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Somalia Marks 66th National Army Anniversary With Military Parade, New Facilities for Fallen Soldiers’ Children

Today, April 12, is not just any date in Somalia. It is the day, exactly 66 years ago, that a nation gave birth to its armed forces — and in Mogadishu on Sunday, that history was honoured with both ceremony and action.
A ceremony marking the 66th anniversary of the founding of the Somali National Army took place at the Ministry of Defence headquarters in Mogadishu, attended by President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud alongside senior commanders and officials from various branches of the armed forces.
The celebrations were more than symbolic this year. President Mohamud, who also serves as Commander-in-Chief of the Somali Armed Forces, used the occasion to back his words with concrete infrastructure.
The President officially laid the foundation stone for a major new facility at the Fiyaamo base — the Armed Forces Orphanage Centre. The project is specifically designed to care for children of fallen soldiers who sacrificed their lives defending the nation, forming part of a broader government strategy to improve military welfare infrastructure.
That gesture carries significant weight in a country where soldiers have been dying in the fight against Al-Shabaab for years. Recognising the families left behind is not just policy — it’s a statement about what the Somali state values.
A newly unveiled technology hub is also expected to help Somalia’s armed forces keep pace with global military advancements. It signals a military looking forward, not just backwards into its difficult history.
As part of the celebrations, the armed forces conducted a military parade and traditional displays, demonstrating their readiness, discipline, and operational capabilities in defending the nation. President Mohamud addressed the gathering, focusing on the history, sacrifices, and achievements of the Somali National Army across the decades.
Addressing the significance of the day, the president praised military officers and personnel for their unwavering dedication and sacrifice, stressing that his administration prioritises the wellbeing of soldiers and their families, particularly the orphans of national heroes.
The date itself is deeply embedded in Somali national identity. April 12, 1960 has been marked as Armed Forces Day since a law establishing the national army was passed just days earlier, on 6 April 1960. After independence, the Somali National Army merged the former Darawishta police mobile group with the former British Somaliland Scouts to form a 5,000-strong force, with its first commander being Colonel Daud Abdulle Hirsi.
From those 5,000 soldiers at founding to the modern force fighting one of Africa’s most dangerous insurgencies today, the journey has been neither straight nor easy. The civil war of 1991 shattered the army’s structure entirely. But the rebuilding — slow, painful, and ongoing — has produced a force that is increasingly capable and internationally engaged.
Somali Prime Minister Hamza Abdi Barre has termed the national army “the backbone of our defence,” while the Chief of Defence Forces, Gen. Odowaa Yusuf Rage, has declared: “We are fighting an international terrorist threat. Every Somali has a role to play — standing with our forces, contributing to stability, and defending our national dignity.”
Sixty-six years in, Somalia is still fighting for the peace its army was built to protect. But today, at least, the country paused to remember, honour, and invest in those doing the fighting.
News
NUT Declares Indefinite Strike in Oyo Over Abducted Teachers, Pupils

The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), Oyo State Wing, has directed all public primary and secondary school teachers in the state to embark on an indefinite strike beginning Monday, June 1, 2026, over the continued captivity of abducted teachers and pupils in Oriire Local Government Area.
The directive follows growing concerns about the safety and security of teachers and students after 46 pupils and their teachers were reportedly abducted by suspected terrorists in the Ahoro-Esinele and Yawota communities.
In a statement jointly signed by the Chairman of the Oyo State NUT, Hassan Fatai, and the Secretary, Salami Olukayode, the union said the prolonged detention of the victims has generated fear and anxiety among teachers, discouraged school attendance, and heightened tension within affected communities.
According to the union, the strike action is aimed at drawing the attention of government authorities and security agencies to the urgent need to intensify efforts toward the safe and unconditional release of the abducted teachers and pupils.
The NUT directed all teachers in public primary and secondary schools across Oyo State to fully comply with the industrial action and remain at home pending further directives from the union.
News
Nigeria is Open For Business With Türkiye, Minister Alake Declares in Bold Economic Pitch

