Nigeria

Constitution Review: NASS Approves Creation of Six New States Across Nigeria

Nigeria’s National Assembly has endorsed a proposal to create six new states across its geopolitical zones, a decision that could increase the country’s federating units from 36 to 42 if ratified.

The resolution, adopted at a two-day Lagos retreat, aims to address decades-old agitations over regional equity and representation, particularly in the South-East which currently has the fewest states.

The Politics of Expansion

The committee’s move has ignited political debates nationwide, with governors and lawmakers lobbying for their regions to host the new entities. Proposed names include Anioma (Delta North), Ijebu, Ibadan, and Savannah, though final delineation will depend on a new sub-committee chaired by Senator Tahir Monguno.

Opportunity and Cost

While the plan is hailed as historic, critics warn it could deepen Nigeria’s fiscal burden, given rising governance costs and existing economic strain. Each new state will require fresh administrative and infrastructural setups, which analysts estimate could cost trillions in federal allocation restructuring.

Power Redistribution and Investment Angles

The new-state drive could reconfigure Nigeria’s investment geography, opening new capitals and governance centres ripe for infrastructure funding and private investment. It also refreshes the political terrain ahead of 2027, giving ambitious power blocs fresh platforms to negotiate influence.

This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.

Also See

EFCC vs VDM: Influencer’s Arrest Sparks Uproar as Agency Defends Action

IDNN

Estevao’s World Cup hopes fade after season-ending Chelsea injury

Noble Onyeagoro

Atiku, Civil Groups Warn Senate Over Electoral Act Delay Ahead of 2027

IDNN

Alvaro Arbeloa’s Real Madrid: Mbappe’s Stellar Contribution to Victory over Villarreal

Noble Onyeagoro

CBN SLAMS POS OPERATORS WITH ₦1.2 MILLION DAILY LIMIT — DIGITAL OVERSIGHT TIGHTENS

IDNN

Nigerian Army Reshuffles High Command, Appoints New GOCs, Provost Marshall, CMI

IDNN

This website uses cookies to improve User experience. Accept Learn More

Our Policies