October 09, 2025

The Gaza Peace Deal: Between Ceasefire and Strategy — A Test of Political Will


By Ephraim Agbo 

When news broke from Cairo that Israel and Hamas had reached an agreement on the first phase of a peace plan, many celebrated, but few truly paused to read between the lines. The images of jubilation in Gaza and Tel Aviv symbolized something historic — a rare convergence of relief and exhaustion. Yet beneath the surface of the cheering crowds lies a fragile political experiment — one that could either mark a genuine turning point in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict or become yet another temporary pause in a long tragedy.


The Anatomy of the Agreement

The deal, announced by U.S. President Donald Trump, promises a ceasefire, the release of Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from parts of Gaza. The agreement also includes a mapped territorial adjustment — though the exact coordinates remain undisclosed — leaving Israel in control of just over half of Gaza.

On paper, it looks like progress. In practice, it is a test of sequencing: can two sides with fundamentally opposing narratives of legitimacy, justice, and survival sustain cooperation long enough to implement even a temporary truce?

Israeli law requires government authorization for the release of Palestinian prisoners — a process that reflects the deep tension between domestic politics and diplomatic obligation. For Hamas, the sequencing of the hostage release is more than symbolic; it is a strategic test of whether Israel’s commitments will be matched by tangible political or humanitarian concessions.


Symbolism and Strategy in a Ruined Land

The scenes from Gaza after the announcement were striking: displaced families rejoicing amid ruins, children waving makeshift flags, elders weeping as they prayed. “We are happy the war has stopped,” one woman said, “we thank everyone who helped end the bloodshed.” Her gratitude was genuine — but also fragile. Gaza’s joy was not rooted in victory, but in relief from suffering.

In Tel Aviv, celebrations in Hostages’ Square carried a different emotion — the politics of closure. For months, families of those captured by Hamas had camped outside government offices, their grief a visible reminder of Israel’s unhealed wounds. For them, this deal is not an end, but an emotional exhale.

Two cities, two reliefs — but one shared uncertainty.


Trump’s Gamble and the Quest for Legacy

President Trump’s involvement adds another dimension to this story — the politics of legacy. With the Nobel Peace Prize announcement coming on Friday, Trump’s timing was hardly coincidental. His mediation reflects both political calculation and genuine ambition to be seen as a global peacemaker. But diplomacy anchored in personal ambition often comes with fragility: the peace process risks becoming a stage performance where applause matters more than architecture.

This is not the first time an American president has tried to broker peace between Israel and Palestine. But Trump’s approach differs in tone — transactional, image-driven, and heavy on symbolism. He presents the deal as a “win-win,” yet the asymmetry of power remains intact: Gaza is in ruins, while Israel retains military control over most of the territory. What we are witnessing is less the birth of equality than a recalibration of dominance.


The Turning Point Nobody Saw Coming

Behind the scenes, one incident may have shifted the trajectory of these talks. Early in September, Prime Minister Netanyahu allegedly authorized an operation targeting Hamas leaders in Qatar. The attempt failed and infuriated both Qatar and Washington. According to diplomatic insiders, that was the moment President Trump decided to intervene decisively — not just to stop the war, but to reclaim control of the narrative.

It was a rare convergence of outrage and opportunity: Trump, pressured internationally, saw a chance to turn crisis into prestige. Netanyahu, facing domestic pressure and a grinding conflict, saw in Trump’s plan a potential political lifeline.


The Politics Beneath the Peace

Every peace deal rests on competing incentives. In this one:

  • Israel seeks normalization — an image of control and stability without fully relinquishing military dominance.
  • Hamas seeks survival — political recognition and space to rebuild, even within limited sovereignty.
  • The U.S. seeks validation — proof that American influence in the Middle East still carries decisive weight.
  • Regional actors like Egypt and Qatar seek credit — leverage that can translate into regional prestige and aid flows.

But here’s the paradox: all these actors are incentivized to start the peace process, not necessarily to sustain it. The moment of signing is easier than the years of enforcement that follow.


Peace or Pause? The Structural Problem

The Gaza deal exemplifies what international relations scholars call negative peace — the absence of war — rather than positive peace, the presence of justice, trust, and mutual security. Ceasefires can stop violence, but they rarely end conflict if the structures of inequality and mistrust remain untouched.

Israel’s partial withdrawal may be militarily significant but politically insufficient. Without a credible reconstruction plan that restores livelihoods, Gaza risks sliding from war into humanitarian dependency — a fragile peace sustained by aid, not agency.

Meanwhile, the question of justice remains unresolved. No mention of war crimes investigations. No truth and reconciliation mechanism. No roadmap for Palestinian governance reform. The moral ledger of this war remains open — and that makes future escalation likely.


The Diplomatic Dilemma

The international community faces a classic dilemma:

  • Act quickly, and risk legitimizing a deal that lacks substance.
  • Act slowly, and risk losing the fragile momentum of hope.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres has promised full support for implementation, and the European Union’s foreign policy chief hailed the deal as a “significant breakthrough.” But history is full of celebrated agreements that collapsed under the weight of their contradictions — from Oslo to Camp David.

If this peace is to endure, it must be institutionalized, not romanticized. It needs monitoring mechanisms, reconstruction guarantees, and mutual accountability. Without that scaffolding, the deal will be another line in the long obituary of failed Middle East diplomacy.


The Moral Weight of Survival

The most profound truth of this deal may not be political at all — it is human. It is about people who have lost too much yet still dare to celebrate. About children who will sleep without explosions tonight but wake tomorrow amid rubble. About a region that remains trapped between fatigue and faith.

The ceasefire offers a pause — not just in fighting, but in despair. Yet for real peace to emerge, that pause must be filled with justice, with reconstruction, and with the political courage to confront uncomfortable truths on both sides.

Until then, Gaza’s celebration will remain half-lit — joyous, but uncertain; hopeful, but haunted.


In the End

This agreement is not the end of war. It is a political experiment — an uneasy handshake in the dark. Whether it becomes a foundation or a footnote depends not on the signatures in Cairo, but on what follows in the next hundred days.


When the Swords Were Lowered: The Forbidden City Surrender and the Politics of Peace, 1945


By Ephraim Agbo


“Victory is rarely the end of conflict—it is often the rearrangement of its terms.”

On October 10, 1945, in the crimson halls of Beijing’s Forbidden City, Japanese officers signed their surrender before Allied delegates, ending years of occupation and brutality in northern China. To the crowds outside, the ceremony seemed like the curtain call of war—a moment of national revival and relief.

But beneath the polished brass and choreographed bows lay something more profound: a reassertion of sovereignty, a struggle for legitimacy, and a quiet contest for control that would determine the shape of postwar East Asia.

This was not merely a ceremony of surrender; it was a geopolitical performance with enduring consequences.


A Palace of Power and Performance

The Forbidden City—once the imperial nucleus of Chinese dynasties—was a deliberate choice for the surrender. Every step taken on its marble floors carried the weight of dynastic continuity and national rebirth.

Reclaiming Sovereignty

By accepting Japan’s surrender there, the Chinese government wasn’t just marking victory—it was symbolically repossessing the state itself. It said, without words: “China has come home to China.”

A Theatre of Allies

British, American, and Soviet observers stood shoulder to shoulder with Chinese officials, their flags displayed side by side. The tableau suggested Allied unity, but it also quietly reminded everyone that China’s postwar fate would be decided not by one nation, but by many.

It was theatre with teeth: every bow, every salute, was part of the new power arithmetic in Asia.


The Politics Hidden in Logistics

War ends with rituals, but peace begins with logistics—disarmament, repatriation, transport control, and food distribution.
And in those logistics, power shifted faster than any treaty could dictate.

The Race for Infrastructure

Control of railways, ports, and weapons depots was everything. Whoever seized them first could dictate the postwar balance of power. For China’s warring factions—Nationalists and Communists—every surrendered Japanese outpost was a new prize to claim.

Allied Coordination—or Competition

Allied interests diverged. Washington wanted a stable, anti-Communist China. Moscow wanted leverage in Manchuria. Britain wanted to reassert imperial access to Asia’s trade routes.
So, while the ceremony spoke of unity, the ground realities whispered division. Logistics became politics.


The Curious Case of Captain John Stanfield

One curious detail of that day: a British signals officer named John Stanfield was chosen to sign Britain’s copy of the surrender documents.

He was not a high-ranking diplomat nor a general—but his signature stood for an empire.

