• PT Insider
  • #EndSARS Dashboard
  • PT Hausa
  • About Us
  • PT Jobs
  • Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Store
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Premium Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • News
    • Headline Stories
    • Top News
    • More News
    • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Investigations
    • All
    • Alabuga Reports
    • Blood on Uniforms
    Government Day Secondary School, Lassa

    EXCLUSIVE: 36 students still missing after Borno school attack

    A collage of IPOB flag, attacked police station and Simon Ekpa

    SPECIAL REPORT: IPOB-linked attacks, killings reduce since Simon Ekpa’s jailing

    Inside details of farmer-herder clashes in Abuja community

    SPECIAL REPORT: Inside details of farmer-herder clashes in Abuja community

    Rev Usetu Bassey’s Ibogo for Christ crusade, Ibogo Community in Biase LGA, Cross River, Dec 2024

    How mob brutally assaulted woman accused of witchcraft at church crusade

    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    A roofless section of the Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly Complex

    SPECIAL REPORT: The secrecy, unanswered questions about Akwa Ibom Assembly’s N15.47bn project

    Monisade Afuye, incumbent deputy governor of Ekiti State (APC)

    #EkitiDecides2026: A ballot without women candidates

    An illustration depicting the terrorists’ use of social media platforms

    How Nigerian terrorists use TikTok, exploit country’s digital governance gap

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

  • Business
    • News Reports
    • Financial Inclusion
    • Analysis and Data
    • Business Specials
    • Trade Insights
    • Opinion
    • Oil/Gas Reports
      • FAAC Reports
      • Revenue
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Columns
    • Contributors
    • Editorial
    Azu Ishiekwene writes about Muhammadu Buhari and his legacy.

    Unusual moments in the World Cup, By Azu Ishiekwene

    Professor-Ibrahim-Abdullah writes about Dr Segun Osoba as the historian of radical political economy.

    Walter Rodney: Sierra Leonean historiography’s refusal of a radical inheritance, By Ibrahim Abdullah

    Africa at the turning point: From managed expectations to strategic agency, By Wale Osofisan

    Why I am “bullish” about Africa: The data tells a different story, By Wale Osofisan 

    When ideology yields to identity: The new axis of conflict, By Sola Fasure

    Police IG’s absurd logic on tinted glasses, By Sola Fasure

    Tunde Akanni writes about his teachers on World Teacher's Day.

    Thumbs up for Oga Bello at 65, By Tunde Akanni

    An urgent appeal to the Minister of Finance: Nigeria’s vital need for a new debt reporting template  By Dayo Olaide

    After On Nigeria: Who will fund democracy in Nigeria?, By Dayo Olaide

  • Health
    • News Reports
    • Special Reports and Investigations
    • Health Specials
    • Features and Interviews
    • Multimedia
    • Primary Health Tracker
  • Agriculture
    • News Report
    • Special Reports/Investigations
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Multimedia
  • Arts/Life
    • Arts/Books
    • Kannywood
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Nollywood
    • Travel
  • Sports
    • Football
    • More Sports News
    • Sports Features
    • Casino
      • iGaming
      • Non AAMS
      • Online Kaszinó Magyar
      • non Gamstop casinos
      • Kasyna online
    • Games
      • كازينو اون لاين
      • Geriausi kazino internetu
      • Онлайн казино Казахстан
  • Elections
    • 2024 Ondo Governorship Election
    • 2024 Edo Governorship Election
    • Presidential
    • Gubernatorial
  • Home
  • News
    • Headline Stories
    • Top News
    • More News
    • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Investigations
    • All
    • Alabuga Reports
    • Blood on Uniforms
    Government Day Secondary School, Lassa

    EXCLUSIVE: 36 students still missing after Borno school attack

    A collage of IPOB flag, attacked police station and Simon Ekpa

    SPECIAL REPORT: IPOB-linked attacks, killings reduce since Simon Ekpa’s jailing

    Inside details of farmer-herder clashes in Abuja community

    SPECIAL REPORT: Inside details of farmer-herder clashes in Abuja community

    Rev Usetu Bassey’s Ibogo for Christ crusade, Ibogo Community in Biase LGA, Cross River, Dec 2024

    How mob brutally assaulted woman accused of witchcraft at church crusade

    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    INVESTIGATION: Commissioned But Locked: How an idle hospital is failing women in Akwa Ibom

    A roofless section of the Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly Complex

    SPECIAL REPORT: The secrecy, unanswered questions about Akwa Ibom Assembly’s N15.47bn project

    Monisade Afuye, incumbent deputy governor of Ekiti State (APC)

    #EkitiDecides2026: A ballot without women candidates

    An illustration depicting the terrorists’ use of social media platforms

    How Nigerian terrorists use TikTok, exploit country’s digital governance gap

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

    SPECIAL REPORT: Failing waste system leaves Lagos roads buried in trash

  • Business
    • News Reports
    • Financial Inclusion
    • Analysis and Data
    • Business Specials
    • Trade Insights
    • Opinion
    • Oil/Gas Reports
      • FAAC Reports
      • Revenue
  • Opinion
    • All
    • Analysis
    • Columns
    • Contributors
    • Editorial
    Azu Ishiekwene writes about Muhammadu Buhari and his legacy.

