By Mohammed Bello Doka
Yesterday, April 10, 2026, the ancient walls of Birnin Kebbi trembled not from an earthquake, but from the thunderous heartbeat of a people reclaiming their own. Abubakar Malami, SAN, the Lion King of Kebbi politics, touched down after 123 days of forced exile from the soil that birthed him. And in that single moment, Kebbi stood still. Traffic froze. Markets emptied. The entire state held its breath as thousands upon thousands surged forward in a sea of green and white, waving ADC flags like battle standards in a war already won.
This was no ordinary homecoming. This was a resurrection. For 99 harrowing days, Malami languished in the cold grip of EFCC and DSS detention—invited, arrested, shuttled between cells, granted bail only to be rearrested, dragged through courts, and denied the freedom every citizen takes for granted. From December 8, 2025, when he walked into EFCC headquarters in Abuja honoring an invitation, until his eventual release on bail around March 22, 2026, the man who once commanded the justice system of Africa’s largest nation was reduced to a political prisoner. Nineteen more days followed post-bail limbo in Abuja before he could finally point the plane homeward. 123 days in total. One hundred and twenty-three days of calculated humiliation. One hundred and twenty-three days the enemies of progress thought would break him.
They failed spectacularly.
The moment his aircraft kissed Kebbi tarmac, the script flipped. Mammoth crowds described by eyewitnesses as the largest political gathering in the state’s recent memory swarmed the streets. Videos flooding social media captured the frenzy: vehicles packed with ecstatic supporters perched precariously on roofs, high-angle shots of endless human waves stretching toward the horizon at sunset, tents overflowing, and the unmistakable silhouette of Birnin Kebbi’s minarets watching over a political earthquake. “ADC everywhere you go!” became the battle cry. “2027 no joke!” the promise. The newly commissioned ADC State Secretariat in Birnin Kebbi wasn’t just a building—it was a declaration of war on the old order.

This return is more than symbolic. It is seismic.
Malami’s prolonged absence was never just about EFCC probes or legal technicalities. It was a naked attempt to decapitate the growing opposition in Kebbi, to silence the one voice capable of uniting the disaffected and charting a new course away from the suffocating grip of the ruling APC. Yet every day he spent in detention only amplified his legend. The “Lion King” tag, once affectionate, now carries the weight of prophecy. He emerges not weakened, but forged battle-hardened, unbowed, and flanked by a grassroots army that has waited, prayed, and mobilized in his name.
Kebbi did not merely welcome him back. It crowned him.
Look at the optics: the dust of political persecution still clinging to his sandals, yet the people responded with a welcome fit for a returning conqueror. Supporters from every ward, every local government, poured in. Loyalists who held the fort during his darkest hours—handles like @KafinHausaa, @VoiceAdc76246, and the verified Abubakar Malami NEWS page—broadcast the moment live, turning phones into megaphones for a revolution already underway. Even Malami’s own verified handle remained characteristically measured, letting the people’s roar speak louder than any tweet.
This is the new political reality Tinubu’s APC must confront: the old godfathers are falling. Defections are no longer whispers in smoke-filled rooms—they are public, defiant, and backed by tidal waves of public support. Malami’s ADC alignment is not a retreat; it is a strategic masterstroke. The 2027 gubernatorial contest, once dismissed as APC’s to lose, now looks like a date with destiny. “No retreat, no surrender,” one loyalist posted. The message is clear: Kebbi is awake, and it is hungry for change.
Critics will sneer, of course. They always do. “Political gimmick,” they’ll say. “Staged spectacle.” But spectacles don’t move like this. Staged crowds don’t climb vehicles at dusk with genuine tears in their eyes. Engineered rallies don’t bring an entire state capital to a standstill for hours on end. This was organic. This was raw. This was Kebbi speaking with one thunderous voice: our son has returned, and the game has changed.
One hundred and twenty-three days ago, they tried to bury Malami politically. Yesterday, Kebbi dug him up—and handed him the crown.
The Lion King is home. The ADC tsunami is here. And as 2027 looms, one thing is certain: Kebbi will never be the same again. The honored son has returned, and the state that stood still for him is now ready to march forward—together, unstoppable, and firmly in the grip of a new dawn.
Let the drums beat louder. The North is watching. Nigeria is watching. History is being written in Birnin Kebbi’s dust.
Mohammed Bello Doka can be reached via bellodoka82@gmail.com