That single pen stroke reveals something larger about how global politics operates: representation often depends on improvisation. In the chaos after war, authority was often exercised by whoever happened to be standing in the right room at the right time.

Stanfield’s modest signature, buried in dusty archives, symbolized Britain’s lingering shadow in Asia’s new order.


After the Surrender: The Peace That Wasn’t

For all its grandeur, the surrender at the Forbidden City didn’t end China’s violence. It shifted it inward.

Within months, the fragile alliance between the Nationalists (Kuomintang) and the Communists collapsed into full-scale civil war. Japanese weapons left in warehouses became tools for new bloodshed. Former battlefields turned into staging grounds for ideological conflict.

Meanwhile, the Soviet presence in Manchuria and the American backing of Chiang Kai-shek transformed China into the first major arena of the Cold War before the term even existed.

Victory had come—but peace had not.


Memory and Myth

Today, the 1945 ceremony survives in collective memory as a moment of triumph. For many Chinese, it symbolizes restoration after humiliation. But historical memory is never neutral.

  • Chinese narratives emphasize sovereignty reclaimed.
  • Japanese narratives wrestle with guilt and victimhood.
  • Western narratives often skip over the ceremony entirely, focusing instead on Tokyo Bay or Hiroshima.

Each narrative edits the scene to suit its political needs.


Why It Still Matters

The Forbidden City surrender reminds us that the performance of peace is not the same as the practice of it.

Ceremony creates order out of chaos—but only temporarily. The true struggle begins after the cameras leave and the ink dries.

Ceremony turns military victory into political authority—but only logistics and legitimacy can sustain it.

The 1945 surrender in Beijing was not just the end of war.
It was the beginning of the modern East Asian order—an order born from theatre, negotiation, and improvisation.


Timeline Snapshot

Event Date Significance
Hiroshima bombed 6 August 1945 Shock that forced Japanese reconsideration
Soviet invasion of Manchuria 8 August 1945 Crushed Japan’s northern armies
Nagasaki bombed 9 August 1945 Final blow that triggered surrender
Japan’s formal surrender on USS Missouri 2 September 1945 Official end of World War II
Regional surrender at Beijing’s Forbidden City 10 October 1945 Restoration of sovereignty in China

Closing Thought

In the marble courtyards of the Forbidden City, surrender was inked into history. Yet, the real contest—the one over how to govern the peace—was only beginning.
And in that contest, the line between ceremony and power proved thinner than the paper on which the surrender was signed.


October 08, 2025

Botswana at a Crossroads: Duma Boko’s Post-Diamond Gamble and the New African Political Economy


By Ephraim Agbo


 The End of an Illusion

For decades, Botswana was celebrated as Africa’s “shining exception” — a country that turned diamonds into stability, growth, and global respect. But the world that once rewarded such a model is fading fast. The old equilibrium — diamonds for stability, De Beers for partnership, and fiscal prudence for praise — is breaking down.

Enter Duma Boko, whose plan is as radical as it is risky:
Increase state control over the diamond sector, drive diversification into new minerals and industries, and build leverage through the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to secure better deals for Botswana. It’s not just a development plan — it’s a challenge to the structure of dependency itself.

But can Botswana remake itself without collapsing under the weight of the very system it seeks to reform?


Structural Dependency: Diamonds as the Single Story

Since independence, Botswana’s economy has revolved around a singular resource logic — diamonds. Through the Debswana joint venture, the state and De Beers shared control over production and sales, channeling revenues into public investment. For decades, it worked.
But that success came with a silent cost: structural dependency.

When Debswana cut production in 2024 due to weakening global demand, Botswana’s fiscal exposure became painfully visible. Even worse, the global diamond industry is undergoing technological disruptionlab-grown diamonds (LGDs) are now not only cheaper but increasingly accepted by consumers.

This is not a cyclical shock. It’s a structural inversion of value. The core of Botswana’s economy — its comparative advantage — is eroding.

The implication is profound: Botswana is still rich, but less relevant. And that realization sits at the heart of Boko’s political project.


Political Economy: Between Sovereignty and Credibility

Boko’s proposal for increased state control over the diamond sector is not simply nationalist rhetoric; it’s a sovereignty claim. He is arguing that Botswana must own its future value chains — not just extract rocks for others to polish.

However, history offers caution. Across Africa, state control often morphs into state capture. Ownership without accountability easily becomes a new form of elite rent-seeking. The risk is that “public control” becomes private gain under political cover.

Yet, the opposite — overreliance on foreign corporations — leaves the nation externally dependent and fiscally vulnerable.
Boko’s challenge is therefore not ideological but institutional:
Can he design transparent, rule-bound state participation that extracts value without undermining investor confidence?

That will require:

  • Open-contracting laws for all mineral deals.
  • Independent audits of state-owned enterprises.
  • A clear fiscal rule tying diamond revenues to long-term stabilization rather than recurrent spending.
  • A publicly disclosed sovereign wealth fund that is insulated from political cycles.

Only such architecture can transform national control from populist rhetoric into sustainable economic strategy.


Industrial Transition: From Extraction to Transformation

Every African leader speaks of “diversification”, but few achieve it. Boko’s focus on critical minerals, digital services, and industrial beneficiation represents an attempt to move Botswana from extractive dependency to productive complexity.

But beneficiation has historically failed across the continent for three key reasons:

  1. Lack of power infrastructure — processing minerals domestically is energy-intensive.
  2. Weak industrial ecosystems — no reliable supply chains or skilled labor.
  3. Policy inconsistency — sudden tax changes and unclear ownership rules deter investors.

Botswana can break this pattern only if it treats industrialization as a governance project, not an engineering one.

The test case will be whether the government can build anchor processing clusters for copper, nickel, or battery minerals with genuine private–public risk-sharing, not rent-sharing.

If successful, this will mark a pivot from being a price taker in the global value chain to a price maker in regional production networks.


Regional Leverage: The AfCFTA and Africa’s Bargaining Power

The AfCFTA is more than a trade pact; it’s a geopolitical strategy. Boko sees it as a way to aggregate African production capacity and negotiate from strength.
By linking Botswana’s minerals, agriculture, and manufacturing to broader Southern African supply chains, the country could build scale and reduce dependency on Western buyers.

However, integration on paper often collapses in practice. Tariff harmonization is the easy part; logistics, infrastructure, and trust are harder.
Botswana will have to pioneer corridor-based integration — focusing on a few high-value regional chains rather than continental ambition. For example:

  • A Southern African Mineral Processing Corridor connecting Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa.
  • An Agro-processing hub tied to cross-border cold chains and logistics.

If these corridors succeed, Botswana could shift from a landlocked to a region-locked advantage — a small state embedded in a larger economic logic.


5. External Pressures: Trade, Migration, and Conditionality

Beyond economics, Boko faces a new layer of geopolitical constraint.

  • AGOA (the African Growth and Opportunity Act) is under renegotiation, reshaping Africa’s export advantage to the U.S.
  • The U.S. and EU increasingly link aid, trade, and migration policies, as seen in the controversial “third-country” deportation agreements involving African states like Eswatini.

This global politics of conditionality means Botswana’s domestic choices — from who it trades with to who it shelters — are now under external surveillance.

For a small democracy like Botswana, the question is:
How do you maintain moral sovereignty when your economy depends on external preferences?

Boko’s answer appears to be diversification of diplomacy — balancing Western partners with new coalitions through AfCFTA, Asia, and possibly BRICS-aligned states. The risk, however, is geopolitical overstretch — courting everyone but committing to none.


6. Institutional Scaffolding: The Real Test

The sustainability of Boko’s vision depends not on ambition, but on institutional scaffolding — the hard, often invisible architecture of rules, checks, and capacities.

This scaffolding includes:

  • A credible public investment management framework.
  • A merit-based civil service shielded from political turnover.
  • A regulatory state that enforces contracts and environmental standards.
  • A citizen oversight mechanism for natural resource governance.

Without this, reforms will be swallowed by what economists call “high-level patterns of extractive continuity” — where new elites replicate old dependencies under reformist branding.


7. A Future in Three Scenarios

Scenario Outcome Risk/Reward
Strategic Transformation Botswana achieves controlled expansion of state equity, launches mineral processing clusters, and builds AfCFTA-backed corridors. High reward — long-term sovereignty.
Reform Fatigue Partial progress; fiscal stress forces compromise with old partners. Medium — structural vulnerability persists.
Populist Collapse Political capture, investor flight, failed projects. High risk — reversal of Botswana’s credibility.

