🇳🇬 Husband. Father. Legal Professional. Arbitrator. Consultant. Change Agent. Mentor. Poet. IG: adewale_adeniji_aacbt linkedin.com

Joined April 2009
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Adewale Adeniji 🇳🇬 retweeted
27 Nov 2025
State Police: my bro and friend sent me this write-up: for discussion: hope @barauijibrin @OfficialBenKalu and @hccrNigeria will find this contribution useful. Unfortunately none of these will work. The police we have in Nigeria today is incapable of doing policing even if motivated. -(a): We must do the fundamental. Never waste a crisis. Very simple things will work.. 1. Restructure the federal police to reflect the country by devolving 85% of the Force to their local government of origin where they can be most effective and motivated. -(a): Only Mobile Police, Counter Terrorism and Specialized Investigation Units should be centralized. -(b): and Most Senior Officers who should be movable around Regional, State and Zonal Commands to ensure national outlook. -(c): Thus, only beyond a certain rank or when in specialized forces should any police be moved outside their LGA. 2. ⁠Responsibility for day to day management, as well as recommendation for hiring and promotion should be transferred to Local Police Boards. -(a): The constitution in Section 216.1 already allows the Police Board to delegate its power of police management. -(b): It doesn’t even manage today, so it should do so to Local police boards immediately. -(c): These boards should not be elected or paid but tenured, with specific civil society bodies appointing their members for a period of no longer than two years -(d): to oversight each local government formation of the Federal Police with sync to the police commission for recommendations for promotions, motivation bonuses and firing including approval of new hires into the “community” based police -(e): under this model. traditional rulers , teachers, unions, faith based bodies et al should be specified as these groups under such fiat order that the police council can pass legally tomorrow. 3: The president, governors and IG are the members of police council today. See your constitution. No amendment required. 4: Sequel to this order, and devolution of the police force in an orderly manner within 6 months, the police should stop the obsolete and colonial era barrack system. 7: Police don’t stay in barracks, they live among the people. When we devolve and motivate locally, this should happen. 8: Let’s pay them housing allowance, let them live among us and watch insecurity disappear. They won’t watch their local government invaded. 9: Community associations and LGAs should then be encouraged to set up local security trust fund, to provide extra bonuses and funding to their devolved community police. 10: Indeed, immediately implementing the Supreme Court order directing FG to fund LGAs directly will go a long way. Simple things. 11: It is only after a 18-24 months period when this devolved federal policing system has settled in place should we pass constitutional amendments to enable State Police. @NigeriaSenate @HouseNGR @PoliceNG @AOFAMIYESIN @LegendaryJoe
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Daystar at 30! 30 years of raising role models. Wouldn’t you rather be with us? ⁦@DaystarNG⁩ ⁦@sam_adeyemi⁩ ⁦@NikeAdeyemi⁩ ⁦@BoyeOloyede
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Happy birthday to me!
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1. The appointment of a new INEC chairman and the comments from some show that many Nigerians who comment on political issues are more emotional than rational. @inecnigeria
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6. I circle back to my introduction- many who comment on political issues are more emotional than rational. Is that one opposition?
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5. They conveniently forgot that in 2015 an appointee president lost an election superintended by his appointed INEC chairman @inecnigeria
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4. It is also inconceivable that some commentators already concluded that because a president appointed an INEC chairman, then he would automatically be favoured! @inecnigeria
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3. When precedence shows that all previous presidents in this Republic had done the same thing? @inecnigeria
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2. How else would you fathom some commentators saying that contrary to the clear provisions of the constitution, a sitting president should not make the appointment? @inecnigeria
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Adewale Adeniji 🇳🇬 retweeted
AWOLOWO was very grateful to GOWON for releasing him from prison, sending him a private jet from Lagos to pick him at Calabar and waiting to receive him in Lagos……and subsequently, making him Number Two Man in his cabinet. AWOLOWO was also very grateful to Murtala Mohammed for releasing his personal car and official guards to him to take him from Ikeja Barracks to Ikenne, Ogun State.