    Unusual moments in the World Cup, By Azu Ishiekwene

    Professor-Ibrahim-Abdullah writes about Dr Segun Osoba as the historian of radical political economy.

    Walter Rodney: Sierra Leonean historiography’s refusal of a radical inheritance, By Ibrahim Abdullah

    Africa at the turning point: From managed expectations to strategic agency, By Wale Osofisan

    Why I am “bullish” about Africa: The data tells a different story, By Wale Osofisan 

    When ideology yields to identity: The new axis of conflict, By Sola Fasure

    Police IG’s absurd logic on tinted glasses, By Sola Fasure

    Tunde Akanni writes about his teachers on World Teacher's Day.

    Thumbs up for Oga Bello at 65, By Tunde Akanni

    An urgent appeal to the Minister of Finance: Nigeria’s vital need for a new debt reporting template  By Dayo Olaide

    After On Nigeria: Who will fund democracy in Nigeria?, By Dayo Olaide

  • Health
    • News Reports
    • Special Reports and Investigations
    • Health Specials
    • Features and Interviews
    • Multimedia
    • Primary Health Tracker
  • Agriculture
    • News Report
    • Special Reports/Investigations
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Multimedia
  • Arts/Life
    • Arts/Books
    • Kannywood
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Nollywood
    • Travel
  • Sports
    • Football
    • More Sports News
    • Sports Features
    • Casino
      • iGaming
      • Non AAMS
      • Online Kaszinó Magyar
      • non Gamstop casinos
      • Kasyna online
    • Games
      • كازينو اون لاين
      • Geriausi kazino internetu
      • Онлайн казино Казахстан
  • Elections
    • 2024 Ondo Governorship Election
    • 2024 Edo Governorship Election
    • Presidential
    • Gubernatorial
Premium Times Nigeria
BUA Group Ad BUA Group Ad BUA Group Ad

Kemi is bad enough, By Majeed Dahiru

The campaign that brought the APC to power and which made it possible for Kashim Shettima to be Nigeria’s vice president today was firmly hinged on Kemi’s truth about Nigeria.

byMajeed Dahiru
January 24, 2025
Reading Time: 5 mins read
1
Google Logo Add us on Google
Kemi Badenoch

Kemi Badenoch is a British citizen and patriot who is openly appreciative of Britain, her country, having experienced Nigeria in the past. She embodies the new spirit of British Conservative values, just as she is passionate about conserving the best of Great Britain and her fellow country folk trust her enough to position her to being the first black British Prime Minister. Her Nigerian traducers will not be able to derail her because Kemi is “bad enough” to stand up to them…

MTN ADVERT

Kemi Badenoch, the British politician and leader of the Conservative Party of UK, has a lot of problems with Nigeria or so it seems, as seen in her often critical comments about the country. Kemi, a British citizen of Yoruba heritage, who spent some time living in Nigeria in the 1980s and 1990s, during a period of the trials and tribulations experienced by citizens in the hands of corrupt military dictatorship, often depicts the country of her ancestors as everything a normal country should not be. According to Kemi, Great Britain is her country and she doesn’t “want it to become like a place I ran away from.” Adding that, ” I grew up in Nigeria, and I saw first-hand what happens when politicians are in it for themselves, when they use public money as their private piggy banks, when they pollute the whole political atmosphere with their failure to serve others.”

Also, “I saw what socialism is for millions. I saw poverty and broken dreams. I came to Britain to make my way in a country where hard work and honest endeavour can take you anywhere. You cannot understand it unless you have lived it. Triple checking that all doors and windows are locked, waking up in the night at every sound, listening as you hear your neighbours scream as they are being burgled and beaten, wondering if your home is next.”

FIRST BANK AD Do you live in Ogijo

The leader of the British Conservative Party has had so much more to talk about her nightmarish experience in Nigeria. But her position on Nigeria can be summed up into how a corrupt political leadership has reduced the giant of Africa into a waddling dwarf that is pauperised, traumatised and terrorised on all fronts.

Interestingly, some leading members of Nigeria’s intellectual community and influential media personalities, who have dedicated their entire adult lives in writing and speaking against the ills of the Nigerian system she often talks about, have turned their pens and voices against Kemi in the most adversarial manner, accusing her of denigrating Nigeria as a short cut up the heights of British politics. For speaking the truth of her reality, as a British resident of Nigeria during the darkest ages of brutal and corrupt military dictatorship, whose guns those maligning her deployed their pens to defeat, Kemi has become the object of ridicule and hate in certain quarters.

