*NATIONAL CHRISTIAN ELDERS FORUM (NCEF)*
*MR PRESIDENT, WHAT LEGACY WOULD YOU LEAVE BEHIND?*
_“A politician thinks of the next election; a statesman thinks of the next generation.” ― James Freeman Clarke_
*HIGHLIGHTS:*
• The current distress in the country affords President Tinubu opportunities to provide solutions that would be enduring legacies for his administration.
• The root cause of the crisis in Nigeria is the conflict between Democracy and Sharia ideologies.
• The Muslim North should revert to the Penal Code approved by the Sardauna for the North and dismantle the Sharia criminal law.
• The 1999 Constitution lacks legitimacy, and it should be decommissioned immediately.
• The 2027 election should not take place under the 1999 Constitution but under a new constitution. Nigeria should stop validating an illegitimacy every four years.
• President Tinubu should initiate the birthing of a new Constitution as one of his legacies to Nigeria. This would put him in the ranks of Robertson Constitution, Mcpherson Constitution, and the Lyttleton Constitution.
• The Government of President Tinubu should convene a conference of the ethnic nationalities to re-negotiate Nigeria and produce a new Constitution for the country before 2027.
Mr President,
The National Christian Elders Forum (NCEF) brings greetings to Mr President in these trying times while we commiserate with multitudes of Nigerians who have been negatively impacted by the ongoing terrorism in Nigeria. The Forum of Christian Elders condoles families that have suffered the loss of loved ones, and empathises, through the Lay Faithful Trust Foundation, with those in the IDP camps. We pray, and we keep working, that this distress shall pass quickly.
As Christian elders, we appeal to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, on whose shoulders lies the responsibility of steering the ship of the state at this critical period, to consider our counsel in this brief presentation. This season calls for sacrificial leadership that will set aside all personal ambitions and work for the common good of all. It is leaders who make the sacrifices that posterity honours. History etches in gold the names of those who make a difference for good in their generation. At this point, Mr. President should be thinking about the legacy he would leave behind. In other words, what does President Tinubu want to be remembered for?
The crisis which Nigeria is going through affords Mr. President the opportunity to distinguish himself as a noble statesman. He should be thinking of turning the present distresses in the country into challenges to which he would provide lasting solutions and win the accolades of generations to come. Only such a commitment can bring the current distress in Nigeria to a quick end. Nigeria is calling for leadership that will set aside partisan politicking and focus on bringing a new Nigeria out of the current rubble induced by the unrestrained politics of religion.
Since 2015, NCEF has been cautioning against the unbridled incursion of religion into the body politics of Nigeria. The eight years of President Buhari witnessed the promotion of sectional religious interest over and above the national interest. That posture does not appear to be declining. It is based on religious discrimination that genocide is still being committed against Christian populations in Nigeria in the North and Middle Belt regions of the country. The violence is spreading all over the country.
NCEF is aghast that there could be a denial of religiously induced genocide against Christian populations in Nigeria. Since its inception in 2015, NCEF has written over one hundred and twenty-one (121) papers on the incursion of Sharia ideology into governance in Nigeria. The incursion of Sharia ideology into the 1999 Constitution created dual conflicting ideologies for Nigeria. Repeatedly, NCEF cautioned that Nigeria is operating two different ideologies for the same country and two sets of laws for the same people. Nigeria is a secular state, and its national ideology is democracy.
In 2017, NCEF asked Muslim leaders in Nigeria nine questions when they sought to deny genocide against Christians. To date, no Muslim leader has answered one of those nine questions. It is therefore surprising that the same leaders of Islam can still deny in 2025 that there is genocide against Christians in Nigeria.
Mr. President, the root of this crisis is the illegitimate and unilateral insertion of Sharia ideology into the 1999 Constitution by a Muslim Military Head of State, who used his position to promote his religion over and above other religions in the country. The starting point in resolving this crisis is as follows:
1. The 1999 Constitution (as amended) must be decommissioned immediately. It failed the test of a true Constitution for Nigeria because it was neither negotiated by the ethnic nationalities nor passed through any Constituent Assembly. Its claim of “we the people …” is not only false, it is also fraudulent. We cannot build a nation on fraud.
2. The Sharia ideology must be consigned as “personal” law, and every structure supporting Sharia “criminal law” must be dismantled forthwith.