There is a confidence in the air around Nigeria’s economic diplomacy right now, and Minister of Solid Minerals Development Dele Alake has given it one of its clearest expressions yet. In a declaration that carries both symbolic and strategic weight, Alake has stated unequivocally that Nigeria is ready for business with Türkiye — an assertion delivered not as diplomatic pleasantry but as a direct investment pitch to one of the world’s most aggressively expanding emerging market economies. The statement marks another deliberate step in Nigeria’s ongoing effort to diversify its international economic partnerships beyond traditional Western allies and pivot toward relationships that carry mutual industrial ambition.
The timing of Alake’s declaration is not accidental. Türkiye, under President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has spent the better part of the last decade positioning itself as a bridge economy — a nation with the manufacturing capacity, infrastructure expertise, construction capability, and geopolitical dexterity to operate simultaneously across Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. For Nigeria, a country sitting atop vast untapped mineral wealth and facing the urgent need for industrial investment, technical partnerships, and value-chain development across its extractive sectors, Türkiye represents exactly the kind of partner whose interests and capabilities align with what Lagos, Abuja, and the broader Nigerian economy currently need.
Alake’s portfolio is central to this conversation. Nigeria’s solid minerals sector — home to deposits of lithium, gold, iron ore, coal, bitumen, and dozens of other commercially valuable resources — has for decades been chronically underexploited, leaving enormous economic potential buried in the ground while the country remained disproportionately dependent on crude oil revenues. The Tinubu administration has made diversification away from oil one of its loudest economic commitments, and solid minerals have been identified as a primary frontier for that diversification. Turkish companies, many of which have deep experience in mining, construction materials, and industrial processing, are among the potential partners that could help Nigeria unlock that frontier at scale and speed.
Beyond solid minerals, the Nigeria-Türkiye relationship has room to grow across trade, manufacturing, agriculture, and defence — sectors in which Turkish firms have already established significant footprints across other parts of Africa. Countries like Somalia, Ethiopia, and Sudan have deepened their ties with Ankara in ways that have yielded tangible infrastructure and capacity outcomes, and Nigerian policymakers are clearly keen to ensure that West Africa’s largest economy is not left behind in what is shaping up to be a meaningful continental realignment of partnerships.
Alake’s message to Türkiye is ultimately a message to the world: that Nigeria is not waiting to be discovered, but actively knocking on doors, making the case for investment, and signalling to serious business partners that the continent’s most populous nation is open, willing, and prepared. Whether Turkish capital and expertise follow that invitation into the solid minerals sector and beyond will be one of the more interesting bilateral stories to watch in the months ahead.
News
Eid Travel: Federal Government Orders Immediate Reopening of Abuja-Kaduna-Kano Road Sections For Festive Rush

With the Eid celebrations drawing near and millions of Nigerians preparing to make the journey home to be with family, the Federal Government has stepped in with a directive that will bring considerable relief to travellers along one of the country’s most critical and most talked-about road corridors. The government has ordered the reopening of key sections of the Abuja-Kaduna-Kano road, a highway that connects three of Nigeria’s most populated and economically significant cities, and whose partial closure had been a source of frustration, anxiety, and genuine hardship for commuters, commercial drivers, and residents who depend on it daily.
The Abuja-Kaduna-Kano corridor is not simply a road — it is a lifeline. It is the artery through which goods, people, and commerce flow between the Federal Capital Territory and the commercial heartland of northern Nigeria, and any disruption along its length sends ripples through the economies and daily lives of communities spread across hundreds of kilometres. The decision to reopen sections of the highway ahead of the Eid travel period reflects a recognition by the authorities that the festive season demands not just celebration but infrastructure that is equal to the moment — roads that can carry the weight of a nation moving.
The reopening order comes as security concerns and ongoing rehabilitation works had kept portions of the corridor restricted or entirely off-limits to civilian traffic, forcing travellers onto longer alternative routes that added hours to journeys and exposed them to additional risks along less patrolled roads. For the millions of northern Nigerians and residents of the FCT who will be travelling for Eid-el-Kabir, the news lands as both a practical convenience and a symbolic gesture from a government that has faced sustained criticism over the state of federal roads and the safety conditions along major national highways.
Relevant government agencies, including the Federal Ministry of Works and the Federal Road Safety Corps, are expected to deploy personnel along the corridor to manage traffic flow, enforce safety regulations, and respond swiftly to any incidents that arise during what is traditionally one of the busiest travel periods on Nigerian roads. The FRSC in particular has historically ramped up its operations during Eid and Christmas travel seasons, and indications suggest that this year will see a similarly heightened presence along the Abuja-Kaduna-Kano route to ensure that the reopening translates into a smooth and safe experience for road users.
For the average Nigerian heading north to celebrate Eid with loved ones, the message from the Federal Government is simple: the road is open, travel safely, and enjoy the celebration. Whether the infrastructure holds up to the volume of traffic that the festive period will inevitably bring is a question that will be answered in real time — but for now, the directive is welcome news in a season that, above all else, is about coming home.
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