Mohammed Hayatu-Deen

Mohammed Hayatu-Deen Nigeria is at a crossroads. It’s time for a new direction. Together, let’s build a safer and prosperous Nigeria.
(2)

STATEMENT BY MOHAMMED HAYATU DEEN ON THE NATIONAL SECURITY EMERGENCYOver the weekend, the nation learnt that a distingui...
16/06/2026

STATEMENT BY MOHAMMED HAYATU DEEN ON THE NATIONAL SECURITY EMERGENCY

Over the weekend, the nation learnt that a distinguished retired General had died in the captivity of his abductors. Major General Rabe Abubakar served this country with honour and distinction for decades. He was abducted from a road in Katsina State alongside his wife. Tragically, we have just learnt that he did not survive. In other climes, people who have given the very best of their imagination and skills in the gallant service of their nation look forward to a life of contentment in retirement.

The death of Major General Abubakar is the latest in an alarming roll call of losses the Nigerian State has suffered at the hands of these monsters. Twenty seven days have now passed since schoolchildren and their teachers were violently abducted from their classrooms in Oriire, Oyo State. They remain, according to the Oyo State Government, in the forests of Old Oyo National Park. These incidents appear to have become daily occurrences across the country. A few days ago, in Kogi State, bandits stormed a community in Kabba Bunu Local Government Area as students sat for their WAEC examination, killing the Vice Principal of a local secondary school, a six year old child, and an elderly resident. In Borno this past weekend, terrorists attacked Kautikari village near Chibok, killing one person and burning a school block, this after the abduction of more than 40 students in Askira-Uba Local Government Area of the State last month. Last week armed bandits were reported to have ambushed and killed an officer and six soldiers in Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State. Every state and region is today affected by similar stories of terror.

We mourn General Abubakar and the loss of every member of the armed forces. We continue to pray for the safe return of those children, and the scores of Nigerians still in captivity. But mourning alone is not enough. Nigeria has now been ranked fourth on the Global Terrorism Index, up from sixth last year. Terrorism deaths in the country rose by 46 per cent in a single year. Every one of those numbers is a name, a family, a community whose lives will be permanently altered.

I want to be clear. This is not a partisan statement. I have no interest in scoring political points off the graves of our soldiers or the suffering of our children. I speak as a concerned private citizen. While the Nigerian constitution places responsibility for our security at the President’s desk, a responsibility that cannot be cast off, this crisis is bigger than any party. It is a fight for the soul of the nation, and it must be fought by all of us, together.

Nigeria’s security crisis is not separate from the economic crisis facing citizens. When young men cannot find work, criminal networks find ready recruits. When the cost of living crushes families, desperation becomes a recruitment poster. Insecurity fuels poverty. Poverty fuels insecurity. To break the cycle, we must attack both at once.

This is why I call on government at both state and federal level to make social welfare an urgent national priority, not an afterthought. The US-Iran conflict drove energy prices up across the world. Many nations introduced subsidies, business support grants and temporary price controls to help cushion the impact on their citizens. I therefore propose that government explore and implement viable interventions to help business stay open and continue to provide jobs to people. Government must assist farmers who cannot reach their fields with targeted support so they can survive the season. Families crushed by the cost of living need real safety nets, not slogans. Communities living under the shadow of armed groups need food security interventions that reach them directly. A hungry, desperate population is fertile ground for recruitment. A population that is fed, supported and has something to lose is Nigeria’s first line of defence.

We commend the House of Representatives for passing the constitutional amendment to establish state police. We urge the Senate to move with equal urgency and complete this process. State police is not a silver bullet. No single measure is. But it is a critical step toward restoring the authority of the state in every community, in every region, every day. The drafters of the bill must however address valid concerns about institutional corruption, impunity, and the very real possibility of the hijack of state police forces by political actors who fund them.