Conclusion — From Resource Wealth to Political Wisdom

Duma Boko’s agenda is not simply economic; it’s civilizational — a statement that Africa’s resource states can transition from raw extraction to strategic ownership.
But rhetoric is easier than redesign. The world no longer rewards moral arguments about sovereignty; it rewards competence, transparency, and credibility.

Botswana’s challenge is to reimagine itself — not as a “diamond country” but as a governance country.
If Boko can institutionalize that shift, he won’t just rewrite Botswana’s story; he’ll redraw the map of how small African nations bargain with the world.

If you are up for the development of Africa, share this post!

October 07, 2025

Ali Kushayb Convicted — What the Verdict Means for Darfur, the ICC, and Victims’ Hopes for Justice


By Ephraim Agbo

On 6 October 2025 the International Criminal Court (ICC) convicted Ali Muhammad Ali Abd-al-Rahman — commonly called Ali Kushayb — on 27 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in the Darfur campaign of 2003–2004. The conviction is neither a final chapter nor a miracle cure; it is a legally significant event that illuminates the strengths and the structural weaknesses of international criminal justice, and it raises urgent questions about prevention, reparations, and political reform in Sudan.

Below I move beyond description: I analyse how this case was won, why it matters, what it failed to deliver, and the concrete policy and justice steps that logically follow.


How the prosecution won — a model of evidentiary and strategic focus

Two complementary strategies underpinned the conviction:

Micro-forensics anchored in survivor testimony. Prosecutors tied named incidents — attacks on specific villages, documented massacres and rapes — to Kushayb through eyewitnesses, contemporaneous incident records, and incident-level corroboration. This granular approach matters because it reduces the reasonable-doubt gap created when cases rely only on high-level patterns.

Contextualisation through expert evidence. The court used joint and expert testimony to show that the attacks were not isolated crimes of opportunity but part of a coordinated campaign: that the Janjaweed model operated as an instrument of state policy in those years and that Kushayb occupied a role that could translate into criminal responsibility under command-and-control doctrines. Experts (including those from institutions like the World Peace Foundation) provided the scaffolding that allowed judges to read incident evidence as components of an organised criminal enterprise.

This two-track strategy—specific incidents + structural context—is the most reliable path to conviction in mass-violence cases where direct documentary “smoking guns” are rare.


The legal reasoning and its limits

Command responsibility vs. direct perpetration. The court’s findings depended on establishing that Kushayb had effective control over forces or participated in a collective criminal design — not that he personally carried out every crime. That doctrinal move is appropriate: modern atrocity prosecutions must translate dispersed violence into individual legal liability. But it also tightens the evidentiary bar: prosecutors must show patterns of orders, public presence at attacks, or other indicia of control. The Kushayb case shows that the bar can be met — but only with exhaustive documentation and credible witnesses.

Evidentiary fragility. Reliance on eyewitness testimony creates vulnerability to defence attacks (memory, bias, identifications), and witness protection and fragmentation of records over 20 years complicate corroboration. The prosecution’s success reflects exceptionalinvestigative persistence and the rare circumstance that Kushayb was physically in custody and available for trial. That reality underwrites a sobering corollary: without custody, even excellent cases remain hypothetical.


Political context: surrender, cooperation, and selective enforcement

Kushayb’s transfer to The Hague followed the political opening after Sudan’s 2019 change in government and subsequent signals of cooperation with the ICC. That transfer was decisive: the ICC cannot act without a suspect in custody. But the broader political environment is harsher to critics: many higher-level suspects (including those at the very top of political hierarchies) remain at large or protected by patronage networks. The result is selective enforcement driven less by legal merit than by geopolitics and state cooperation.

This selectivity undermines two critical instruments of international justice: deterrence and equal accountability. If only those who surrender or fall into hands of cooperative states are tried, the normative deterrent value of prosecutions is attenuated.


The displacement between criminal law and victims’ needs

Criminal convictions produce official findings and can punish individuals. They do not automatically deliver the bulk of what survivors say they need: security, return of property, dignified reparations, community reconstruction, and healing. Darfur’s estimated toll — around 300,000 deaths and millions displaced in the 2000s — makes that mismatch stark: a single conviction does not reconstitute ruined livelihoods or undo demographic devastation. The court’s judgment helps with recognition and historical record, but it is a first step in a longer transitional justice journey.


Why the verdict is strategically important anyway

Despite limits, the conviction matters in four concrete ways:

  1. It creates an authoritative written record that rebuts denial and underpins reparations claims and memorialisation projects. International judgments are evidence in future civil and administrative fora.
  2. It refines prosecutorial playbooks — showing how to combine incident-level documentation with contextual experts to prove command responsibility. Other prosecutors will copy and adapt these tactics.
  3. It raises political costs for some actors and states that openly protect indicted individuals; over time, the reputational and financial consequences (sanctions, diplomatic pressure) can constrain patronage networks. Amnesty and other rights groups framed the verdict as a potential warning for current abusers.
  4. It strengthens civil society advocacy by validating survivor testimony and creating a legal record that activists can use to press for domestic reforms and reparations.

The present threat: continuity between Janjaweed and the RSF

The political-military networks that produced Darfur’s early atrocities did not evaporate. The Janjaweed’s organisational lineage to today’s Rapid Support Forces (RSF) shows institutional continuity: ex-militia leaders, paramilitary structures, and patterns of impunity were transformed — and in some cases institutionalised — into new power-centres. The RSF’s role in Sudan’s current civil conflict (since April 2023) and allegations of fresh mass abuses demonstrate that prosecutions against individuals will not by themselves dismantle the systems that reproduce atrocity.


Policy prescriptions — what should change now

If the goal is to convert a single conviction into a durable reduction of atrocity risk and a credible justice process for victims, policymakers and advocates should pursue a multipronged strategy:

A. Arrest and cooperation diplomacy. Targeted diplomacy to secure transfers of other indicted individuals (where evidence is sufficient), combined with conditional incentives (aid, visas, sanctions relief) tied to cooperation with the ICC. Without arrests, the court’s docket will remain symbolic.

B. Parallel domestic accountability and reform. Support Sudanese judiciary capacity, vet and reform security institutions (including DDR — disarmament, demobilisation, reintegration — tailored to paramilitary actors), and create domestic mechanisms that approximate international standards of fairness and independence. Complementarity is not optional.

C. Victim-centred reparations and reconstruction. Begin planning and financing community-level reparations (cash, land restitution, infrastructure) and psychosocial care — programmes that courts alone do not provide. The ICC can order reparations, but execution usually requires national or donor support.

D. Documentation & safe testimony pipelines. Invest in survivor documentation, mobile evidence collection, satellite imagery analysis, and secure chains of custody, so future cases are ready if and when suspects are arrested. The Kushayb prosecution succeeded in part because evidence was preserved; scale this model.

E. Regional pressure to break protectors’ networks. Engage neighbours and regional powers to deny sanctuary, clamp down on illicit finance, and refuse safe haven to indicted figures. Coercive regional diplomacy is often the only practicable enforcement lever.


Key questions and political risks to watch

  • Does conviction of low- or mid-level commanders produce deterrence or merely decapitation that invites fragmentation and more criminal entrepreneurs? The empirical answer may vary; Sudan’s current instability suggests risks of fragmentation.
  • How will the RSF and its sponsors react politically to a growing ICC docket? Expect rhetorical denial, domestic nationalist framing, and potential recrudescence of violence if leaders feel cornered.
  • Can hybrid accountability mechanisms (local courts + international advisers) reconcile demands for speed and legitimacy? That model deserves pilots.

Final take — what the conviction buys us, and what it doesn’t

Ali Kushayb’s conviction is an overdue and important piece of accountability. Legally, it demonstrates that painstaking documentation and smart use of expert context can secure convictions in complex mass-violence cases. Politically, it offers a lever for advocates. But justice in Darfur will not be delivered by a single verdict; it requires arrests of other suspects, domestic reforms, funded reparations, and meaningful security guarantees for communities. Most importantly, preventing future atrocity requires breaking the political and economic networks that created the Janjaweed-to-RSF trajectory — a task that is primarily political and institutional, not judicial.

The ICC verdict is necessary. It is not sufficient.


October 06, 2025

Egypt Israel-Hamas talks: a focused opening — and the hard, technical climb ahead

By Ephraim Agbo 

Indirect Israel–Hamas talks convening in Egypt under a U.S.-backed framework mark the most credible diplomatic opening in months: a deliberately narrow, phased approach that aims first to trade hostages for prisoners and to secure limited Israeli pullbacks and humanitarian access. That narrowness is the source of both its plausibility and its fragility.


