Reported by: Oahimire Omone Precious | Edited by: Gabriel Osa
A fresh wave of political and spiritual discourse has emerged following a new prophecy by Primate Elijah Ayodele, leader of the INRI Evangelical Spiritual Church. In a video message shared on the church’s official Facebook page, the cleric declared that Nigeria will, in the foreseeable future, elect its first female president — and that she would come from the Southeast region of the country.
The prophecy, delivered with unusual certainty, adds a striking dimension to national conversations around gender inclusion, regional equity, and the future of political leadership in Africa’s most populous nation. According to Ayodele, the development is not just a political possibility but a spiritual revelation pointing toward a major shift in Nigeria’s power dynamics.
Beyond politics, the cleric delved into Nigeria’s persistent security crisis, which has continued to worsen despite government interventions. He sharply criticized what he described as the authorities’ weak and misleading approach to dealing with kidnappings, terrorism, and violent crime. Ayodele warned that government engagement in negotiations with terrorists is creating a dangerous incentive structure that emboldens criminal groups rather than deterring them.
“Negotiation suggests that we are encouraging these actions,” he said, arguing that such tactics project weakness and fuel the belief that crime is a reliable path to financial gain.
In one of the most alarming parts of his message, Ayodele claimed that Nigeria’s security challenges are being manipulated by a small but powerful group. He asserted that only five individuals—whose identities he did not disclose—are orchestrating the chaos that has destabilized communities, disrupted economic activity, and weakened public trust in state institutions. According to him, insecurity has gradually evolved into a lucrative enterprise managed by vested interests profiting from national suffering.
He lamented that the crisis has been mishandled for too long, transforming what should have been treated as a national emergency into what he described as a “business,” where the lives and safety of citizens are traded for political and financial gains. Ayodele urged the government to stop issuing empty reassurances and instead adopt decisive, intelligence-driven strategies capable of dismantling the underlying networks fueling insecurity.
His prophecy about a Southeast female president has already begun sparking conversations online, especially among proponents of gender equality and advocates for increased political representation of the Southeast, a region long clamoring for greater inclusion at the federal level. Political analysts note that while no woman has yet held Nigeria’s highest office, growing calls for diversity and a more inclusive leadership model may create an environment where such a prediction gains more mainstream traction.
As debates continue, Ayodele’s statements—combining prophecy, political insight, and security critique—have intensified public scrutiny of Nigeria’s leadership trajectory. They also highlight the evolving intersection of faith, national politics, and public discourse in a country where religious figures remain influential voices in shaping public opinion.
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