Premium Times

Stay Ahead with Premium Times

Follow us on Google News and never miss breaking stories, investigations, and in-depth reporting.

Google Logo Add as a preferred source on Google

…Vice President Shettima’s admonition to Badenoch to remove the “Kemi” in her name if she is not proud of her Nigerian heritage, is an unfortunate statement, just as the applause it received from the adversarial section of Nigeria’s intellectual community is a reminder of the democratic citizenship miseducation that is widespread in Nigeria, even among the highly educated and highly placed.

The on-going spat between some concerned members of Nigeria’s intellectual community (home and abroad) and Kemi Badenoch, over her often critical comments about Nigeria, assumed a diplomatic dimension when Nigeria’s vice president, Kashim Shettima made his rather unexpected intervention. While stating that “we are proud of her in spite of her effort to denigrate her country of origin,” Shettima said “she is entitled to her own opinions; she has even every right to remove Kemi from her name but that does not underscore the fact that greatest black nation on earth is the nation called Nigeria.” And with the vice president weighing in on the side of her traducers, Kemi has become a person of national interest to the Nigerian government.

PT WHATSAPP CHANNEL

However, Vice President Shettima’s admonition to Badenoch to remove the “Kemi” in her name if she is not proud of her Nigerian heritage, is an unfortunate statement, just as the applause it received from the adversarial section of Nigeria’s intellectual community is a reminder of the democratic citizenship miseducation that is widespread in Nigeria, even among the highly educated and highly placed. And the bemused reaction from the same quarter to Kemi’s response to the effect that she is “Yoruba and British not Nigerian” reveals the depth of democratic citizenship “illiteracy” among Nigeria’s otherwise sophisticated intellectual class, that is supposed to be the light of the nation of Nigeria.

Thanks to the high level of integration and seamless assimilation in the British society (something that is lacking in Nigeria), it has become perfectly possible to be Yoruba and not be Nigerian but British. It is called democratic citizenship.

To ask an individual to drop her Yoruba name (Kemi) as a sign of her rejection of her Nigerian ancestry, is to suggest that to be Yoruba must necessarily translate to being Nigerian. To many Nigerian nativist intellectuals, being Yoruba and British is impossible in the same way a White supremacist considers being Yoruba and British incompatible. Otherwise if her Nigerian traducers had understood Kemi Badenoch to be as British as any other Euro-White citizen of United Kingdom, they would not have judged her assessment of Nigeria through a different criteria from David Cameron, who similarly described Nigeria as a “fantastically corrupt” a country. And it is this same nativist mentality that has prevented Nigeria from evolving into the Kashim Shettima’s “greatest black nation” where it is possible to be Yoruba and Kano, Hausa and Anambra, Igbo and Lagos, Kanuri and Bayelsa, Ijaw and Borno, etc.

The Afrobeat legend and great Pan-Africanist rose to global fame singing about the issues Kemi experienced while living in Nigeria, yet nobody accused him of denigrating Nigeria for speaking the truth. Some sections of the Nigerian media that has made it their pastime to chew on Kemi’s personality have been reporting and analysing Kemi’s truth about Nigeria since forever.

Like every other British citizen and institution, Kemi Badenoch has a right to her opinion on Nigeria without her personality and ethnic heritage coming under attack. At best Vice President Kashim Shettima could have aimed a shot at the flaws in her country’s (Britain) system and pointed out cases of corruption, embezzlement of public funds by Kemi and other British politicians, their broken healthcare system, millions of out-of-school-children, Boko Haram insurgency, banditry and sea piracy to her. There is nothing Kemi has said about Nigeria that is not the reality of Africa’s most populous country.

The Afrobeat legend and great Pan-Africanist rose to global fame singing about the issues Kemi experienced while living in Nigeria, yet nobody accused him of denigrating Nigeria for speaking the truth. Some sections of the Nigerian media that has made it their pastime to chew on Kemi’s personality have been reporting and analysing Kemi’s truth about Nigeria since forever. And most importantly, Vice President Kashim Shettima who once lamented that Boko Haram insurgents are better armed than Nigerian security forces supported his APC party to defeat the erstwhile ruling PDP on three key camping promises of tackling “insecurity, corruption and economic woes.” The campaign that brought the APC to power and which made it possible for Kashim Shettima to be Nigeria’s vice president today was firmly hinged on Kemi’s truth about Nigeria.