What has actually changed — why negotiators think a phased approach might work

Two linked shifts underpin the talks: (1) Washington publicly compressed the problem into a short, technically implementable first phase (hostage releases, prisoner swaps, limited withdrawals) rather than trying to negotiate an immediate grand political settlement; and (2) regional interlocutors (Egypt, Qatar and others) have been mobilised as active guarantors and logistical channels. Those shifts reduce the number of moving parts in the opening phase — and therefore the political overhead required to get agreement — but they do not remove the tougher questions that must follow.


The central political calculus (who wants what)

  • United States: seeks a visible breakthrough (hostage releases, humanitarian space), using diplomatic weight and public pressure to accelerate implementation — but its emphasis on speed risks short-circuiting detailed monitoring arrangements.
  • Israel: wants hostages returned and security guarantees; political constraints at home (a fractious coalition, powerful far-right ministers) limit how many concessions Tel Aviv can accept without internal blowback.
  • Hamas: seeks large prisoner releases and an easing of bombardment while protecting its political survival; demands for disarmament or loss of governance are red lines it will resist.
  • Regional guarantors (Egypt, Qatar, Saudi Arabia): provide channels and leverage — political cover, money and enforcement capacity — but their influence depends on credible incentives and the willingness to apply costs for backsliding.

The core technical obstacles — why “agreeing to a swap” is only the start

  1. Verification & sequencing. Who certifies a hostage’s release, and which independent entity confirms a prisoner swap so the next step is triggered? Without neutral certification, “phase two” never activates.
  2. Disarmament mechanics. Demilitarisation is more than a pledge: it requires inventories, custodianship, and enforceable measures — all politically fraught.
  3. Governance transition risk. Any reshaping of Gaza’s governance without buy-in invites spoilers and a security vacuum.
  4. Humanitarian throughput vs. security screening. Overly burdensome vetting will throttle aid; lax vetting will raise Israeli security objections. Calibration is essential.

Measurable indicators of success (operational KPIs negotiators should adopt)

A credible verification architecture must make these public; they are the minimum that turns political promises into operational reality:

  • Hostage verification: X hostages verified released and medically evaluated by neutral forensic teams within 72 hours of signed triggers.
  • Reduction in major strikes: ≥80% decline in heavy aerial/ground strikes in agreed zones within 24 hours (third-party monitoring).
  • Humanitarian throughput: A defined minimum of daily aid tonnage (example KPI: 500 metric tons/day) delivered to hard-hit northern Gaza within 72 hours, logged by independent logisticians.
  • Protection of civilians: No forced mass displacements into active combat zones; functioning temporary shelters with fuel and medical supplies within 7 days.
  • Transparent monitoring: A tripartite or UN-led monitoring dashboard, public and updated daily (hostage counts, aid deliveries, incidents).

Failure modes to watch for (how this opening collapses)

  • Headline deal without objective certification. Parties claim swaps completed but disagree on evidence; subsequent phases stall.
  • Aid bottlenecks. Delays in permits, border openings or logistics leave civilians without relief — eroding local legitimacy for the pause.
  • Domestic political reversal in Israel. Coalition pressure or protests force backtracking on agreed steps.
  • Spoilers and splinter violence. Non-state actors exploit seams during transitions, creating new flashpoints.

Concrete recommendations — what negotiators, guarantors and aid agencies should demand now

  1. Put KPIs in the text. The agreement must include precise, time-bound metrics (hostage counts, aid tonnage, strike reductions) and name neutral certifiers.
  2. Deploy neutral verification teams immediately. Forensics and third-party logisticians should be pre-positioned so “verification” is not ad hoc.
  3. Back guarantees with conditional carrots and sticks. Guarantors (U.S., Egypt, Qatar, Saudi) should commit parallel reconstruction pledges and clearly signalled political/diplomatic penalties for violations.
  4. Interim civil administration design. Create a temporary, technocratic civil-administration mechanism — Palestinian-led but internationally supported — to manage aid, public services and reconstruction logistics.
  5. Insist on public dashboards. Transparency reduces competing narratives and allows the international community to spot and name violations quickly.

The human imperative: why speed must be matched by rigour

Civilians in Gaza are not abstract variables. The camps and urban centres that negotiation teams discuss are full of displaced families, damaged hospitals and collapsing services; limited, immediate humanitarian relief is urgent and morally non-negotiable. But speed without rigour risks wasting an opening: a fast headline deal that fails to get food, medicine and shelter into those same camps will collapse under the weight of its own legitimacy deficit. Reporting from the ground—on destruction, displacement and civilian suffering—should drive the KPIs negotiators adopt.


Probable scenarios and what each would mean

  • Optimistic but conditional: First phase implemented cleanly (verified hostage releases; humanitarian corridors operational). That creates a window for technical talks on governance and security — not peace, but breathing space.
  • Partial success: Hostage swaps occur but verification disputes or aid delays erode trust and a return to violence is likely within weeks.
  • Failure: Negotiations stall on sequencing or certification; violence continues and international momentum dissipates.

Conclusion — a pragmatic test, not a silver bullet

The Egypt talks are a meaningful tactical opening precisely because they reduce the immediate objective to technically definable steps. That is the right test: can rival parties be induced, in a short window, to meet objective, verifiable standards that tangibly improve civilians’ lives? If yes, this becomes a platform to tackle harder political questions. If not, momentum will evaporate and the humanitarian cost will grow.

The determinative factor is not rhetoric or pressure alone; it is whether the parties and their guarantors convert political will into technical architecture: independent verification, clear sequencing, enforceable guarantees, and rapid humanitarian delivery. Without those, even a well-intentioned deal risks becoming another paused tragedy.


October 02, 2025

Nigeria’s Power Paradox: Between Darkness, Diesel, and the Promise of the Sun


By Ephraim Agbo 

When you stand on the balcony of most cities in Nigeria at night, you don’t just hear the city — you hear its power crisis. The drone of hundreds of diesel and petrol generators rises like industrial static, a constant soundtrack of improvisation. That noise is not just an inconvenience; it is the sound of an economy taxed twice — once by official tariffs, and again by the informal “generator economy.”

Nigeria’s power challenge is not new, but it is uniquely costly. Despite its oil wealth, its abundant sunshine, and decades of reforms, the country still has the world’s largest electricity access deficit, with over 86 million people excluded from reliable supply. For a country that describes itself as the “giant of Africa,” this is not just an embarrassment — it is a brake on every measure of social and economic progress.


The Historical Trap: How a Nation Fell Behind

Nigeria’s electricity system was once a symbol of modernity. In the 1970s and 1980s, the National Electric Power Authority (NEPA) supplied relatively stable power to a much smaller population. But as the country’s population exploded — from 56 million in 1970 to over 220 million today — the grid stagnated.

Investment faltered under military rule; funds earmarked for expansion vanished into corruption. Transmission lines aged, thermal plants broke down, and hydropower was left under-utilized. Liberalisation in the 2000s brought the unbundling of NEPA into GENCOs, DISCOs, and TCN, but privatisation was half-hearted: politically connected buyers acquired assets without sufficient capital to modernise them.

The result is what economists call a “structural deficit” — supply is not just temporarily below demand; it is permanently out of sync. Even as installed capacity climbs to 13,000 MW on paper, only 4,000–6,000 MW actually reaches consumers. Demand, by some estimates, is four times that.


The Political Economy of Darkness

Electricity in Nigeria is not just a technical issue — it is a political currency. Leaders promise “stable light” as a shorthand for development, but delivering it risks angering powerful lobbies.

  • Fuel importers benefit from the generator economy. Diesel and petrol sales thrive when the grid fails.
  • Politicians often distribute transformers or solar kits as constituency projects — short-term palliatives that rarely build systemic reliability.
  • Regulators hesitate to enforce true cost-reflective tariffs, fearing backlash in a society where many live below the poverty line.

The outcome is a vicious cycle: low tariffs lead to revenue shortfalls, which prevent investment, which keeps supply weak, which forces people back onto generators, which strengthens the diesel economy, which pressures government not to disrupt the status quo.

This cycle is why the April 2025 claim by Power Minister Adebayo Adelabu — that 150 million Nigerians now enjoy “adequate electricity” — rang hollow. Adequacy is meaningless if even the connected endure daily blackouts and if Band-A users, paying premium tariffs, sometimes receive less supply than Band-C customers.