Alongside the proposal for decentralized policing, we need community policing structures that rebuild trust between citizens and security agencies, and real intelligence gathering, so that we act before an attack rather than mourning after one. We must urgently and immediately rebuild the Multi National Joint Task Force and restore coordinated operations with Chad, Niger, Cameroon and Benin. Terrorist networks operate across borders.

Our military deserves greater support than it has so far received. That means an aggressive recruitment drive to rebuild our numbers, improved remuneration at par with emerging market countries, honour for service, and sacrifice that is celebrated. It means proper care for the widows and families of our men and women in uniform who gave everything, and modern equipment and training that match the threat our troops face on the ground. And it means deepening our partnerships with international allies whose objectives align with ours, for the threats confronting us now and in the years ahead.

No Nigerian should have to bury a loved one taken in captivity. No parent should spend a single night not knowing where their child sleeps. No Nigerian road should be a conveyor belt into a kidnapper’s den. No community should live under the shadow of fear while the state looks away.

Nigeria has walked through dark valleys before. We have always found our way back to the light. We will do so again, but only if we choose, now, to walk that path together, by adopting a ‘whole of society’ approach to combating poverty and terrorism.

May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Signed,

Mohammed Hayatu Deen

Today, we celebrate Democracy Day and honour the courage, sacrifice, and resilience of those who fought for the right of...
12/06/2026

Today, we celebrate Democracy Day and honour the courage, sacrifice, and resilience of those who fought for the right of Nigerians to choose their leaders and shape their future.

While our democracy has come a long way, its true measure is not in the number of years we have practiced it, but in the extent to which it improves the lives of ordinary citizens.

As we reflect on our journey, let us recommit ourselves to building a nation where security is assured, opportunities abound, and every Nigerian can live with dignity.

The work continues for us to keep the promise alive; a safer and more prosperous Nigeria.

Happy Democracy Day.

02/06/2026

JUNE 1ST 2026

MY CAMPAIGN, THE SILENT MAJORITY, AND THE FUTURE OF OUR DEMOCRACY

On Tuesday, 26 May, before the commencement of the collation of results for the African Democratic Congress (ADC) presidential primaries, I issued the following statement on my social media handles:

_“I will not be attending the announcement of the ADC Presidential Election Results today. I am concerned by reports from across the country of widespread vote rigging, some of which I myself observed. How can the ADC criticise INEC for election interference and the falsification of results, and yet tolerate the same within its own house? I will therefore be taking advice on my next steps.”_

It is important that I provide proper context for that statement, not merely for the sake of my supporters and party members, but also because the issues raised go to the heart of the kind of democratic culture we must build if Nigeria is to move forward.

In 2022, I entered partisan politics for the very first time when I aspired to serve as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria under the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party. That experience taught me important lessons about politics, leadership, institutions, and indeed about our country itself.

It was that experience that shaped many of my expectations going into the African Democratic Congress presidential primary of May 25, 2026.

I joined the ADC because I sincerely believed that the party represented an opportunity to build something different, a credible opposition movement anchored on a robust ideology, integrity, internal democracy and national renewal.

I believed that many Nigerians, especially younger Nigerians, were searching for a politics that speaks not only to power, but to high purpose. A politics that is less driven by bitterness and more inspired by service. A politics that treats public office not as entitlement, but as responsibility.

Throughout this primary campaign, I travelled across our country speaking with party members, young people, women leaders, professionals, students, entrepreneurs, farmers, artisans and countless ordinary Nigerians who remain deeply concerned about the direction of our nation.

Everywhere I went, I encountered what I have come to describe as the silent majority. These are Nigerians who may not always dominate public discourse or social media conversations, but who carry within them a quiet and enduring hope for a better country. Nigerians who still believe that leadership matters. Nigerians who still believe that integrity matters. Nigerians who are not asking for perfection, but who long for a high quality of life, a safer and more secure society, fairness, equity, competence and compassion in governance. Nigerians who still believe that visionary and selfless leadership matters.

Their faith inspired me. And it is in honour of that faith that I speak today.

