Bowing to pressure from groups and political power-beakers, President Bola Tinubu has renewed the appointment of Abubakar Sadiq Yelwa as Managing Director of the National Hydroelectric Power Producing Areas Development Commission (N-HYPPADEC). Yelwa, who has held the position since 2021, begins his second and final four-year term in line with Section 93 of the Electricity Act, 2023.
Tinubu’s endorsement comes with high expectations. He urged Yelwa to build on the commission’s momentum by introducing greater innovation and strengthening efforts to improve the lives of communities in hydroelectric-producing areas.
Political tensions and regional turmoil
Legal uproar: A breach of statutory mandates
Yelwa’s renewed mandate did not come without political friction. His return followed an earlier controversial appointment of Mrs. Tomi Somefun, an Oyo State indigene, as N-HYPPADEC’s Managing Director — a decision that ignited outrage across the hydroelectric-producing states.
Stakeholders argued that the appointment violated the commission’s Establishment Act, which requires that its MD must be an indigene of one of the designated member states — Niger, Benue, Kwara, Kogi, Kebbi, Plateau, Kaduna, or Gombe — and that the position should rotate among them, ensuring the MD and Chairman hail from different states.
Civil society coalitions, community leaders, and regional advocacy groups condemned the move as both illegal and a breach of the federal character principle. They insisted that ignoring these statutory provisions undermined the legitimacy of the commission and disrespected the rights of host communities.
Governors and pressure groups as political levers
Governor Nasir Idris of Kebbi state was pivotal in the reversal. Deploying a combination of quiet diplomacy and strategic pressure, he appealed directly to President Tinubu, emphasising fairness, legal compliance, and the need for Kebbi to retain its rightful representation in N-HYPPADEC.

His argument was reinforced by a groundswell of opposition from organised groups, which sustained public pressure through statements, media campaigns, and mobilising grassroots support. This convergence of political authority and civic advocacy ultimately forced a rethink at the highest level.
Youth mobilisation and regional identity as political assets
Multiple groups, including the Coalition of Shiroro Associations (COSA), denounced the appointment as a clear violation of the commission’s Establishment Act, which stipulates that its MD must be an indigene of one of the member states and that the position must rotate among them—while ensuring the MD and Chairman hail from different states .
Similarly, Ambassador Nmaa Ahmed, Director-General of RAAMP, underscored that this was not mere political agitation but a “constitutional demand,” highlighting the federal government’s obligation to respect the law, Nigeria’s federal character principle, and rectify historical marginalization . Stakeholders—including regional coalitions and youth organizations—pressed aggressively for reversal .
The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) also weighed in, branding the initial appointment “illegal” and “politically motivated.” The group warned that such disregard for law and equity could alienate young Nigerians and fuel regional distrust.
Their involvement signalled a growing trend: youth constituencies are increasingly proactive in defending legal and regional rights, and their participation can significantly raise the political cost of controversial decisions.
The outcome: A resounding but cautious victory
Yelwa’s reinstatement is more than a personal win for Kebbi State — it’s a reaffirmation that law and regional representation still matter in Nigeria’s federal governance. It sends a clear message that disregarding statutory mandates and host community interests is a politically risky gamble.
For the Tinubu administration, the episode serves as a warning: even a president with significant political capital cannot afford to bypass procedural fairness without facing substantial backlash.
Looking ahead: Implications and the road to 2027
Legal compliance will be under the microscope: Stakeholders are now more alert to the legal foundations of appointments, making quiet circumventions harder to pull off.
Regional watchdogs are more assertive: Governors and advocacy groups are developing stronger mechanisms to protect local interests.
Youth pressure is a rising force: Mobilised young Nigerians are becoming influential players in political accountability.
Federal-regional balance remains fragile: Navigating the competing demands of national cohesion and regional justice will remain a challenge.
In summary
What began as a routine renewal quickly became a flashpoint in the politics of legality, regional equity, and federal representation. Governor Idris’s success in reclaiming the N-HYPPADEC MD position for Kebbi is both a political triumph and a lesson in how strategic alliances, civic mobilisation, and statutory law can combine to shape federal decisions.

