How Tinubu and His Governors Stole ₦800 Billion From Starving Nigerians to Buy an Election.
The numbers are in. The names are known. The accounts have been traced. And this time, there is nowhere left to hide.
What has just been exposed is not a political allegation, not a rumour circulating on WhatsApp, not an opposition talking point. It is a documented, structured, systematic theft of public money, executed by elected governors, authorised by a finance minister, and orchestrated to keep one man in power at the expense of 220 million people who cannot afford to eat.
This is the final straw.
WHAT THEY DID
When President Bola Ahmed Tinubu stood at Eagle Square on May 29, 2023, and declared “subsidy is gone,” Nigerians were told it was a sacrifice for a better future. The pain was real and immediate — fuel prices tripled overnight, transport costs exploded, food inflation shattered household budgets across every state in the federation. Tens of millions of Nigerians entered poverty in a matter of weeks.
They were told to endure.
What they were not told was what was coming next.
The fuel subsidy removal unlocked historic revenue flows into the Federation Account. In 2024 alone, FAAC distributed ₦28.78 trillion to the three tiers of government — a 79 percent jump from the previous year, and more than double the figure two years prior. By 2025, states were receiving approximately ₦2 trillion per month in federal allocations. The money existed. The resources were there. The windfall was real.
And then the governors, the men elected to deploy those funds for schools, hospitals, roads, security, and salaries, quietly agreed to skim it. Systematically. Monthly. Into private accounts.
Over ₦800 billion, diverted from Federation Account Allocation Committee disbursements, channelled through a political platform called the “Renewed Hope Network,” held in accounts linked to Hope Uzodimma, Governor of Imo State and Chairman of the Progressive Governors Forum, who simultaneously serves as Director-General of Tinubu’s 2027 re-election machinery.
This is not a campaign contribution. This is state theft on an industrial scale.
THE NAMES BEHIND THE NUMBERS
Bola Ahmed Tinubu, President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, beneficiary of the scheme, the man in whose name ₦800 billion was diverted from public coffers.
Hope Uzodimma, Governor of Imo State, Chairman of the Progressive Governors Forum, Director-General of the “Renewed Hope Network.” The bag man. The accounts were his. The platform was his. The operation ran through him.
Wale Edun, Former Minister of Finance. According to sources cited by The Will Nigeria and Arise TV, Edun authorised the monthly deductions from participating states’ FAAC shares. He has since been removed from office. The timing is not coincidental. He was not removed for incompetence. He was removed because the scheme was exposed, and someone had to take the fall.
The APC governors who participated in the deductions are collectively implicated. Their names are known to the Progressive Governors Forum. Their states received the FAAC disbursements. The deductions came out of public funds belonging to the people of those states, to their hospitals, to their teachers, to their roads.
None of them has denied it.
As of this writing, neither the Presidency, nor Uzodimma, nor the APC national secretariat has issued a single statement refuting these allegations. Silence, in this context, is confession.
THE ARITHMETIC OF CRUELTY
Consider what ₦800 billion could have done.
It could have fully funded Nigeria’s federal health budget for two years. It could have paid the minimum wage of every federal civil servant for eighteen months. It could have built functional primary schools in every local government area in Nigeria. It could have provided the palliatives Tinubu promised when he removed the subsidy , the ones that never arrived, the buses that never came, the relief that never materialised.
Instead, it was funnelled into political accounts to purchase the machinery of electoral manipulation ahead of 2027.
“The same government that told Nigerians there is no money to reduce suffering,” the African Democratic Congress stated in its formal response, “somehow found a way to allegedly mobilise over ₦800 billion for politics. FAAC allocations are meant for development, salaries, healthcare, education, infrastructure, security and the welfare of citizens, not for financing the re-election plans of one man. To divert public allocations into political accounts while citizens cannot afford food is wickedness on an industrial scale.”
Wickedness on an industrial scale. Remember that phrase.
THE AGE OF EXPOSURE
There is something these men fundamentally miscalculated. They are operating with the instincts of a previous generation — the assumption that the machinery of state secrecy, media control, and institutional complicity can contain a scandal of this magnitude.
That era is finished.
We live in the age of instant information, forensic journalism, OSINT networks, diaspora accountability campaigns, and international legal architecture that moves faster than any Nigerian court can be leaned on or delayed. The moment those FAAC deductions were authorised, they entered a digital record. The moment accounts were opened in the name of “Renewed Hope Ambassadors,” they became traceable. The moment this story was published by TheWill and broadcast on Arise TV, it entered a global information environment that no presidential spokesman and no APC press release can recall.
Every governor who participated is now identifiable. Every account that received or transferred these funds is potentially subject to international financial investigation. Every official who authorised the deductions — and Wale Edun’s departure suggests they know this and have created a documentary trail.
The FBI, the DEA, the UK Serious Fraud Office, INTERPOL, and the Financial Action Task Force all have existing files or pending inquiries touching the Tinubu network. This scandal does not exist in isolation. It sits on top of the 1993 DEA asset forfeiture. It sits on top of the $13 billion in no-bid contracts to Gilbert Chagoury. It sits on top of Judge Beryl Howell’s federal court orders compelling the release of FBI and DEA files. Every new disclosure thickens the evidentiary picture that international investigators are already building.
These men are known. And what is known cannot be unknown.
THE RECKONING
Revolutions in the modern era do not always begin with gunfire. They begin with a moment of collective recognition — the instant a people look at what has been done to them, understand it completely, and decide that the social contract has been irrevocably broken.
Nigeria is at that moment.
The fuel subsidy was removed in the name of the people. The windfall was generated on the backs of the people. And then ₦800 billion of it was stolen from the people, by the very governors sworn to serve them, and deposited into a war chest to ensure that the man who imposed their suffering remains in power to impose more of it.
This is not mismanagement. This is not corruption in the ordinary Nigerian political sense, where ministers steal contracts and build mansions. This is the deliberate weaponisation of mass poverty as an electoral strategy. Make people desperate enough, then use their own money to buy the political infrastructure that will keep you in power over them.
It will not stand.
To every governor who participated in these deductions: you are known. Your state is known. The amounts are being reconstructed. International investigators read Nigerian newspapers. Diaspora accountability networks do not sleep. Legal submissions citing this scandal are already being prepared for submission to relevant authorities across multiple jurisdictions.
To Hope Uzodimma: the accounts existed. They had names. Money moved through them. That is not a political allegation — that is a financial record.
To Bola Ahmed Tinubu: the people of Nigeria did not endure the removal of the fuel subsidy so that you could use the proceeds to buy your own re-election. That money belonged to them. Every naira of it.
The reckoning is not coming. It is already here.
Kio Amachree is President of Worldview International and a commentator on Nigerian governance and accountability