The outcome of the May 25 primary did not fully meet my expectations, and I have communicated my deep concerns about certain processes and procedural matters directly and privately to the leadership of the party. I trust that those concerns will be reviewed in the spirit of continuous improvement, because any party that aspires to lead Nigeria must first demonstrate democratic discipline and integrity within its own walls. I have decided, after careful reflection and wide consultation, that I will not challenge the outcome in court. Nigeria urgently requires a strong, credible and united opposition. That objective must always remain larger than individual ambition or temporary political disappointment.

What I will carry forward from this campaign is not bitterness, but gratitude. Gratitude to every Nigerian who believed in this movement. To the young people who volunteered their time and energy. To the women who organised tirelessly across communities. To our coordinators, supporters, donors, professionals, students, artisans, and party faithful across the federation, thank you.

To my selfless campaign team, thank you for your sacrifice, resilience, discipline and belief in this cause. I remain deeply grateful to each and every one of you, and I doff my hat to your commitment and service.

Thank you for believing that politics can still be principled. Thank you for believing that integrity still matters in public life. Thank you for standing for something greater than personal interest.

What moved me most throughout this journey was the profound connection so many Nigerians had to the values we tried to represent: equity, inclusion, discipline, competence, integrity and national renewal. Many of you were not simply supporting Mohammed Hayatu-Deen. You were expressing your belief that Nigeria can still become the country we all know it can be.

Please do not stop believing. Do not surrender your hope to cynicism. Do not accept dysfunction as normal. And do not stop believing in the possibility of a better nation.

History often changes quietly before it changes visibly. And every enduring national transformation begins with citizens who do not stop believing that a better future is possible.

This campaign may have come to an end, but the larger task of building a stronger, fairer and more prosperous Nigeria continues. And that cause remains worthy of our collective effort.

God bless you all. And God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

Signed:

Mohammed Hayatu-Deen (OON)

MY CAMPAIGN, THE SILENT MAJORITY, AND THE FUTURE OF OUR DEMOCRACY
01/06/2026

MY CAMPAIGN, THE SILENT MAJORITY, AND THE FUTURE OF OUR DEMOCRACY

On this blessed occasion of Eid-el-Kabir, may the spirit of sacrifice, gratitude, peace, and compassion continue to guid...
27/05/2026

On this blessed occasion of Eid-el-Kabir, may the spirit of sacrifice, gratitude, peace, and compassion continue to guide us all.

Wishing every Muslim family celebrating today joy in your homes, peace in your hearts, and abundant blessings in the days ahead.
Eid Mubarak.

Thank you to all ADC members that voted for a new direction yesterday.
26/05/2026

Thank you to all ADC members that voted for a new direction yesterday.

25/05/2026

Today I cast my vote in Jare, Borno, in the ADC presidential primary. I am running because if we are to defeat the President next year, we must offer Nigerians a new direction.

Nigeria is at a crossroads. And the ADC is at a crossroads.

I am ready to lead our party and our country to a safer and more prosperous future for all Nigerians.

Today is the ADC presidential primary. If you observe or experience any issues as you come out to vote, please report th...
25/05/2026

Today is the ADC presidential primary.

If you observe or experience any issues as you come out to vote, please report this to our dedicated state-by-state helpline team to log your concerns.

Please make sure you get in line and stay in the line!

25/05/2026

I am live in Borno for the ADC Presidential Primaries. To all our members; my supporters - come out and vote for a new direction.
Vote MHD for ADC.

Every day throughout this campaign, I have heard from more and more Nigerians.They want jobs, lower prices, safer commun...
25/05/2026

Every day throughout this campaign, I have heard from more and more Nigerians.They want jobs, lower prices, safer communities. And they want a leader who has actually delivered.

To those that have supported me, thank you! But today, I need you to make sure you vote!

Address

No 25, Lake Chad Crescent
Abuja
234

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Mohammed Hayatu-Deen posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share