3. Mr. President should convene a conference of the ethnic nationalities to re-negotiate Nigeria and come out with a new constitution of the people, by the people, for the people. We suggest that this should be done before the next election in 2027.
4. It would not be in the interest of Nigeria to conduct another election under a constitution that does not represent the collective agreement of Nigerians. Nigeria should no longer continue to endorse illegality every four years.
NCEF is aware that the matter of Sharia evokes emotion amongst Muslims of the core North. However, the controversy can easily be resolved if we travel down memory lane to the foundation of Nigeria at Independence. The late Sardauna wanted Sharia, but the request was declined by the Colonial Authority because Sharia failed the “repugnancy test”. We shall quote three legal luminaries on this matter: Mr. Solomon Asemota, SAN; the late Professor Ben Nwabueze; and the late Justice Mohammed Bello.
Mr. Solomon Asemota, SAN, commented thus:
“It is also very clear that Sharia cannot be enforced as state law, which was why the Sardauna took the trouble to ensure the passage of the Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure in 1960, which has the following features:
a. It was applicable to everybody in Northern Nigeria.
b. It was internationally accepted and above all
c. It was Quran compliant.
If the above is the correct state of the two laws, then there is need to return Sharia to the status it was before 1975 – Civil and Personal Law.”
The late Professor Ben Nwabueze gave his legal opinion as follows:
“The conclusion is thus inescapable that the prohibition in section 10 of the Constitution stamps with an indelible taint of unconstitutionality, the Sharia criminal law, whether in its original form as contained in the Quran and the Sunnah or in a codified form to be enacted by the National Assembly or a State House of Assembly.”
The late Justice Mohammed Bello commented thus:
“Section 38(1) of the Constitution ensures for every person the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion, including freedom to change his religion or belief, whereas under Sharia, ‘ridda’ (change of religion) is a capital offence. Consequently, the offence of ridda is inconsistent with Section 38(1) and by virtue of Section 1 is unconstitutional.”
Mr. President, based on the legal opinions of these legal luminaries, there should be no delay in setting in motion the process of giving Nigeria a new constitution. The twelve states in the North that introduced Sharia law should revert to the Penal Code. It was the deviation from the Penal Code that brought Nigeria into this crisis. To fully resolve this crisis, NCEF wishes to outline the following recommendations to Mr. President for his careful consideration:
a) There should be an immediate decommissioning of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).
b) In the interim, Nigeria should revert to its 1963 Republican Constitution, being the only constitution that was negotiated by the founding fathers of Nigeria. The 1963 Republican Constitution was not abrogated. It was “suspended” by the Military in 1966. Mr. President can lift the suspension and with some minor amendments, resume its operation.
c) A Conference of ethnic nationalities should be convened to renegotiate Nigeria and produce a new constitution for the country.
d) A Truth and Reconciliation Commission should be established, for the healing and rebuilding of trust among all the divergent groups in Nigeria.
e) Professionalism should be restored to the Army through the dismissal of all “repentant terrorists”.
f) Government should enable the IDPs to return to their ancestral homes.
g) Maximize the assistance offered by the United States of America to neutralize all terrorists who have been undermining the State and compromising security all over the nation.
Mr. President, we conclude with the words of James Freeman Clarke, that “a politician thinks of the next election; a statesman thinks of the next generation.” We appeal to you to seize the rare opportunity of turning the present crisis in Nigeria into legacy projects that will etch your name in gold for generations to come. We pray that you will superintend the emergence of a new constitution that will restore peace, progress, and prosperity to Nigeria. In years to come, History will speak of a Tinubu Constitution, like the Robertson Constitution, the Mcpherson Constitution, and the Lyttleton Constitution. Your current report card, when assessed by Section 14(2)b of the 1999 Constitution, is not encouraging. Security and welfare of the citizens are at the lowest rung of the ladder of the performance index. You should not leave this report card behind. It will haunt you and your descendants for generations to come. We encourage you to rise like a noble statesman and set politicking apart to provide lasting solutions to the problems of Nigeria. That should be your legacy, not the 2027 election. We believe that this should be done before your first term in office is over.
NCEF wishes to thank all the kind-hearted people, locally and internationally, who have expressed concern and willingness to help Nigeria in this period of distress. We pray that Mr. President will take seriously our counsel, that posterity remembers and honors those who make a difference in their generation.
God bless Nigeria.
