TDA documented account of offshore shell companies, a $13 billion no-bid contract, an $11 million laundering-linked London mansion, alleged abductions, bribery, and a bloodline built on concealment
#SeyiTinubu #NigeriaCorruption #TinubuMustGo #Chagoury #LagosCalabарHighway #MoneyLaundering #NigeriaAccountability #WorldviewInternational
He was born Oluwaseyi Tinubu on October 13, 1985 — though even that foundational fact carries its own shadow. His mother is not Senator Oluremi Tinubu, the polished First Lady who has fronted the role for decades. Seyi is the product of a liaison between Bola Tinubu and Bunmi Oshonaike, a glamorous Nigeria Airways air hostess. According to published accounts, they met on a transatlantic flight, she became pregnant, and Tinubu — already legally married to Oluremi and with political ambitions beginning to crystallise — arranged for his wife to adopt the child, while Oshonaike disappeared into deliberate anonymity. Seyi was conceived while Tinubu and Oluremi were already legally married. The concealment was not accidental. It was, from the very beginning, the family business model: hide the truth, protect the brand, and let power do the rest.
That model has now scaled to national dimensions.

THE $13 BILLION QUESTION
In May 2024, the Nigerian federal government announced that construction had begun on the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway — a 700-kilometer megaproject to be built by Hitech Construction Company Ltd., a subsidiary of the Chagoury Group. The contract, valued at an estimated $13 billion, was awarded without a public bidding process, raising immediate allegations of favoritism and corruption.
The reason for the rush became apparent almost immediately.
Leaked corporate documents revealed that Seyi Tinubu co-owned an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands alongside Ronald Chagoury Jr., the son of tycoon Ronald Chagoury. The BVI — long the preferred jurisdiction of those seeking corporate anonymity — concealed the arrangement until documents leaked to the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists brought it to light. Africa Intelligence, a Paris-based investigative outlet, further reported that Nigerian Corporate Affairs Commission filings confirmed Seyi as an officially registered business associate of the Chagoury family.
It did not end there. Former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar publicly stated that Seyi serves as a director on the board of CDK Integrated Industries, a Chagoury Group subsidiary, and that the Lagos-Calabar contract was hurriedly awarded precisely because of this entangled personal business relationship — constituting a direct breach of Nigeria’s procurement laws.
The Presidency’s response was brazen in its audacity. Presidential spokesman Bayo Onanuga argued that Seyi joined the CDK board in 2018 and had every right to pursue legitimate business interests — as though the timing of board membership, and not the award of a $13 billion no-bid contract to his business partners, was the operative question.
It was not. The operative question is this: who benefits when a sitting president hands $13 billion — without tender, without competition, without transparency — to the business empire of his son’s offshore co-shareholder?
The answer is not Nigeria.
THE LONDON MANSION: A CORRUPTION TROPHY
Before his father ever took the presidential oath, Seyi had already demonstrated the family’s relationship with due diligence. A firm belonging to Seyi Tinubu purchased an $11 million London mansion that the preceding Buhari government had been seeking to confiscate as part of a probe into one of the biggest corruption scandals in Nigeria’s history. The property was acquired in 2017. President Buhari subsequently visited his successor’s son there in August 2021.
The legal term for acquiring assets linked to an active corruption probe — at a price that requires explaining — is money laundering. No Nigerian authority has investigated it. No British authority has publicly acted. The mansion stands.
THE BRIBE, THE ABDUCTION, AND THE NAKED STUDENT LEADER
In April 2025, Seyi Tinubu’s alleged methods of political control moved from financial architecture into something more visceral.
Comrade Atiku Abubakar Isah, the duly elected President of the National Association of Nigerian Students, stated publicly that Seyi Tinubu and the Minister of Youth Development invited him to Lagos and offered him ₦100 million — approximately $65,000 — to publicly support the Tinubu administration and withdraw student opposition. Isah refused.
What happened next was not subtle. Isah alleged that on April 15, 2025, gun-wielding thugs acting on the instructions of Seyi Tinubu abducted him in Abuja. He was beaten, subjected to what he described as the most cruel and dehumanising treatments, his clothes torn to shreds, and he was stripped naked. He was then taken to the NTA television studio and forced to record an involuntary statement under duress.
Days later, when Isah attempted to hold his official inauguration at The Wells Carlton Hotel in Asokoro, Abuja, thugs linked to Seyi Tinubu stormed the venue armed with cutlasses and guns. The attack also reportedly targeted former Governor of Kano State Senator Ibrahim Shekarau and former Kogi Governor Captain Idris Wada, who were present at the event. Attendees were robbed of phones and personal belongings.
Isah subsequently issued a retraction — then retracted the retraction. The pattern itself — allegation, recantation under apparent pressure, re-allegation — is, in Nigeria, a familiar signature of intimidation from a position of power that cannot be openly challenged.
THE BLOODLINE OF IMPUNITY
Analysts and commentators have noted that Seyi Tinubu surpasses even his predecessors in the long Nigerian tradition of presidential sons operating as shadow governors. Where others hid behind their fathers’ influence, Seyi operates in broad daylight — attending official state visits, directing student politics, sitting on boards of companies receiving state contracts — daring Nigerians to name what they are seeing.
His estimated net worth is placed between $50 million and $100 million. He has never held elected office. He has never won a public tender. He has never published an audited account of how that wealth was accumulated during his father’s tenure.
He did, however, find time in March 2025 to declare — in public, to a crowd of applauding youth — that his father is “the only president that is not trying to enrich his own pocket.”
The $13 billion no-bid contract to his business partners. The $11 million corruption-linked London mansion. The BVI offshore shell company. The alleged ₦100 million bribe. The abducted, naked, beaten student president. The concealed mother. The adopted identity.
This is not a family that enriches its pocket. This is a family that enriches its architecture — and leaves Nigerians to live inside the rubble.
Worldview International | Kio Amachree | Stockholm














