How Tinubu Sacked Finance Minister Wale Edun Weeks After Hon. Alex Mascot Exposed ‘Missing’ N1.15tr

President Bola Tinubu has removed the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr. Wale Edun, in a dramatic cabinet reshuffle that has sent shockwaves through the Federal Executive Council—and renewed attention on the lawmaker who first exposed the financial scandal now haunting the administration.
That lawmaker is Hon. Alex Mascot Ikwechegh, the fearless member representing Aba North/Aba South Federal Constituency, whose relentless questioning during a February budget defence hearing laid bare a staggering truth: ₦1.15 trillion in approved capital funds had vanished into thin air, with zero disbursement to any capital project across Nigeria.
It was Wednesday, February 25, 2026, when Hon. Mascot—a key member of the House Committee on Aids and Loans—took the floor at the Appropriation Committee’s budget defence session. Armed with insider documents from his committee assignment, he painted a disturbing picture: billions of dollars in loans had been secured, record revenues had been generated by FIRS and Customs, yet not a single kobo had reached any capital project. Roads, hospitals, schools—all left to rot while funds sat untouched.
Then came the question that silenced the entire room: “Why the capital of the Nigerian government remains at zero in 2026?”
When a flustered Minister Edun tried to shift responsibility to his Minister of State, Doris Uzoka-Anite, Hon. Mascot refused to back down. The committee adjourned and summoned her. She appeared the next day, confirmed the funds were approved, but blamed “pre-disbursement conditions.” Hon. Mascot was ready. He asked her a simple question: name one ministry that met all conditions and was still denied funding. She could not name a single one.
Exactly one week later, on March 3, Uzoka-Anite was removed as Minister of State for Finance—her third portfolio in two years.
Now, less than two months after that historic hearing, Wale Edun has also been sacked. The Secretary to the Government of the Federation announced his removal in a memo dated April 20, 2026, citing the need to “strengthen cohesion” in governance. Taiwo Oyedele, who was appointed Minister of State after Uzoka-Anite’s fall, has now been elevated to substantive Minister of Finance.
The official statements have never mentioned Hon. Mascot’s name. They never will. But Nigerians are not fools. The timeline speaks louder than any press release: a lawmaker asked tough questions about missing funds, and within weeks, two ministers who appeared before his committee have lost their portfolios.
This is not the first time Hon. Mascot has shaken the establishment. Just days after Uzoka-Anite’s removal, he made a bold political move, resigning from APGA and joining the Labour Party, where he was warmly received by Governor Alex Otti, who has described his performance as “magical.” His constituents in Aba North and Aba South—a commercial hub—now boast a representative whose influence reaches the highest levels of government.
But here is the question Nigerians must now ask: has he been settled?
Sacking both ministers from the finance ministry does not negate the fact that there has been financial malfeasance and misappropriation of funds. Two ministers have lost their jobs, but has a single kobo been recovered? Has any investigation been launched? Has anyone been charged with a crime?
The man from Aba who silenced the room with his questions has now gone mute. The money is still missing. And until Hon. Mascot speaks again, Nigerians are left to wonder: was he settled, or was he silenced?