For, and on behalf of, NCEF,
Dr Samuel Danjuma Gani, CON
Chairman
25th December 2025
*MR PRESIDENT, WHAT LEGACY WOULD YOU LEAVE BEHIND?*
_“A politician thinks of the next election; a statesman thinks of the next generation.” ― James Freeman Clarke_
*HIGHLIGHTS:*
• The current distress in the country affords President Tinubu opportunities to provide solutions that would be enduring legacies for his administration.
• The root cause of the crisis in Nigeria is the conflict between Democracy and Sharia ideologies.
• The Muslim North should revert to the Penal Code approved by the Sardauna for the North and dismantle the Sharia criminal law.
• The 1999 Constitution lacks legitimacy, and it should be decommissioned immediately.
• The 2027 election should not take place under the 1999 Constitution but under a new constitution. Nigeria should stop validating an illegitimacy every four years.
• President Tinubu should initiate the birthing of a new Constitution as one of his legacies to Nigeria. This would put him in the ranks of Robertson Constitution, Mcpherson Constitution, and the Lyttleton Constitution.
• The Government of President Tinubu should convene a conference of the ethnic nationalities to re-negotiate Nigeria and produce a new Constitution for the country before 2027.
Mr President,
The National Christian Elders Forum (NCEF) brings greetings to Mr President in these trying times while we commiserate with multitudes of Nigerians who have been negatively impacted by the ongoing terrorism in Nigeria. The Forum of Christian Elders condoles families that have suffered the loss of loved ones, and empathises, through the Lay Faithful Trust Foundation, with those in the IDP camps. We pray, and we keep working, that this distress shall pass quickly.
As Christian elders, we appeal to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, on whose shoulders lies the responsibility of steering the ship of the state at this critical period, to consider our counsel in this brief presentation. This season calls for sacrificial leadership that will set aside all personal ambitions and work for the common good of all. It is leaders who make the sacrifices that posterity honours. History etches in gold the names of those who make a difference for good in their generation. At this point, Mr. President should be thinking about the legacy he would leave behind. In other words, what does President Tinubu want to be remembered for?
The crisis which Nigeria is going through affords Mr. President the opportunity to distinguish himself as a noble statesman. He should be thinking of turning the present distresses in the country into challenges to which he would provide lasting solutions and win the accolades of generations to come. Only such a commitment can bring the current distress in Nigeria to a quick end. Nigeria is calling for leadership that will set aside partisan politicking and focus on bringing a new Nigeria out of the current rubble induced by the unrestrained politics of religion.
Since 2015, NCEF has been cautioning against the unbridled incursion of religion into the body politics of Nigeria. The eight years of President Buhari witnessed the promotion of sectional religious interest over and above the national interest. That posture does not appear to be declining. It is based on religious discrimination that genocide is still being committed against Christian populations in Nigeria in the North and Middle Belt regions of the country. The violence is spreading all over the country.
NCEF is aghast that there could be a denial of religiously induced genocide against Christian populations in Nigeria. Since its inception in 2015, NCEF has written over one hundred and twenty-one (121) papers on the incursion of Sharia ideology into governance in Nigeria. The incursion of Sharia ideology into the 1999 Constitution created dual conflicting ideologies for Nigeria. Repeatedly, NCEF cautioned that Nigeria is operating two different ideologies for the same country and two sets of laws for the same people. Nigeria is a secular state, and its national ideology is democracy.
In 2017, NCEF asked Muslim leaders in Nigeria nine questions when they sought to deny genocide against Christians. To date, no Muslim leader has answered one of those nine questions. It is therefore surprising that the same leaders of Islam can still deny in 2025 that there is genocide against Christians in Nigeria.
Mr. President, the root of this crisis is the illegitimate and unilateral insertion of Sharia ideology into the 1999 Constitution by a Muslim Military Head of State, who used his position to promote his religion over and above other religions in the country. The starting point in resolving this crisis is as follows:
1. The 1999 Constitution (as amended) must be decommissioned immediately. It failed the test of a true Constitution for Nigeria because it was neither negotiated by the ethnic nationalities nor passed through any Constituent Assembly. Its claim of “we the people …” is not only false, it is also fraudulent. We cannot build a nation on fraud.
2. The Sharia ideology must be consigned as “personal” law, and every structure supporting Sharia “criminal law” must be dismantled forthwith.
3. Mr. President should convene a conference of the ethnic nationalities to re-negotiate Nigeria and come out with a new constitution of the people, by the people, for the people. We suggest that this should be done before the next election in 2027.