Kemi Badenoch is a British citizen and patriot who is openly appreciative of Britain, her country, having experienced Nigeria in the past. She embodies the new spirit of British Conservative values, just as she is passionate about conserving the best of Great Britain and her fellow country folk trust her enough to position her to being the first black British Prime Minister. Her Nigerian traducers will not be able to derail her because Kemi is “bad enough” to stand up to them as seen in the way she redirected Vice President Kashim Shettima’s attention to the problem of Islamism and Boko Haram in his native region of Northern Nigeria.

Majeed Dahiru, a public affairs analyst, writes from Abuja and can be reached through [email protected].

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
Premium Times

Stay Ahead with Premium Times

Follow us on Google News and never miss breaking stories, investigations, and in-depth reporting.

Google Logo Add as a preferred source on Google
Previous Post

How Katsina’s Radda governs with uncommon empathy, By Ibrahim K Mohammed

Next Post

Abuja hospitals scale down operations amid resident doctors’ strike

Majeed Dahiru

Majeed Dahiru

More News

Azu Ishiekwene writes about Muhammadu Buhari and his legacy.

Unusual moments in the World Cup, By Azu Ishiekwene

July 2, 2026
Professor-Ibrahim-Abdullah writes about Dr Segun Osoba as the historian of radical political economy.

Walter Rodney: Sierra Leonean historiography’s refusal of a radical inheritance, By Ibrahim Abdullah

July 2, 2026
Africa at the turning point: From managed expectations to strategic agency, By Wale Osofisan

Why I am “bullish” about Africa: The data tells a different story, By Wale Osofisan 

July 2, 2026
When ideology yields to identity: The new axis of conflict, By Sola Fasure

Police IG’s absurd logic on tinted glasses, By Sola Fasure

July 2, 2026
Tunde Akanni writes about his teachers on World Teacher's Day.

Thumbs up for Oga Bello at 65, By Tunde Akanni

July 2, 2026
An urgent appeal to the Minister of Finance: Nigeria’s vital need for a new debt reporting template  By Dayo Olaide

After On Nigeria: Who will fund democracy in Nigeria?, By Dayo Olaide

July 2, 2026

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Our Digital Network

  • PT Hausa
  • Election Centre
  • Human Trafficking Investigation
  • Centre for Investigative Journalism
  • National Conference
  • Press Attack Tracker
  • PT Academy
  • Dubawa
  • LeaksNG
  • Campus Reporter

Resources

  • Oil & Gas Facts
  • List of Universities in Nigeria
  • LIST: Federal Unity Colleges in Nigeria
  • NYSC Orientation Camps in Nigeria
  • Nigeria’s Federal/States’ Budgets since 2005
  • Malabu Scandal Thread
  • World Cup 2018
  • Panama Papers Game

Projects & Partnerships

  • AUN-PT Data Hub
  • #EndSARS Dashboard
  • Parliament Watch
  • Panama Papers
  • AGAHRIN
  • #PandoraPapers
  • #ParadisePapers
  • #SuisseSecrets
  • Our Digital Network
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Resources
  • Projects
  • Data & Infographics
  • DONATE

All content is Copyrighted © 2025 The Premium Times, Nigeria

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

DMCA.com Protection Status
  • Home
  • Elections
    • 2024 Ondo Governorship Election
    • 2024 Edo Governorship Election
    • Presidential & NASS
    • Gubernatorial & State House
  • News
    • Headline Stories
    • Top News
    • More News
    • Foreign
  • Investigations
  • Business
    • Gender
    • News Reports
    • Financial Inclusion
    • Analysis and Data
    • Trade Insights
    • Business Specials
    • Oil/Gas Reports
      • FAAC Reports
      • Revenue
  • Health
    • COVID-19
    • News Reports
    • Special Reports and Investigations
    • Data and Infographics
    • Health Specials
    • Features
    • Events
    • Primary Health Tracker
  • Agriculture
    • News Report
    • Research & Innovation
    • Data & Infographics
    • Special Reports/Investigations
    • Features
    • Interviews
    • Multimedia
  • Arts/Life
    • Arts/Books
    • Kannywood
    • Lifestyle
    • Music
    • Nollywood
    • Travel
  • Sports
    • Football
    • More Sports News
    • Sports Features
    • Casino
      • iGaming
      • Non AAMS
      • Online Kaszinó Magyar
      • non Gamstop casinos
      • Kasyna online
    • Games
      • كازينو اون لاين
      • Geriausi kazino internetu
      • Онлайн казино Казахстан
  • #EndSARS Dashboard
  • AUN-PT Data Hub
  • Projects
    • Panama Papers
    • Paradise Papers
    • SuisseSecrets
    • Parliament Watch
    • AGAHRIN
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • PT Hausa
  • Become a PT Insider
  • DONATE
  • About Us
  • Dubawa NG
  • Advert Rates
  • PT Jobs
  • Digital Store
  • Contact Us

All content is Copyrighted © 2025 The Premium Times, Nigeria