Remi Tinubu Sparks Outrage With Comments on Akara, Roasted Corn

Olawale Olalekan
3 Min Read

Nigeria’s First Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, has found herself at the center of a swirling online storm following her comments on akara (fried bean cakes), roasted corn, and kuli kuli. 

This comes as the First Lady urged struggling citizens to embrace low-capital street food businesses, such as selling akara, roasted corn, and kuli-kuli, which have sparked massive public backlash.  

​The viral statement has reignited a heated national debate over the widening disconnect between Nigeria’s political elite and ordinary citizens grappling with severe economic hardship.  

Tinubu made the comments on akara and roasted corn while addressing State House Correspondents after the Renewed Hope Initiative’s second-quarter meeting with wives of state governors, held at the State House, Abuja, on Wednesday.

She stated this while highlighting the efforts of the Renewed Hope Initiative to support vulnerable Nigerians through grants and other interventions.

According to her, beneficiaries of the initiative were given grants, not loans, to enable them to start businesses.

“We’re trying to give hope, and to start the Akara business doesn’t take a lot of money. To start roasting corn, or somebody even said kuli kuli doesn’t take much. We didn’t give them a loan; we gave it to them as a grant.

“So we’ve encouraged Nigerians as best as we could. What is within our hands, I have given, and I keep giving,” she said.

The First Lady said the initiative had also supported interventions in healthcare, agriculture, education, and social investment.

She said she donated N2bn to tackle tuberculosis, N1bn for breast cancer interventions, and N500m to address malnutrition.

“I remember giving for TB. When I heard there were so many TB cases, I gave N2 billion. To breast cancer, I gave a billion. For food malnutrition, I gave half a billion.

“So those are the things we’ve been doing and making sure we can make sure that whatever this government is trying to do, it will see the light of day,” she stated.

Tinubu added that the initiative had also provided scholarships, ICT training, and support for agriculture and social investment programmes.

She urged Nigerians not to lose hope despite the country’s economic challenges.

“The narrative has really changed, has changed to challenge the average man, whereas the average man is supposed to have hope. So I like the idea that Mr President says this is the Renewed Hope Agenda.

“We have to renew our hope, and that’s how we renew our hope, you know, and that’s what I have to tell Nigerians,” she said.

The remarks, however, triggered swift backlash on social media, with many Nigerians accusing the First Lady of trivialising the economic hardship facing ordinary citizens.

Below are some of the reactions;

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Olalekan Olawale is a digital journalist (BA English, University of Ilorin) who covers education, immigration & foreign affairs, climate, technology and politics with audience-focused storytelling.