4. It would not be in the interest of Nigeria to conduct another election under a constitution that does not represent the collective agreement of Nigerians. Nigeria should no longer continue to endorse illegality every four years.
NCEF is aware that the matter of Sharia evokes emotion amongst Muslims of the core North. However, the controversy can easily be resolved if we travel down memory lane to the foundation of Nigeria at Independence. The late Sardauna wanted Sharia, but the request was declined by the Colonial Authority because Sharia failed the “repugnancy test”. We shall quote three legal luminaries on this matter: Mr. Solomon Asemota, SAN; the late Professor Ben Nwabueze; and the late Justice Mohammed Bello.
Mr. Solomon Asemota, SAN, commented thus:
“It is also very clear that Sharia cannot be enforced as state law, which was why the Sardauna took the trouble to ensure the passage of the Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure in 1960, which has the following features:
a. It was applicable to everybody in Northern Nigeria.
b. It was internationally accepted and above all
c. It was Quran compliant.
If the above is the correct state of the two laws, then there is need to return Sharia to the status it was before 1975 – Civil and Personal Law.”
The late Professor Ben Nwabueze gave his legal opinion as follows:
“The conclusion is thus inescapable that the prohibition in section 10 of the Constitution stamps with an indelible taint of unconstitutionality, the Sharia criminal law, whether in its original form as contained in the Quran and the Sunnah or in a codified form to be enacted by the National Assembly or a State House of Assembly.”
The late Justice Mohammed Bello commented thus:
“Section 38(1) of the Constitution ensures for every person the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion, including freedom to change his religion or belief, whereas under Sharia, ‘ridda’ (change of religion) is a capital offence. Consequently, the offence of ridda is inconsistent with Section 38(1) and by virtue of Section 1 is unconstitutional.”
Mr. President, based on the legal opinions of these legal luminaries, there should be no delay in setting in motion the process of giving Nigeria a new constitution. The twelve states in the North that introduced Sharia law should revert to the Penal Code. It was the deviation from the Penal Code that brought Nigeria into this crisis. To fully resolve this crisis, NCEF wishes to outline the following recommendations to Mr. President for his careful consideration:
a) There should be an immediate decommissioning of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).
b) In the interim, Nigeria should revert to its 1963 Republican Constitution, being the only constitution that was negotiated by the founding fathers of Nigeria. The 1963 Republican Constitution was not abrogated. It was “suspended” by the Military in 1966. Mr. President can lift the suspension and with some minor amendments, resume its operation.
c) A Conference of ethnic nationalities should be convened to renegotiate Nigeria and produce a new constitution for the country.
d) A Truth and Reconciliation Commission should be established, for the healing and rebuilding of trust among all the divergent groups in Nigeria.
e) Professionalism should be restored to the Army through the dismissal of all “repentant terrorists”.
f) Government should enable the IDPs to return to their ancestral homes.
g) Maximize the assistance offered by the United States of America to neutralize all terrorists who have been undermining the State and compromising security all over the nation.
Mr. President, we conclude with the words of James Freeman Clarke, that “a politician thinks of the next election; a statesman thinks of the next generation.” We appeal to you to seize the rare opportunity of turning the present crisis in Nigeria into legacy projects that will etch your name in gold for generations to come. We pray that you will superintend the emergence of a new constitution that will restore peace, progress, and prosperity to Nigeria. In years to come, History will speak of a Tinubu Constitution, like the Robertson Constitution, the Mcpherson Constitution, and the Lyttleton Constitution. Your current report card, when assessed by Section 14(2)b of the 1999 Constitution, is not encouraging. Security and welfare of the citizens are at the lowest rung of the ladder of the performance index. You should not leave this report card behind. It will haunt you and your descendants for generations to come. We encourage you to rise like a noble statesman and set politicking apart to provide lasting solutions to the problems of Nigeria. That should be your legacy, not the 2027 election. We believe that this should be done before your first term in office is over.
NCEF wishes to thank all the kind-hearted people, locally and internationally, who have expressed concern and willingness to help Nigeria in this period of distress. We pray that Mr. President will take seriously our counsel, that posterity remembers and honors those who make a difference in their generation.
God bless Nigeria.
