Renowned Veteran Youth Leader and 2027 presidential aspirant, Abayomi-Mighty, has issued a sharp rebuke to the federal government over the rising trend of non-transparent foreign loan agreements, warning that the unchecked borrowing poses a grave threat to Nigeria’s sovereignty, economic independence, and generational stability.
In a press statement released, he lamented the increasing external debt profile — now crossing $52 billion, with no visible impact on key sectors such as education, public health, and rural infrastructure.
“We cannot continue to borrow in billions while the people are begging in baskets,” Mighty declared. “These loans are being signed in silence but will be paid back in sweat — by our children and their children.”
He questioned the rationale behind borrowing for white elephant projects while schools lack chalk, hospitals lack gloves, and children sleep hungry under bridges built with borrowed money.
“Every kobo borrowed must be defended in clear, public terms. What are we borrowing for? Who benefits? Where is the return on investment?”
A People-First Economic Vision
Abayomi-Mighty used the occasion to unveil a portion of his forthcoming “People Before Projects” economic framework, which emphasizes grassroots development, debt accountability, and citizen-led audits of public expenditure.
According to him, no future administration can afford to inherit a country in financial chains:
“The purpose of leadership is not to impress foreign lenders but to invest in local lives. Our roads, our farms, our clinics, our young people — these are the true foundations of GDP.”
A Call to Conscious Citizenship
In his usual Pan-African tone, he called on Nigerians across all states to awaken to their civic responsibilities:
“The time has come to rise — not in protest alone, but in purpose. Let us demand clarity. Let us vote for truth. Let us choose leaders who think beyond tenure, beyond tribe, and beyond kickbacks.”
As 2027 draws nearer, Abayomi-Mighty continues to emerge not just as a political figure, but as a voice for a new Nigeria — one built on transparency, justice, and the unshakable belief that impossible is dead.

