the referee. As head of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Amupitan’s job is simple; be trusted. Instead, he is entangled in a vanishing X account that spoke like a partisan, then dissolved into denial. In Nigeria, such mysteries are less investigated than endured.

More troubling is INEC’s growing enthusiasm for interpreting court judgments rather than merely obeying them. In disputes like that of the ADC, the commission appears less like an umpire and more like a quiet participant, deciding not just outcomes, but meanings.

Then comes biography. Before elections, there was academia. Allegations, voiced bluntly by Solomon Dalung, suggest a past where results could be “arranged.” If so, the transition from managing grades to managing elections feels less like promotion and more like continuity.

Alongside him stands Ozekhome, once a thunderous defender of justice, now accused of something far less poetic; document forgery in a London property dispute. In Nigeria, moral outrage often ages badly.

Individually, these are allegations. Together, they form a pattern, the steady erosion of belief. And belief, in a democracy, is the only currency that matters.

The problem is no longer whether these men are guilty. It is whether the system they represent can still be believed.

When referees become the story, the match is already lost.

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Emeka Enechi
5 d

In the beginning, there was confusion. Then came policy. And from policy emerged two sacred pillars of national survival; Indomie and Rice.

Thus was born the Republic of Edible Promises.


Every election season in Nigeria begins not with manifestos, but with menu planning. The politicians do not ask, “What do the people need?” They ask, “How many cartons?”

And the people, wise in the arithmetic of survival, respond accordingly.

“Is it one carton per vote,” they ask, “or are we negotiating wholesale democracy this year?”


Indomie, the fast-food deity of urgency, is for the youth. It cooks in two minutes, just like campaign promises. No need for long-term thinking. No need for infrastructure. Just boil water, if there is electricity. If not, improvise. The nation has always been excellent at improvisation.

Rice, on the other hand, is for the elders. It carries prestige, is ceremonial and whispers stability while quietly inflating in price. A bag of rice is not just food, it is a policy document in woven nylon.

Together, they form the twin engines of electoral logistics.


In this system, governance is seasonal. Roads may collapse, hospitals may fade into memory, and education may become a rumour, but Indomie and Rice will arrive, right on schedule, escorted by sirens and moral speeches.

The politician stands before the people and declares: “My brothers and sisters, I have come to empower you.”

Behind him, aides unload cartons.

Empowerment, in this context, is measured in seasoning sachets.


And the people, practical as ever, understand the arrangement. They know that after the election, the politician will disappear into the fortified temples of Abuja, where rice is no longer distributed, it is consumed.

So they collect their share. They smile. They vote.

Not because they believe.

But because, in a land where tomorrow is perpetually under construction, today must be eaten.


Years pass.

The children grow up on Indomie manifestos and rice-based ideologies. They inherit a nation where budgets are abstract, but food distribution is precise. Where GDP is debated, but noodles are delivered.

And when their time comes, they too will gather at the polling units, asking the only question that has ever truly mattered:

“Hope is good, but what are we eating today?”


Thus continues the cycle.

A country where destiny is not written in constitutions or carved into institutions, but packed neatly in cartons and sealed in 5kg bags.

A republic nourished, sustained, and ultimately defined by its most reliable policy instruments:; Indomie and Rice.

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Emeka Enechi
5 d

“In a country where counting requires a tribunal, arithmetic has long surrendered to politics; and numbers, like truth, must first pass through negotiation before they are allowed to exist.” — Ukatta Oganvo (1871–1974)


The Republic of Perpetual Counting.

In most countries, a census is a quiet affair. Enumerators knock on doors, people grumble mildly, numbers are tallied, and life goes on. But in Nigeria, counting is not merely arithmetic, it is a full-contact sport, complete with referees, appeals courts, and, of course, a Census Tribunal.

Yes, a Census Tribunal.

Because in Nigeria, when you count people, the people count back.

The exercise begins innocently enough. Government announces a census. Citizens are urged to “be counted.” Religious leaders pray over the figures in advance. Politicians clear their schedules. Entire regions brace themselves, not for accuracy, but for negotiation.

Enumerators are dispatched with clipboards and hope. But hope, like fuel subsidy, quickly evaporates.

In one village, the population mysteriously doubles overnight. In another, entire communities develop a sudden aversion to being seen, as if invisibility might attract federal allocation elsewhere. Babies are born in bulk. Ancestors briefly return. Even the goats begin to look suspiciously like potential voters.