For, and on behalf of, NCEF,
Dr Samuel Danjuma Gani, CON
Chairman
25th December 2025
*NATIONAL CHRISTIAN ELDERS FORUM (NCEF)*
*MR PRESIDENT, WHAT LEGACY WOULD YOU LEAVE BEHIND?*
_“A politician thinks of the next election; a statesman thinks of the next generation.” ― James Freeman Clarke_
*HIGHLIGHTS:*
• The current distress in the country affords President Tinubu opportunities to provide solutions that would be enduring legacies for his administration.
• The root cause of the crisis in Nigeria is the conflict between Democracy and Sharia ideologies.
• The Muslim North should revert to the Penal Code approved by the Sardauna for the North and dismantle the Sharia criminal law.
• The 1999 Constitution lacks legitimacy, and it should be decommissioned immediately.
• The 2027 election should not take place under the 1999 Constitution but under a new constitution. Nigeria should stop validating an illegitimacy every four years.
• President Tinubu should initiate the birthing of a new Constitution as one of his legacies to Nigeria. This would put him in the ranks of Robertson Constitution, Mcpherson Constitution, and the Lyttleton Constitution.
• The Government of President Tinubu should convene a conference of the ethnic nationalities to re-negotiate Nigeria and produce a new Constitution for the country before 2027.
Mr President,
The National Christian Elders Forum (NCEF) brings greetings to Mr President in these trying times while we commiserate with multitudes of Nigerians who have been negatively impacted by the ongoing terrorism in Nigeria. The Forum of Christian Elders condoles families that have suffered the loss of loved ones, and empathises, through the Lay Faithful Trust Foundation, with those in the IDP camps. We pray, and we keep working, that this distress shall pass quickly.
As Christian elders, we appeal to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, on whose shoulders lies the responsibility of steering the ship of the state at this critical period, to consider our counsel in this brief presentation. This season calls for sacrificial leadership that will set aside all personal ambitions and work for the common good of all. It is leaders who make the sacrifices that posterity honours. History etches in gold the names of those who make a difference for good in their generation. At this point, Mr. President should be thinking about the legacy he would leave behind. In other words, what does President Tinubu want to be remembered for?
The crisis which Nigeria is going through affords Mr. President the opportunity to distinguish himself as a noble statesman. He should be thinking of turning the present distresses in the country into challenges to which he would provide lasting solutions and win the accolades of generations to come. Only such a commitment can bring the current distress in Nigeria to a quick end. Nigeria is calling for leadership that will set aside partisan politicking and focus on bringing a new Nigeria out of the current rubble induced by the unrestrained politics of religion.
Since 2015, NCEF has been cautioning against the unbridled incursion of religion into the body politics of Nigeria. The eight years of President Buhari witnessed the promotion of sectional religious interest over and above the national interest. That posture does not appear to be declining. It is based on religious discrimination that genocide is still being committed against Christian populations in Nigeria in the North and Middle Belt regions of the country. The violence is spreading all over the country.
NCEF is aghast that there could be a denial of religiously induced genocide against Christian populations in Nigeria. Since its inception in 2015, NCEF has written over one hundred and twenty-one (121) papers on the incursion of Sharia ideology into governance in Nigeria. The incursion of Sharia ideology into the 1999 Constitution created dual conflicting ideologies for Nigeria. Repeatedly, NCEF cautioned that Nigeria is operating two different ideologies for the same country and two sets of laws for the same people. Nigeria is a secular state, and its national ideology is democracy.
In 2017, NCEF asked Muslim leaders in Nigeria nine questions when they sought to deny genocide against Christians. To date, no Muslim leader has answered one of those nine questions. It is therefore surprising that the same leaders of Islam can still deny in 2025 that there is genocide against Christians in Nigeria.
Mr. President, the root of this crisis is the illegitimate and unilateral insertion of Sharia ideology into the 1999 Constitution by a Muslim Military Head of State, who used his position to promote his religion over and above other religions in the country. The starting point in resolving this crisis is as follows:
1. The 1999 Constitution (as amended) must be decommissioned immediately. It failed the test of a true Constitution for Nigeria because it was neither negotiated by the ethnic nationalities nor passed through any Constituent Assembly. Its claim of “we the people …” is not only false, it is also fraudulent. We cannot build a nation on fraud.
2. The Sharia ideology must be consigned as “personal” law, and every structure supporting Sharia “criminal law” must be dismantled forthwith.
3. Mr. President should convene a conference of the ethnic nationalities to re-negotiate Nigeria and come out with a new constitution of the people, by the people, for the people. We suggest that this should be done before the next election in 2027.