The Social Cost of Unreliability

When analysts describe electricity as “infrastructure,” they understate its role. In Nigeria, unreliable electricity is a social determinant of health, education, and inequality:

  • In hospitals, ventilators and operating theatres are hostage to diesel. In small clinics, surgeries are postponed when fuel runs out. The result: avoidable deaths.
  • In schools, students prepare for exams by torchlight or kerosene lanterns, falling behind global peers.
  • For small businesses, electricity costs eat profit margins alive — the World Bank estimates Nigerian firms lose about $29 billion annually to power shortages.

This is why the national grid’s collapse in September 2025 was not just a technical fault — it was a systemic wound, felt in every household and business that depends on predictable power.


Solar and the New Frontier: Escaping the Grid’s Prison

Yet Nigeria is not without hope. The rise of solar mini-grids and home systems represents both a technological leapfrog and a quiet rebellion against the failures of the centralised grid.

In rural communities, residents willingly pay for mini-grid connections, often with remarkable discipline, because the alternative is perpetual darkness. For them, the value of reliable power outweighs the price. In peri-urban Lagos and Abuja, wealthier households invest in rooftop panels and lithium batteries, treating solar not as a luxury but as insurance.

But the solar revolution faces structural barriers:

  • Panels and batteries are almost entirely imported, making costs vulnerable to currency devaluation.
  • Financing is scarce for the poor; pay-as-you-go systems exist but remain limited in reach.
  • Policy uncertainty and customs bottlenecks delay deployment.

Still, the logic is irresistible: Nigeria’s greatest curse (sun-drenched blackouts) could become its greatest asset (sun-powered independence).


Decentralisation: The Electricity Act 2023 and the Federal Dilemma

The Electricity Act of 2023 is Nigeria’s boldest legal reform in decades. By allowing states to create their own electricity markets, it acknowledges what people already know: a one-size-fits-all national grid cannot serve a country of 36 states with different needs, resources, and security challenges.

Early adopters — about a dozen states — are exploring independent power policies, from embedded generation to local distribution companies. The gamble is that decentralisation will encourage competition, innovation, and accountability.

But this raises hard questions:

  • Will richer states like Lagos and Rivers advance while poorer northern states fall further behind?
  • Can state regulators resist the same patronage and vested interests that crippled the federal system?
  • What happens if decentralisation fragments rather than strengthens national coherence?

The Act is an opportunity — but also a test of governance capacity across Nigeria’s federal structure.


The Path Forward: What Nigeria Must Do

Nigeria’s power crisis is not insoluble. Other nations — India, Vietnam, Brazil — have faced similar deficits and made rapid gains through bold reforms, massive investment, and renewable integration. For Nigeria, three analytical imperatives stand out:

  1. Break the Generator Economy’s Grip
    Government must disincentivise diesel dependence through cleaner alternatives and targeted taxation, while scaling subsidies for renewables. The political cost will be high, but the long-term economic drag of generators is unsustainable.

  2. Redesign Tariffs with Equity and Honesty
    Pretending electricity can be cheap for all is fantasy. Tariffs must reflect cost, but with lifeline subsidies for the poorest and smart cross-subsidisation. Transparency — not populism — is the currency of reform.

  3. Invest in Transmission and Local Manufacturing
    Nigeria cannot import its way to energy independence. Local assembly of solar panels and batteries must be incentivised, and transmission lines must be hardened against vandalism and under-capacity.

  4. Treat Electricity as Nation-Building, Not a Campaign Slogan
    Every kilowatt delivered is not just power — it is GDP growth, jobs, literacy, and health. Politicians must shift from seeing electricity as a vote-catching promise to recognising it as the foundation of state legitimacy.


Final Take: From “Up NEPA!” to Energy Dignity

In the early 2000s, whenever power returned, children across Nigerian neighbourhoods shouted in unison: “Up NEPA!” It was a moment of joy, relief, and collective release. But behind that cry was also resignation — an acceptance that electricity was a fleeting gift, not a right.

Today, that cry still echoes. But if Nigeria is to claim its place as a 21st-century economy, the chant must evolve — from relief at temporary light to confidence in permanent, reliable, affordable power.

The paradox is stark: Nigeria has the sun, the gas, the people, and the potential. What it lacks is not capacity but political will and systemic honesty. Until those align, the generators will roar, the candles will burn, and millions will remain trapped in the dark.

The real test is not whether Nigeria can generate electricity — it can — but whether it can generate the governance, investment, and discipline needed to keep the lights on.


September 28, 2025

Netanyahu at the UN: War Cry, Statesmanship, or Something in Between?


By Ephraim Agbo 

Benjamin Netanyahu’s 2025 UN General Assembly address was simultaneously theatrical and transactional — an appeal to domestic constituencies, a direct coercive message to Hamas and Gaza, and a diplomatic strike at Western capitals that recognised Palestinian statehood. The speech reused a long-standing Netanyahu toolbox (maps and theatrical props), but landed in a radically different legal and diplomatic environment than past UN interventions: after ICJ provisional measures and ICC action, geopolitical costs for provocative rhetoric are higher and more immediate.


Historic theatricality — Netanyahu’s UN style in context

Netanyahu has repeatedly used visual props and dramatic staging at the UN to compress complex threats into single, shareable images. The most famous precedent is his 2012 “cartoon bomb” moment — he held up a drawing of a bomb and literally drew a red line to dramatize how close Iran was to a nuclear weapon. That act changed how his speeches were covered worldwide and is a recognized element of his rhetorical playbook: make the threat visible and memorable.

In 2025 he returned to that playbook with a map he labelled “THE CURSE” (and other visual hooks like QR codes in the hall) — the same strategic logic: visual condensation of a threat and a play for virality. The novelty this year was the pairing of theatrical UN rhetoric with immediate battlefield-directed messaging — notably, Israel’s decision to broadcast the speech toward Gaza by loudspeaker, an explicit attempt to treat words as a field weapon. That combination blurred the line between international diplomacy and direct psychological warfare.


The legal and institutional backdrop: why this speech landed differently in 2025

Two legal developments frame every utterance now:

  1. ICJ provisional measures in the “Gaza genocide” case. South Africa’s case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) and the ICJ’s provisional measures (ordered in 2024) place a legal obligation on Israel to take steps to prevent acts that could amount to genocide and to enable humanitarian access. That judicial context means UN statements about the campaign in Gaza are not only rhetorical — they are being read by judges and prosecutors.

  2. ICC prosecutorial action. The International Criminal Court’s situation in the State of Palestine has proceeded into warrants and pre-trial steps (the ICC issued warrants in 2024–25 against senior Israeli figures). That creates practical travel and reputational consequences for Israeli leaders and makes every high-profile public intervention a potential piece of prosecutorial record. The very routing of Netanyahu’s flight to avoid some European airspace — widely reported — is a concrete signal of that changed legal environment.

Put simply: in 2012 a dramatic UN visual aimed mainly at shifting political opinion. In 2025 similar theatricality carries immediate legal and mobility costs — and is processed through tribunals evaluating whether conduct amounts to international crimes.


Rhetorical architecture: audiences and instruments

Netanyahu’s speech operated on three concentric audiences, each served by different techniques:

  • Domestic audience (primary): The rhetorical goal is to consolidate support and inoculate domestic opinion against calls for compromise. Phrases like “finish the job” and “murdering Jews pays off” function as rallying refrains — short, morally absolute lines that reduce political complexity into binary moral claims and motivate a political base.

  • Adversary audience (Hamas/Gaza): The broadcast into Gaza via loudspeakers (and reported phone messaging attempts) turned the UN podium into a battlefield microphone. The direct commands — “lay down your arms…free the hostages” — were framed as both offer and threat. That is strategic communications applied as coercion: attempt to split the governed population from its armed rulers and induce capitulation.

  • International/diplomatic audience (UN, Western capitals): The public shaming of states that recognised Palestine (Britain, France, Canada, Australia and others in the week before the UN session) reframed recognition as a moral error that “rewards terror,” a deliberate attempt to delegitimize their action and to signal that Israel sees bilateral support as the key axis of legitimacy. 

Each audience received a calibrated message; the risk is that satisfying one (domestic base) may significantly alienate others (European partners, UN members, and legal institutions).


