Ambassadors: Opposition, APC clash over Tinubu’s nominees
Opposition parties and the ruling All Progressives Congress clashed on Saturday following President Bola Tinubu’s transmission of a fresh list of 32 ambassadorial nominees to the Senate — his first major diplomatic appointments since he recalled all envoys from the country’s 109 foreign missions two years ago.
The nominations, released in two batches and now totalling 35, have drawn sharp criticism from the Peoples Democratic Party, African Democratic Congress and New Nigeria Peoples Party.
The parties accused Tinubu of using strategic diplomatic postings to reward political allies and controversial figures.
They particularly faulted the nomination of former Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Mahmood Yakubu, describing it as scandalous.
The APC, however, dismissed the allegations as baseless and mischievous.
Two-year diplomatic vacuum
The President’s move comes amid rising public concern that Nigeria’s foreign missions have operated without substantive envoys since September 2023, when Tinubu ordered the withdrawal of all diplomats to reassess the country’s foreign policy direction.
Although the Federal Government completed vetting and security checks for several nominees as far back as April 2025, the appointment process stalled repeatedly, forcing missions to rely on chargés d’affaires and senior consular officers.
Tinubu attributed the prolonged delay in September to “complex political considerations.”
The PUNCH reported on November 4 that the President had ordered a final cleanup of the list after discovering that some nominees had died or become ineligible.
The Senate subsequently returned the list for adjustments.
By mid-November, presidency sources told Sunday PUNCH that the President would roll out appointments in phases, starting with envoys to major global capitals — a prediction fulfilled when Tinubu first nominated Ayodele Oke, Amin Dalhatu and retired Colonel Lateef Are for postings to the United Kingdom, United States and France.
Tinubu sends full 32-man list to Senate
Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, confirmed on Saturday that Tinubu had transmitted a second tranche of 32 nominees to the Senate for confirmation.