By the time the numbers return to Abuja, they are less statistics and more political statements.

And then, inevitably, the outrage.

“How can they say we are 3 million? We are at least 7 million, excluding those in diaspora and those spiritually present!”

“This is marginalisation by spreadsheet!”

“Our people have been undercounted since 1914!”

The census, which began as a headcount, has now become a head-on collision.

Enter the Census Tribunal.

A solemn body of learned individuals tasked with resolving the unresolvable; how many Nigerians are Nigerian enough to be counted, and where.

The Tribunal sits like a court of divine arithmetic. Lawyers arrive armed not with evidence, but with emotion, historical grievances, and occasionally, satellite imagery interpreted through ethnic lenses.

One lawyer argues:
“My Lord, our people were counted during the rainy season. Naturally, many had migrated to higher ground. This is a constitutional injustice.”

Another counters:
“My Lord, their figures include unborn children projected over the next ten years. This is premeditated inflation.”

Expert witnesses are called.

A demographer explains population growth rates.

A traditional ruler insists that his people “multiply by destiny, not by biology.”

A politician submits a list of names so long it includes individuals yet to be conceived, on the grounds of “anticipated loyalty.”

The judges listen patiently, occasionally adjusting their glasses, perhaps wondering when counting became metaphysical.

Outside the courtroom, the nation waits.

Not for truth, truth is a luxury, but for advantage.

Because in Nigeria, population is not just about people. It is about power. It is about revenue allocation, legislative seats, and the subtle art of being too many to ignore.

Finally, the Tribunal delivers its judgment.

A compromise.

Numbers are adjusted, not necessarily to reflect reality, but to maintain peace. Some states gain millions. Others lose a few imaginary citizens. Everyone leaves dissatisfied, which, in Nigeria, is the closest thing to fairness.

The official figures are announced.

They are accepted in the way one accepts a poorly told joke; with polite silence and quiet disbelief.

Life moves on.

Until the next census.

Until the next counting of bodies, and recounting of grievances.

Until the next reminder that in Nigeria, even numbers have tribes.

And somewhere, in a quiet office, a statistician sighs.

Because in a country where counting requires a tribunal, arithmetic has long surrendered to politics; and numbers, like truth, must first pass through negotiation before they are allowed to exist.

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Emeka Enechi
5 d

The Salvation Legacy.

They said he began early, twelve years old, already disrupting the local market. While others were apprenticed to carpenters and compliance, he had moved into intangible services; hope distribution, moral restructuring, and the audacious promise of eternal returns. No startup capital, no formal office, just a roaming consultancy with twelve underqualified associates and a business model that refused to scale conventionally, yet somehow did.

For twenty-one years, he operated in what analysts today would call a “hostile regulatory environment.” His messaging was, to say the least, problematic. It threatened incumbents. It destabilised established revenue streams, particularly those tied to ritual, hierarchy, and carefully priced access to the divine. Naturally, stakeholders convened. Concerns were raised. Committees formed. Eventually, one of his own middle managers, his CFO, an insider with full system access, facilitated a hostile audit.

The emperor, representing the ultimate compliance authority, found him in breach of something suitably grave; treason, they called it. A convenient label. Execution followed. Case closed. Market restored.
Or so they thought.

Because what happened next has puzzled economists, theologians, and brand strategists for centuries.

The founder exited, but the enterprise exploded.

No headquarters, yet global presence. No marketing budget, yet unmatched brand recognition. No product revisions, yet unwavering customer loyalty. Two millennia on, his “clients” number in the billions. They gather weekly, some daily, subscribing to his original pitch deck, still remarkably intact despite countless reinterpretations, franchising efforts, and, occasionally, hostile takeovers by those claiming exclusive licensing rights.

Twice a year, operations pause globally. Entire economies slow down to commemorate his market entry and his… unusual exit event. Governments that would never tolerate such disruption in any other sector quietly adjust fiscal calendars around him.

Most fascinating, however, is the affiliate network.

Some of his “representatives” have built empires, cathedrals of capital, leveraging his name with remarkable profitability. Private jets have been acquired. Offshore accounts sanctified. Entire industries have emerged around merchandising salvation. And yet, if one examines the founder’s original operating principles, one suspects he would struggle to pass onboarding in his own organisation today.

Still, the clients remain. Loyal. Devoted. Sometimes confused, often divided, but enduring.

And the founder?

Executed as a traitor. Revered as a Saviour.

A man who lost his life… and accidentally cornered the largest market share in human history.

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