President Bola Tinubu used Nigeria’s 2026 Democracy Day broadcast on Friday to announce the renaming of the completed Institute of Petroleum Studies in Kaduna as the General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua University of Geological Sciences and Engineering Technology.
Delivering his nationwide address to mark the anniversary of June 12, Tinubu framed the gesture as part of a broader tribute to figures who shaped Nigeria’s path to civilian rule.
He recognized “soldier-democrats of the June 12 struggle,” including Major General M.A. Garba, Major General Joseph Oshanupin, and Colonel Olusegun Oloruntoba, alongside pro-democracy campaigners such as Sylvester Odion-Akhaine and Ike Okonta.
Singling out Yar’Adua, the president said the federal government had approved the revitalization and renaming of the institute in recognition of his enduring contributions to nation-building and democratic development.
The newly designated university, according to reports, is intended to build capacity in critical sectors of Nigeria’s extractive and energy industries.
On the broader theme of the day, Tinubu drew a generational line connecting Nigeria’s independence struggle, the pro-democracy movement, and the present, declaring that today’s challenge is economic rather than political. “The heroes of June 12 secured political freedom. Our challenge is to secure economic freedom,” he said, calling on citizens to set aside division and embrace unity and confidence as the country works toward shared prosperity.
The man honoured by the gesture was a central, if tragic, figure in Nigeria’s transition history. He served as chief of staff, Supreme Headquarters, under General Olusegun Obasanjo from 1976 to 1979, helping steer the country’s first major handover from military to civilian rule.
After retiring from the army, he founded the People’s Democratic Movement (PDM), a political vehicle that went on to shape the ideological direction of several major Nigerian parties in the years that followed.
His later years were marked by confrontation with military authority. An older relative of former president Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, he died in December 1997 while in detention after being accused of coup plotting by military ruler Sani Abacha.
He has long been remembered as one of the political heavyweights of the aborted Third Republic and a vocal advocate for the validity of the June 12, 1993, presidential election.
The renaming was one of several commemorative gestures announced during the broadcast, which also included the conferment of national honours on dozens of pro-democracy activists and retired military officers who contributed to the restoration of civilian rule.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
President Tinubu’s renaming of the Kaduna Petroleum Institute as the General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua University of Geological Sciences and Engineering Technology stands as the centerpiece announcement of his 2026 Democracy Day address, a gesture honouring a man who helped steer Nigeria toward civilian rule in the late 1970s but died in detention under Abacha in 1997 for defending that same democratic ideal.
Beyond the tribute, the move signals a tangible investment: a fully completed institution being repurposed to build skilled manpower for Nigeria’s energy and extractive sectors.
Tinubu paired symbolic recognition of democracy’s architects with a concrete institutional legacy, while framing the nation’s next task after securing political freedom as the pursuit of economic prosperity.























