The Obi-Kwankwaso Movement, widely known as the OK Movement, has formally announced the rollout of its national and state organisational structures across Nigeria, describing the development as the launch of a coordinated nationwide platform for systemic reform and national transformation at a moment it characterised as a defining crossroads for the country.
In a statement issued by its National Publicity Secretary Justin Ijeh, the movement identified worsening economic hardship, a rising cost of living, and persistent insecurity as the core challenges it intended to mobilise citizens to address, framing the unveiling of its structures as a deliberate civic intervention rather than a conventional political exercise.
The movement said its central mission was to build a functioning system that prioritised the interests of ordinary citizens over those of the elite, arguing that Nigeria’s accumulated problems required structural reforms rather than political rhetoric.
“Our mission is anchored in a singular, unwavering conviction: Nigeria will be OK. We do not offer mere rhetoric; we offer a structured, disciplined pathway towards a country that works, not for the few, but for every citizen,” the statement said.
The movement acknowledged the widespread frustration among Nigerians, particularly those caught between economic instability and the threat of violence, but said it saw in that frustration the raw material for a genuine national renewal driven by organised citizen engagement.