4. It would not be in the interest of Nigeria to conduct another election under a constitution that does not represent the collective agreement of Nigerians. Nigeria should no longer continue to endorse illegality every four years.
NCEF is aware that the matter of Sharia evokes emotion amongst Muslims of the core North. However, the controversy can easily be resolved if we travel down memory lane to the foundation of Nigeria at Independence. The late Sardauna wanted Sharia, but the request was declined by the Colonial Authority because Sharia failed the “repugnancy test”. We shall quote three legal luminaries on this matter: Mr. Solomon Asemota, SAN; the late Professor Ben Nwabueze; and the late Justice Mohammed Bello.
Mr. Solomon Asemota, SAN, commented thus:
“It is also very clear that Sharia cannot be enforced as state law, which was why the Sardauna took the trouble to ensure the passage of the Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure in 1960, which has the following features:
a. It was applicable to everybody in Northern Nigeria.
b. It was internationally accepted and above all
c. It was Quran compliant.
If the above is the correct state of the two laws, then there is need to return Sharia to the status it was before 1975 – Civil and Personal Law.”
The late Professor Ben Nwabueze gave his legal opinion as follows:
“The conclusion is thus inescapable that the prohibition in section 10 of the Constitution stamps with an indelible taint of unconstitutionality, the Sharia criminal law, whether in its original form as contained in the Quran and the Sunnah or in a codified form to be enacted by the National Assembly or a State House of Assembly.”
The late Justice Mohammed Bello commented thus:
“Section 38(1) of the Constitution ensures for every person the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion, including freedom to change his religion or belief, whereas under Sharia, ‘ridda’ (change of religion) is a capital offence. Consequently, the offence of ridda is inconsistent with Section 38(1) and by virtue of Section 1 is unconstitutional.”
Mr. President, based on the legal opinions of these legal luminaries, there should be no delay in setting in motion the process of giving Nigeria a new constitution. The twelve states in the North that introduced Sharia law should revert to the Penal Code. It was the deviation from the Penal Code that brought Nigeria into this crisis. To fully resolve this crisis, NCEF wishes to outline the following recommendations to Mr. President for his careful consideration:
a) There should be an immediate decommissioning of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).
b) In the interim, Nigeria should revert to its 1963 Republican Constitution, being the only constitution that was negotiated by the founding fathers of Nigeria. The 1963 Republican Constitution was not abrogated. It was “suspended” by the Military in 1966. Mr. President can lift the suspension and with some minor amendments, resume its operation.
c) A Conference of ethnic nationalities should be convened to renegotiate Nigeria and produce a new constitution for the country.
d) A Truth and Reconciliation Commission should be established, for the healing and rebuilding of trust among all the divergent groups in Nigeria.
e) Professionalism should be restored to the Army through the dismissal of all “repentant terrorists”.
f) Government should enable the IDPs to return to their ancestral homes.
g) Maximize the assistance offered by the United States of America to neutralize all terrorists who have been undermining the State and compromising security all over the nation.
Mr. President, we conclude with the words of James Freeman Clarke, that “a politician thinks of the next election; a statesman thinks of the next generation.” We appeal to you to seize the rare opportunity of turning the present crisis in Nigeria into legacy projects that will etch your name in gold for generations to come. We pray that you will superintend the emergence of a new constitution that will restore peace, progress, and prosperity to Nigeria. In years to come, History will speak of a Tinubu Constitution, like the Robertson Constitution, the Mcpherson Constitution, and the Lyttleton Constitution. Your current report card, when assessed by Section 14(2)b of the 1999 Constitution, is not encouraging. Security and welfare of the citizens are at the lowest rung of the ladder of the performance index. You should not leave this report card behind. It will haunt you and your descendants for generations to come. We encourage you to rise like a noble statesman and set politicking apart to provide lasting solutions to the problems of Nigeria. That should be your legacy, not the 2027 election. We believe that this should be done before your first term in office is over.
NCEF wishes to thank all the kind-hearted people, locally and internationally, who have expressed concern and willingness to help Nigeria in this period of distress. We pray that Mr. President will take seriously our counsel, that posterity remembers and honors those who make a difference in their generation.
God bless Nigeria.
For, and on behalf of, NCEF,
Dr Samuel Danjuma Gani, CON
Chairman
25th December 2025
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