Historical parallels and differences (short comparative table)

  • 2012 “Red line” cartoon bomb (Iran): Visual dramatization of a future threat meant to influence policy choices (not intended for a direct battlefield). Outcome: intense media buzz, mixed diplomatic effect.
  • 2025 “CURSE” map + loudspeakers (Gaza): Visual dramatization + direct dissemination to an occupied population under attack. Outcome: immediate diplomatic walkouts and legal scrutiny in an era of ICJ/ICC action.

The difference is not only the content but the operational environment: 2012’s drama was pre-emptive warning; 2025’s drama amplifies and justifies an ongoing kinetic campaign, with more immediate normative consequences.


The political calculus — why Netanyahu doubled down

Three linked incentives explain the tone and content:

  1. Electoral and coalition pressures at home. Netanyahu’s political survival has repeatedly hinged on security credibility. After October 7 and a long war, a hawkish posture is politically salient.
  2. Deterrence logic. By promising to “finish the job,” Israel signals high cost to adversaries. This is aimed at Hezbollah, Iranian proxies, and other actors balancing the calculus of escalation.
  3. Delegitimizing opponents internationally. By framing recognition of Palestine as a “reward for terror,” Netanyahu tries to reframe diplomatic moves by friends and foes alike as moral failures — an effort to shape a narrative that limits pressure for ceasefires or change. Reuters and other outlets recorded these lines and the list of countries whose recognition he attacked.

These incentives produce a speech that is high reward domestically but high-risk internationally.


6) Strategic and normative consequences — three scenarios

  1. Short-term tactical success, long-term diplomatic isolation. A maximal military campaign could erode Hamas’s capacity and even produce tactical successes, but will likely deepen Israel’s isolation in multilateral fora and increase legal exposure (ICJ/ICC processes).

  2. International legal escalation. The speech and the campaign now feed into dossiers at the ICJ and ICC. Public statements, props and operational broadcasts are evidentiary inputs for international and domestic actors assessing intent and proportionality. That does not decide guilt, but it hardens the legal and reputational record.

  3. Fragmented Western coalition. Some capitals will double down on bilateral support; others will move toward symbolic and substantive detachment (recognition of Palestine, sanctions, or legal posturing). Multiple Western recognitions the week before the speech is evidence of that fracturing.


Humanitarian and governance blind spots

Netanyahu’s speech was explicit about military aims and implicit about political end-states. Critical absences:

  • Post-conflict governance: No credible plan for Gaza’s civil administration, reconstruction or de-radicalisation was provided — yet those are essential to prevent a repeat of insurgency.
  • Humanitarian mechanics: The rhetoric did not offer operational measures to guarantee sustained humanitarian corridors consistent with ICJ provisional measures, which could further complicate legal compliance and international cooperation. ICJ orders and humanitarian commentary make these gaps consequential.

8) What historians will note

Four lines a historian is likely to highlight:

  1. The continued use of theatrical props by Netanyahu as a signature rhetorical tactic (2012 bomb → 2025 “CURSE”).
  2. The fusion in 2025 of theatre with direct operational messaging (broadcast into Gaza) — a sign of how public diplomacy and psychological operations have merged.
  3. The speech’s timing amid legal processes at the ICJ and ICC — a rare moment where UN rhetoric and international adjudication overlap intensely.
  4. The diplomatic fallout from Western recognitions of Palestine — a pivot point showing how prolonged conflict can reorder traditional alliances.

Final take

Netanyahu’s address was effective theatre — compact, viral, and domestically potent. But theatre in the UN agora now surfaces in a transformed legal and diplomatic ecosystem. Visual props and blistering rhetoric that once mainly reshaped public opinion now enter judicial archives and influence state behaviour in ways that could have lasting consequences for Israel’s access, alliances, and legal exposure.

So then, the imperative is threefold: (1) treat public rhetoric as a strategic variable (not mere words), (2) craft parallel legal/diplomatic messaging to mitigate tribunal and ally fallout, and (3) insist on operational plans for governance and humanitarian access that can be implemented post-hostilities. Without those, rhetoric will increasingly harden the adverse scenarios this piece sketches.


September 26, 2025

Stupid People or Stupid Politics? Trump’s War on Climate Science


By Ephraim Agbo 

When Donald Trump stood before the United Nations General Assembly and dismissed the climate agenda as a “hoax made up by stupid people,” it was more than a provocation. It was a crystallization of a battle that has defined global politics for over three decades: science vs. skepticism, elites vs. populists, long-term survival vs. short-term economics.

To grasp the significance of Trump’s comments, we must look at both sides — the skepticism he channels and the science he rejects — and ask why, despite mountains of data, climate action still faces such political resistance.


Trump’s Case: Climate as Scam and Political Tool

Trump’s rhetoric rests on three pillars: failed predictions, economic costs, and distrust of elites.

  1. Failed Predictions?
    Trump argues climate warnings have been exaggerated. He cites past forecasts that never materialized — like claims in the late 1980s that island nations could be underwater by the 2010s. While some projections were indeed overstated, they were often worst-case scenarios rather than consensus science. But to skeptics, the very fact that these predictions entered the public discourse reinforces the sense that climate science overpromises catastrophe.

    • Fact: The IPCC’s more cautious projections (e.g., a 0.3–0.6m sea-level rise by 2100 if emissions are curbed) have generally held up.
    • Skeptical spin: Public remembers “the world will end in 12 years” soundbites, not nuanced scientific ranges.
  2. Economic Harm of Green Policies
    Trump insists that “green” policies hurt workers, inflate energy prices, and undermine competitiveness. He points to coal miners, oil rig workers, and industries tied to cheap fossil fuels.

    • Fact for skeptics: Germany’s Energiewende saw electricity prices nearly double since 2000 while reliance on coal and gas persisted to stabilize intermittent renewables.
    • Fact for scientists: Solar and wind costs have fallen by 85% and 55% respectively since 2010, making renewables the cheapest new energy source in most regions (IEA).
  3. Distrust of Elites
    Trump frames climate science as a narrative pushed by “globalists” to guilt individuals with the idea of a carbon footprint and funnel trillions into climate finance.

    • Fact for skeptics: Global climate finance surpassed $1.3 trillion in 2023, creating industries around carbon credits, consultancies, and green tech.
    • Fact for science: Fossil fuel subsidies still dwarf green finance — estimated at $7 trillion in 2022 (IMF), suggesting fossil lobbies retain far more structural power.

The Scientific Consensus: Warming is Real, Impacts Escalating

On the other side stands a formidable wall of evidence.

  1. Global Temperature Rise
    The Earth has warmed by 1.1–1.3°C since the late 19th century, according to NASA and NOAA. 2024 was the hottest year on record, surpassing even El Niño years.

  2. Sea Levels and Ice Melt
    NASA satellites show sea levels rising about 3.7mm per year since 1993, accelerating compared to the 20th-century average of 1.4mm. Glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica are losing hundreds of billions of tons of ice annually.

  3. Extreme Weather
    Attribution science has advanced: studies now link heatwaves, wildfires, and extreme rainfall directly to climate change. For instance, Europe’s 2022 heatwave was made 10 times more likely by human-induced warming.

  4. Economic Costs of Inaction
    Climate damages are mounting. In 2023, the U.S. suffered 28 separate billion-dollar weather disasters, the highest on record (NOAA). Globally, climate-linked damages cost over $300 billion annually.


Why the Divide Persists

So why, with such overwhelming evidence, does Trump’s rhetoric resonate?

  1. Memory of Failed Predictions
    People recall bold media headlines more than nuanced science, feeding skepticism.

  2. Economic Anxiety
    Climate action often feels like a threat to jobs and affordability in fossil-dependent economies.

  3. Politics of Distrust
    Populist leaders thrive on framing elites as corrupt or manipulative. Climate science, tied to the UN, academia, and NGOs, becomes a convenient target.

  4. Communication Gap
    Scientists speak in probabilities and ranges. Politicians and media prefer absolutes. The gap fuels confusion and mistrust.


A Clash of Worldviews

Ultimately, Trump’s speech was not just about climate. It was about who gets to define truth: scientists with datasets and models, or populist politicians appealing to common sense and suspicion of elites.

The irony is that both sides contain truths. Yes, some predictions were exaggerated, green transitions can impose real costs, and climate finance is riddled with vested interests. But it’s also true that the Earth is warming, weather extremes are intensifying, and delaying action multiplies risks and costs for future generations.