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Play Fantasy Champions League? Join DeBest league. Let’s have some fun @ChampionsLeague @OfficialFPL @SkySportsPL
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Adewale Adeniji 🇳🇬 retweeted
" In 2022, @TitanTrustBank, backed by @TGiGroup, surprised many by acquiring 93.41 per cent of @UNIONBANK_NG. The deal involved more than 27bn shares at seven naira each, giving it a total value of about ₦191bn or roughly US$461m. To finance the acquisition, Titan Trust secured a US$300m facility from @afreximbank and raised approximately USD 190 million in equity from its core shareholders, Magna International and Luxis International DMCC. On the surface, everything seemed to have been done by the book. Approvals were obtained from the @cenbank, the @SECNigeria, the @ngxgrp, and the @FIRSNigeria. Certificates of Capital Importation were also issued to back the inflows. Nevertheless, the structure of the deal raised several important questions. The CBN has long held the rule that a Nigerian bank cannot be acquired with borrowed money (such money does not qualify as Tier 1 capital, even though in some contexts it would qualify as Tier 2 capital). The reasoning is simple, as we explained in a recent post on the Unity-Providus merger. If acquisitions are debt-funded, the repayment obligations weaken the capital of the acquiring bank, encourage pressure on the acquired bank’s balance sheet, and ultimately put depositors at risk. The regulator’s position is that ownership must rest on clear and unencumbered equity. A New Sheriff in Town When a new team took over at the CBN, this principle was tested again. A special investigation panel concluded that the funding model for the Titan Trust–Union Bank deal did not meet the standard. The panel even raised concerns about proxies linked to the former Central Bank Governor, Godwin Emefiele. In January 2024, the CBN dissolved the boards of Union Bank, Titan Trust, Keystone, and Polaris and installed new management. The message was unmistakable. The Titan Trust acquisition would not stand muster. By 2025, a court-sanctioned merger approved by the CBN left Union Bank as the surviving entity, while Titan Trust was absorbed into its older counterpart. On the surface, this corrected a flawed structure and reinforced the principle that bank ownership must be equity-based. Yet the process itself opens new questions. Suppose the real issue was the debt component. Why were Titan Trust’s shareholders not given the option to inject fresh equity, repay the loan, and recapitalise both banks to meet the minimum of ₦200bn? Instead, they appear to have been excluded altogether, leaving the regulator to manage the merger on its own terms. What happens if these shareholders seek legal redress? Could this create more uncertainty about the newly recapitalised Union Bank’s future? The Merger: A Case of Two Bad Heads? Another issue is that Titan Trust Bank reportedly had negative shareholders’ funds, making it an unlikely candidate to absorb Union Bank. At the same time, Union Bank was already wrestling with capital adequacy pressures and CBN-granted forbearance arrangements. This hardly looks like a perfect pairing. There are also suggestions that Titan Trust’s investors could be nudged to reduce their stake to 40 per cent. How exactly would this work? Can shareholders be compelled to sell down without consent? At what valuation and at what multiples would such a divestment be carried out? These questions matter because without their resolution, regulatory neutrality swims in shark-infested waters. The CBN must not only be unbiased, but it must appear so. Like Caesar's wife, the banking system regulator must come with clean hands. There is also the delicate line to draw between needed oversight and regulatory overreach. Proshare’s Economic and Market Intelligence Unit (EMIU) contends that what began as a bold acquisition has now become a test case of regulatory authority, governance, and the protection of investor rights in Nigeria’s banking sector. Until the loose ends are tied together, the lingering question remains. Was this a straightforward correction of a flawed deal, or has it created a precedent where ownership rights can be reshaped by regulatory intervention? Closing Thoughts: Of Good Intentions, and Gripping Actions The CBN was right to revisit the Titan Trust Bank and Union Bank business combination. The restructure of the recapitalisation was clearly based on a medium to long-term debt structure that did not qualify as Tier 1 bank equity finance. The previous CBN administration was remiss in this regard. However, the new CBN administration would be deemed guilty of playing coy, keeping the exact details of the present recapitalisation wrapped in obscurity. No one outside the regulatory institutions and the two banks involved in the revised business combination has an inkling of the fresh capital raise of the enlarged Union Bank or the terms of the merger. The earlier questions raised by the #EMIU require answers as they form the bedrock of regulatory transparency and operational integrity. The ‘magic’ of throwing a piece of meat in the air and swallowing it may be a good show for kindergartners. Still, for investors and other mature stakeholders, it smacks of underhandedness and paints the Nigeria investment environment in a poor light. As of the time of writing this report, Proshare’s data and content unit is unable to update its Banks Recapitalization Watch for the enlarged entity - Union Bank, because the amount raised as Tier 1 capital in the business combination with Titan Trust Bank is still unknown. At the point of a court-ordered Scheme of Arrangement (SoA) based on a CBN and a Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC’s) ‘No Objection’ letter being affirmed, the parties to the business combination should, as deposit-taking institutions, build confidence amongst customers by reassuring them of the new unencumbered (debt-free) size of their share capital. @TheAnalystNG are hopeful this information will be made available as part of the confidence-building required for the bank recapitalisation process. Source: proshare.co/articles/titan-t… via @proshare @webtvnigeria
9 Sep 2025
The @cenbank was right to revisit the @TitanTrustBank and @UNIONBANK_NG business combination. The restructure of the recapitalisation was clearly based on a medium to long-term debt structure that did not qualify as Tier 1 bank equity finance.  The previous CBN administration was remiss in this regard. However, the new CBN administration would be deemed guilty of playing coy, keeping the exact details of the present recapitalisation wrapped in obscurity. No one outside the regulatory institutions and the two banks involved in the revised business combination has an inkling of the fresh capital raise of the enlarged Union Bank or the terms of the merger. The earlier questions raised by the EMIU require answers as they form the bedrock of regulatory transparency and operational integrity. The ‘magic’ of throwing a piece of meat in the air and swallowing it may be a good show for kindergartners. Still, for investors and other mature stakeholders, it smacks of underhandedness and paints the Nigeria investment environment in a poor light. As of the time of writing this report, Proshare’s data and content unit is unable to update its Banks Recapitalisation Watch for the enlarged entity - Union Bank,  because the amount raised as Tier 1 capital in the business combination with Titan Trust Bank is still unknown. At the point of a court-ordered Scheme of Arrangement (SoA) based on a CBN and a Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC’s) ‘No Objection’ letter being affirmed, the parties to the business combination should, as deposit-taking institutions, build confidence amongst customers by reassuring them of the new unencumbered (debt-free) size of their share capital. Analysts are hopeful this information will be made available as part of the confidence-building required for the bank recapitalisation process. Read more: proshare.co/articles/titan-t…
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Adewale Adeniji 🇳🇬 retweeted
15 Aug 2025
5 rules of success by Steve Jobs. (Bookmark it. Use it)
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E sweet my belle die! La decima WAFCON! @NGSuper_Falcons
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Mission X Accomplished! Those who were waiting to mess with Tinubu with a Nigerian defeat, how market?
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Leadership does not play to the gallery. Are we at El-dorado? Of course not … But we have set sail And the tide is turning… We stay the course! @DeeOneAyekooto @SundayDareSD @woye1 @officialABAT
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