Nigerian Newspapers: Key Demands for Government Action | Monday 20th October, 2025

Nigerian Newspapers

Welcome to today’s roundup of Nigerian newspaper headlines, accompanied by our advocacy-focused calls for government action on pressing issues that impact citizens.


1. Daily Trust: Alleged Coup Plot: Ex-Governors Under Watch

Daily Trust reports that a former governor from one of the southern states is said to be under investigation for his alleged connection to the army officers detained over an alleged coup plot.

Our Take: The National Security Advisor (NSA), Nuhu Ribadu, should provide clear and transparent information on the ongoing investigation to keep the public accurately informed. Nigerians deserve to know the facts surrounding the alleged coup plot, including the extent of civilian involvement, to prevent misinformation and maintain trust in national institutions. Transparency, not suspense, should be the order of the day; otherwise, the next “breaking news” might as well come with popcorn.


2. The Guardian: Farmers in Limbo as Bureaucracy Stalls N50 Billion Tractor Rollout

The Guardian reports that nearly four months after President Bola Tinubu launched N50 billion worth of farm tractors to boost food production, the equipment remains idle, exposing Nigeria’s recurring pattern of stalled agricultural reforms, bureaucratic bottlenecks, and waste of public resources that undermine the government’s mechanisation agenda.

Our Take: It is time for the Minister of Agriculture, Senator Abubakar Kyari, and the Presidential Food Systems Coordination Office to trade their speeches for spanners and get those tractors moving, literally. Perhaps a little less ceremony and a bit more diesel in those engines would do more for the ‘Renewed Hope’ agenda than another round of press releases.


3. Vanguard: #EndSars@Five: Memories, Martyrs, Unfinished Struggle for Justice 

Vanguard reports that today (20 October), as the 5th anniversary of the #EndSARS protests is marked, the movement remains both a milestone in civic awakening and a bitter reminder of how justice can be delayed, denied, or distorted.

Our Take: Five years on, the panel reports have not counted as justice. The Inspector-General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, and the Attorney-General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi (SAN), must move beyond promises and ensure accountability for the victims of #EndSars abuses. The least the state can do is prove that ‘never again’ actually means something.

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