The Bottom Line

Trump’s “hoax” framing is unlikely to disappear, because it taps into deep political instincts: resist control, protect jobs, distrust elites. Climate science, on the other hand, is unlikely to weaken, because the data keeps accumulating — glaciers melting, seas rising, heat records breaking.

The question is not whether the climate is changing. It is whether politics can ever bridge the chasm between measurable reality and cultural perception. For now, Trump’s words remind us that climate change is not just a scientific issue — it is the frontline of a global battle over truth, trust, and the future.


September 25, 2025

“From Rhetoric to Architecture”: An in-depth read of Nigeria’s UNGA-80 statement and what it would take to make the big asks stick

By Ephraim Agbo 

Vice-President Kashim Shettima delivered Nigeria’s national statement at the 80th UN General Assembly on behalf of President Bola Tinubu. The text is striking not for its novelty but for the audacity of packaging several long-standing Nigerian demands — a permanent Security Council seat, major changes to sovereign-debt architecture, and new climate commitments tied to development space — into a single, tightly argued claim that the current multilateral order must be remade or risk losing legitimacy. The speech’s headline innovation is not the claim itself but the form it takes: concrete institutional requests (a “new and binding mechanism” for sovereign debt; formal claim to a UNSC permanent seat; an updated set of NDCs to be announced at the climate high-level).

What the speech actually demands — and why that combination matters

Read together the three strands (UN reform/UNSC seat; sovereign-debt mechanism; climate finance & NDCs) form a political logic: Nigeria is attempting to convert claims about representation and voice into material policy instruments — more voting power, a binding process to reduce debt servicing burdens, and access to climate finance and technology that would ease the trade-off between mitigation and industrial policy. If realized, this bundle would boost Nigeria’s negotiating leverage across trade, investment and security. The speech is therefore less an appeal for prestige than a coordinated strategy to expand policy space for industrialization and development.

The “debt-court” idea — conceptually sharp, practically slippery

Tinubu’s phrase — “a sort of International Court of Justice for money” — reframes sovereign debt as a governance problem rather than solely an economic one. The benefits are clear: a binding mechanism could prevent chaotic, piecemeal restructurings, neutralize hold-out litigation by vulture funds, and standardize treatment across bilateral, multilateral and private creditors. Yet the politics and law are brutally hard. There are three constraining realities:

Heterogeneous creditor universe. Official bilateral lenders (Paris Club/China/others), multilateral lenders (IMF, World Bank, MDBs) and dispersed private bondholders and banks all have different legal claims, preferred fora and incentive structures. Any binding mechanism needs rules accepted by those constituencies.

Existing partial fixes are incremental. The IMF and World Bank have repeatedly pushed contractual solutions (enhanced collective action clauses, single-limb voting, improved transparency), and the G20 Common Framework has been used unevenly; these show the preference for gradual, negotiated technical fixes rather than top-down compulsory courts. Nigeria’s proposal therefore faces a two-track problem: how to design a credible legal instrument and how to persuade major creditors to surrender leverage.

Political buy-in from major powers is essential. The largest bilateral creditors (including China and many OECD states) and the principal MDBs will only accept mechanisms that preserve their financial exposures and policy influence — which means any “court” will look more like a hybrid multilateral adjudicatory/mediation body with opt-ins and escape clauses. Expect a protracted process of institutional design and bargaining, not instant legal conversion.

Bottom line: Nigeria’s framing is powerful as a rallying cry for indebted emerging economies. Practically, it is most useful as a political lever to push the IMF/World Bank, the G77 and creditor coalitions to accelerate technical reforms (CACs, improved debt transparency, a stronger Common Framework) — not to produce an immediate “court” overnight.

The UNSC claim — normative logic meets constitutional prison

Nigeria’s insistence on a permanent Security Council seat is defensible on representational and contributions grounds: Nigeria is Africa’s most populous country, has a long record of regional leadership, and has historically contributed to peace operations. But the UN Charter’s amendment path makes formal enlargement extremely onerous: Article 108 requires a two-thirds General Assembly vote and ratification by two-thirds of UN members including all five permanent Security Council members — i.e., P5 assent. Since the P5 can effectively veto amendments that reduce their exclusive club advantages, the realistic route to meaningful change is political: build a broad African and Global South coalition, seek stepwise procedural reforms (e.g., longer non-permanent seats, new categories with longer tenure, or veto-use restraint agreements), and press for incremental institutional innovations rather than immediate charter amendment.

Tactical implication: Nigeria’s short-term win is agenda-setting and alliance-building — the speech is designed to consolidate African positions (AU), rally the G77, and leverage BRICS sympathy for representation reforms. But converting that into a legal permanent seat will require years and creative deal-making with at least some P5 members who have an interest in selective enlargement or symbolic concessions.

Domestic constraints that shape the realism of these asks

Any successful external bargaining posture depends on credible domestic policy management. Nigeria’s public debt dynamics, fiscal balances and external liabilities create both motivation (why Nigeria needs relief and finance) and constraint (limited room to make risky bargains). Recent IMF Article IV reporting shows elevated public debt metrics, a rising share of foreign-currency debt since 2023–24, and fiscal deficits that require continued market access and official engagement. Simultaneously, the Debt Management Office and official statistics show nominal debt stock growth and continued service pressures — facts that make a credible negotiation posture with creditors essential but also limit tactical room for brinkmanship.

Investor note: markets prize clarity. Nigeria’s speech (if accompanied by concrete fiscal/medium-term budget frameworks, transparent NDC investment pipelines, and credible project bankability) could lower country risk premia; without technical follow-through it risks being priced as political-rhetoric. Recent CBN actions (policy-rate movement) and fiscal re-basings matter because they change debt ratios and investor expectations.

Climate, minerals and development: the conditionality trap

By announcing updated NDCs and insisting that countries hosting strategic minerals should benefit from processing and jobs, Nigeria is trying to reframe the climate debate to include industrial policy. This is pragmatic: Nigeria wants climate finance and technology transfer but also domestic value-addition. But international climate finance flows are typically conditional on measurable MRV (measurement, reporting and verification), bankable pipelines, and governance safeguards. If Nigeria wants to turn an NDC update into real money, it must (a) publish a pipeline of bankable projects tied to NDC targets, (b) create transparent governance for resource rents, and (c) co-finance to mobilise private capital. Multilateral institutions (IMF/World Bank) are already working to fold climate vulnerability into debt sustainability frameworks — a policy space Nigeria can exploit if it supplies credible project pipelines.

A realistic roadmap — how Nigeria can convert speech into policy wins

  1. Short term (0–12 months): Turn the rhetorical ask into a set of technical proposals. Launch a UN-led working group (Nigeria + AU + G77) to draft the institutional architecture for a debt-resolution mechanism and a parallel “practical package” to strengthen CACs and debt transparency. Use the UNGA window to secure a resolution endorsing negotiations and a timeline.

  2. Medium term (1–3 years): Pursue a two-track strategy: (A) push for contractual fixes — universal adoption of enhanced CACs/single-limb voting in new sovereign bonds; (B) develop a hybrid arbitration/mediation instrument under UN auspices with opt-in clauses for different creditor classes. Simultaneously, lead AU coordination for a common UNSC reform position that is precise (numbers, categories) and tradeable. Leverage BRICS/G77 fora to win support from large emerging creditors.

  3. Long term (3+ years): If a consensus emerges, negotiate a charter amendment or a General Conference under Articles 108/109 — but only as the culmination of broad multilateral agreement. In parallel, implement transparent NDC investment frameworks to capture bilateral and MDB climate finance.

Political economy risks and downsides

Creditor pushback. China, Paris Club creditors and private bond markets will resist anything that looks like involuntary haircut mechanics without compensation or risk-sharing. • Domestic political risk. Large institutional reforms promised abroad can be politically costly at home if they diverge from immediate service delivery. • Reputational risk. If the speech is not followed by credible technical steps (published proposals, working groups, bilateral track records), it may become a talking point that undercuts Nigeria’s leverage.


Final assessment 

Nigeria’s UNGA-80 statement is a strategically coherent blueprint: it links representation (UNSC) to practical burdens (debt, climate finance) that constrain development. Its real value lies in forcing a negotiation agenda and building coalitions among indebted and rising-power states. But the route from speech to institution is long and technically demanding: start with UN-sanctioned working groups, pragmatic contractual reforms (CACs, transparency), and a clear domestic fiscal/finance package that turns rhetorical asks into bankable projects. Without that, the speech risks being a high-profile appeal with limited durable payoff.


September 24, 2025

“Better Together” at 80 — An analysis on Amina Mohammed’s UNGA interview and what it means for multilateralism

By Ephraim Agbo 

Amina J. Mohammed used her BBC interview at the 80th UN General Assembly to do three things at once: diagnose a weakened international peace architecture, point toward practical levers for greater accountability (especially around Security Council behavior), and insist that development and peace must be financed and operationalized together. Her argument is not moralizing; it’s systems-level: institutions built in 1945 are straining under 21st-century geopolitics, and the human cost of that strain—most visibly in Sudan, the DRC and Gaza—requires a combination of political pressure, technical fixes, and targeted investment. The stakes are not abstract: they affect how billions of development and humanitarian dollars are spent and whether core UN tools (sanctions, mediation, peacekeeping, development finance) are used effectively.

The institutional diagnosis: what Mohammed called a “loss of value” in peace

Mohammed’s blunt formulation — that “peace seems to be a word, a five-letter word, that is losing its value” — should be read as institutional critique rather than rhetorical flourish. Her point: the UN’s core peace tools (Security Council-mandated action, preventive diplomacy, peacekeeping and peacemaking) are not delivering predictable outcomes because political gatekeepers (the P5; interested external funders; regional spoilers) often block coherent responses. That failure has two practical consequences:

  • Resource diversion. Instead of investing in prevention, states and multilateral actors spend huge sums reacting to protracted conflict. Mohammed repeatedly tied the SDGs and peace together: without stable politics, investments in health, education and climate adaptation are eaten by crisis response.

  • Erosion of normative authority. High-profile vetoes and the inability to enforce ceasefires weaken global rules and public faith in multilateral problem-solving; this is one reason civil society and middle powers have stepped into the breach with pressure campaigns. The practical effect is less predictable crisis management and more protracted suffering for civilians.

The veto, paralysis and the political economy of inaction

Mohammed’s focus on the Security Council is tactical: reform is politically fraught, but the immediate lever is accountability—using General Assembly processes and public votes to shame or isolate intransigent actors. Two analytical points are important:

  • The veto is both a procedural tool and a political signal. Recent high-stakes vetoes have reinforced perceptions that a single P5 member can shield allies from collective measures—even when nearly all other council members support action. That dynamic turns the Council from an engine for collective security into a site of strategic blocking. The practical consequence: the General Assembly, emergency special sessions and public diplomacy become de facto instruments to register global majorities even when the Council stalls.

  • Accountability via transparency works—sometimes. Public roll-call votes, NGO monitoring, and GA resolutions do not substitute for binding action, but they raise political costs domestically for governments that abstain or vote against humanitarian measures. Mohammed argues—and the recent GA practice confirms—that naming, shaming and political pressure can change behaviour or at least restrict the political space of spoilers. That is why she emphasizes “stand up and be counted.”

Analytical implication: short of Charter amendments, the UN can still recalibrate incentives. That requires using transparency, carefully targeted sanctions, referral mechanisms, and coordinated multilateral diplomacy to make veto-based obstruction politically costly.


Case studies: Sudan and the DRC — a test of Mohammed’s prescription

Mohammed’s interview repeatedly returned to concrete theatres where institutional failure has tolls:

Sudan. Recent UN human-rights reporting documents a sharp rise in civilian deaths, widespread displacement and systematic sexual violence. The humanitarian footprint—millions displaced, health systems collapsing—means that standard UN instruments (statements, humanitarian appeals) are necessary but insufficient; what’s missing are enforceable, multilateral mechanisms that can stop the flows of arms, money and proxies that fuel the fighting. Mohammed’s insistence that external backers be called out directly is an operational prescription: identify supply lines, freeze assets, and build targeted diplomacy to cut funding flows.

DRC and other protracted conflicts. In states with multiple local and external actors, peace requires political settlements that include not just principal belligerents but financiers and regional enablers—precisely the actors whose influence is easiest to evade under current UN practices. Mohammed’s practical emphasis is on expanding the bargaining table and combining pressure with incentives for those funders to withdraw support.

Humanitarian dimension (sexual violence, children). Independent UN and NGO reports (UNICEF, Save the Children, Amnesty) confirm widespread sexual violence and extreme risks to children in these conflicts. Mohammed’s argument ties this human data to institutional reform: if the Security Council cannot act, the UN must ensure that its other tools (investigations, monitoring, referrals to courts, protective funding) are scaled up and funded.

Reform vs. adaptation: what to demand from member states now

Calls for Security Council reform (more seats, African permanent representation) are legitimate and politically popular in many capitals. But the politics are intractable: amending the Charter requires P5 consent—precisely the actors who benefit from the status quo. Mohammed’s stance—push for representation and internal fixes without necessarily reopening the Charter—is therefore strategically sensible.

Practical, medium-term reforms to prioritize now:

  • Expand indirect accountability mechanisms: make abstention and vetoes accompany mandatory, public briefings explaining rationale; attach clear thresholds for emergency GA action when the Council is paralyzed.
  • Strengthen regional UN-AU (African Union) ties for conflict mediation and peacekeeping — delegate authority where regional legitimacy and capacity exist.
  • Create clearer, time-bound triggers for targeted sanctions and asset freezes against external backers discovered to be fueling conflict—so accountability is swift, not only rhetorical.

Financing prevention: the missing link between SDGs and peace

A central analytic thread in Mohammed’s remarks is fiscal: prevention is cheaper than response, but current budgetary incentives favor crisis managers (humanitarian appeals, emergency peacekeeping) over steady investments in governance, rule of law, and community resilience.

Key policy proposals that follow her logic:

  • Reframe development finance to include peace-building returns in cost-benefit calculations—i.e., measure and report how investments in jobs, local justice systems and resilient services reduce future humanitarian spending.
  • Use multilateral development banks and climate funds more deliberately as peace instruments (de-risk investments that promote local inclusion and employ youth), conditional on demonstrable reductions in conflict financing.

Strategic communications and public pressure: the democracy of multilateralism

Mohammed’s emphasis on “stand up and be counted” is also a communications strategy. If GA debates and public votes are broadcast and framed effectively, they create constituency pressure—citizens ask their governments “why did you abstain?”—and that political pressure can shift positions, or at least reduce impunity for obstruction. This is not a panacea, but it is a low-cost, high-leverage tool that the UN can use immediately.

What success would actually look like (operational yardsticks)

If Mohammed’s prescriptions are more than rhetoric, we should be able to measure success across short and medium timeframes:

Within 6–18 months

  • Clear public explanations for every major Security Council veto or abstention; correlated increase in public debate and domestic scrutiny.
  • Faster launches of targeted sanction regimes where WHO/UN/OHCHR investigations identify external enablers.

Within 2–5 years

  • Pilot programmes that pair development finance with robust peace dividends (local jobs, justice mechanisms) in at least three conflict-affected countries, with metrics showing reduced recruitment and violence.
  • A visible expansion of AU-UN joint mediation and peace support roles in at least one major African crisis.

Risk assessment: why Mohammed’s plan could stall

  • Political resistance from P5: any attempt to make veto behavior politically costly can provoke counter-measures and even withdrawals from cooperative UN mechanisms.
  • Fragmentation of global institutions: when bilateral alliances (or blocs) prefer parallel arrangements, they can bypass UN structures, undermining any GA-based accountability.
  • Resource constraints: donors’ fatigue and competing crises (climate, pandemics, inflation) could starve prevention portfolios if policymakers don’t see clear short-term political dividends.

Conclusion — a pragmatic agenda for multilateral repair

Amina Mohammed’s critique is not an elegy for multilateralism but a roadmap: use transparency to raise costs for obstruction, pair development and prevention with clear funding mechanisms, and expand regional partnerships so action is locally legitimate and operationally faster. The alternative—accepting an ossified Security Council and ad hoc, expensive crisis management—ensures a steady conveyor belt of human suffering and fractured multilateral capacity.

If the 80th General Assembly is to mean anything practical, it will be judged by whether member states convert public accountability into concrete policy changes: tighter controls on conflict financing, smarter use of development finance for prevention, and measurable reductions in civilian harm in hotspots such as Sudan and the DRC. Until then, Mohammed’s interview is a useful wake-up call—but a wake-up call must be followed by governance choices that are visible, measurable and politically costly to reverse.


The Gaza Peace Deal: Between Ceasefire and Strategy — A Test of Political Will

By Ephraim Agbo   When news broke from Cairo that Israel and Hamas had reached an agreement on the first phase of a peace plan,...