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Goodwin Ceramic FZE Warns Customers, General Public Over Fraudsters Activities

By Ebinum Samuel

Goodwin Ceramic FZE located in Ogun State Nigeria, has raised the alarm over suspected fraudsters using the name of the company to carry out nefarious activities, including using it to defraud unsuspecting members of the public.
In a letter signed and stamped by Goodwin Ceramic FZE, titled: “Disclaimer,” which was made available to our reporter, Goodwin Ceramic FZE warns: “This is to bring to the attention of the general public, the fraudulent activities of individuals illegally using the name Goodwill Ceramic to scam unsuspecting members of the public.”
The signed letter further states: “Goodwin Ceramic FZE with brand names, ‘Goodwill Ceramics, Mansion Ceramics,’ located at Guangdong free trade zone, Igbesa, Ogun State, does not conduct business via internet, WhatsApp, or any social media platforms.

“We also do not sell products directly to individuals. All our products are sold only through officially registered distributors who maintain an active account with the company, verify legitimate distributors, and call 07067331811.
“Anyone claiming to represent Goodwill Ceramics on the internet or social media platforms such as YouTube, Google, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, etc, is a fraudster! These accounts are fake and should be completely disregarded.”
Goodwin Ceramic FZE further warns members of the public, “Do not engage with any individual or platform claiming to be Goodwill Ceramics outside our official distribution network. Verify all transactions through our registered distributors, report any suspicious activity to the nearest law enforcement agency or our official customer service.”

PSC Desirous Of Good Governance Through Prudence And Finanicial Discipline.. Pledges To Partner With Institute Of Quantity Surveyors

By Ebinum Samuel

The Police Service Commission has pledged to partner with the Nigeria Institute of Quantity Surveyors in the promotion of excellence in cost management.

The Commission is poised to ensure good governance through prudence and financial discipline in the management of its human and material resources, including personnel of the Nigeria Police Force.

Chairman of the Commission, DIG Hashimu Argungu rtd mni, spoke today, June 2nd, 2025, when he received in audience, a strong delegation from the Nigeria Institue of Quantity Surveyors led by its President Kene Nzekwe.

DIG Argungu said the Commission will partner with the Institue to ensure that Nigerians with requisite knowledge in Quantity Surveying are recruited into the Police to assist manage Police national security infrastructure and service delivery.

The PSC Chairman said the Police needs the expertise of Quantity Surveyors, in the management of its physical infrastructure, stressing that the Commission needs the cooperation of the Nigeria Institute of Quantity Surveyors.

The President of the Institute, Kene Nzekwe had earlier told his host that the visit underscores “our commitment to meaningful collaboration in nation-building”.

Mr. Nzekwe said the Institue is fully aware of the vital role the Commission plays in shaping the integrity , structure and operational effectiveness of the Nigeria Police Force. ” We recognise your leadership in Strenghtening institutional frameworks and fostering within the policing ecosystem”.

The President of the Institute advocated for a greater inclusion of qualified Quantity Surveyors within the administrative and technical units of the Commission.

He noted that the management of Police infrastructure, housing, logistic centres, training schools, Command Offices and other capital projects, presents an opportunity to improve project delivery outcomes through the involvement of our professionals”

Mr. Nzekwe proposed that the Commission consider some areas of collaboration with the Institue to enhance project delivery, value-for-money and institutional capacity.

He noted that these areas of collaboration which includes dispute resolution and expert services; capacity building; project auditing and value for money assessment, will not only support the Commission’s strategic objectives but also foster a culture of accountability, professionalism and technical excellence in the management of public resources.

“We look forward to building a mutually beneficial partnership between the NIQs and the Police Service Commission -one that supports your noble mission and helps deliver impactful outcomes for the Nigeria people”, he told the PSC Chairman.

Dangote Refinery Symbolises Hope for Africa ―ECOWAS President

… We’ve capacity to meet ECOWAS’s petroleum needs ―Dangote

 

Towering over the Lekki Free Zone on the edge of the Atlantic, the Dangote Petroleum Refinery is more than just a feat of engineering; it has become a symbol of ambition, vision, and industrial self-reliance for an entire continent. Now, that promise has been affirmed by the region’s highest political and economic bloc, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).

 

During a high-level visit to the state-of-the-art 650,000 barrels-per-day facility, the President of the ECOWAS Commission, H.E. Dr Omar Alieu Touray, declared the refinery a beacon of hope for Africa’s future, and a clear demonstration of what the private sector can achieve in the drive for regional industrialisation. The delegation also included ECOWAS Commissioner for Infrastructure, Energy and Digitalisation, Sediko Douka; Commissioner of Internal Services, Prof. Nazifi Abdullahi Darma; Director of Private Sector/SME, Dr Tony Luka Elumelu; and Dr Touray’s Chief of Staff, Hon Abdou Kolley, among others.

“What I have seen today gives me a lot of hope, and everybody who doesn’t believe in Africa should come here. Visiting here will give you more hope because this is exactly what our continent should focus on,” Dr Touray remarked, visibly moved by the scale and sophistication of the facility. “We have seen something I couldn’t have imagined, and really the capacity in all areas is impressive. We congratulate Alhaji Dangote for this trust in Africa because I think you do this only when you have the trust, and he has a vision for Africa, and this is what we should all work to encourage.”

 

Dr Touray noted that the refinery, which produces fuel to Euro V standard, is critical for enabling the ECOWAS region to meet its 50ppm sulphur limit for petroleum products—a standard many imported fuels fail to meet, posing health and environmental risks across member states.

 

“We are still importing products below our standard when a regional company such as Dangote can meet and exceed these requirements,” he said. “The private sector must take the lead in ECOWAS industrialisation.”

 

The ECOWAS Commission President used the visit to call for stronger collaboration between governments and the private sector, stressing that policy decisions must reflect the real challenges and opportunities experienced by African industrialists.

“We believe our visit also serves as an opportunity to hear directly from Mr Dangote, about what the private sector expects from the ECOWAS community,” Dr Touray remarked, noting that as ECOWAS celebrates its 50th anniversary, the community is more committed than ever to bringing the private sector to the table—to listen to their perspectives and to understand how best to create an environment that works for them.

 

“We cannot continue to make decisions on behalf of the private sector from a distance. Visits like this provide us with first-hand experience and direct insight into the challenges they face—challenges that authorities and government officials must work to address,” he added.

 

Dr Touray said the time is ripe for the region to pursue an industrial strategy capable of addressing deep-rooted challenges such as youth unemployment, poverty, and insecurity.

 

“We often speak about poverty eradication and youth employment, but the government alone may not have the capacity to achieve these goals. Only the private sector can deliver the scale of impact required, and it is essential that we listen to them, understand how these objectives can be met, and identify the bottlenecks they face so that they can be effectively addressed. This is the only realistic path to creating jobs and fostering genuine prosperity across our economies.”

 

He pledged the Commission’s full support for enabling regional giants such as Dangote Group to access wider ECOWAS markets and urged other African nations to follow Nigeria’s example by building infrastructure that serves the continent, not just individual countries.

 

“Once again, I congratulate the Dangote Group and commit that ECOWAS Commission will do everything to open up the ECOWAS market for them, if not the entire African continent.”

 

President of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, led the ECOWAS delegation on a detailed tour of the facility, explaining the challenges and milestones involved in bringing the world’s largest single-train refinery to life.

 

He reiterated his longstanding position that Africa’s continued dependence on imported goods is unsustainable and hinders economic sovereignty.

 

“As long as we continue importing what we can produce, we will remain underdeveloped,” Dangote said. “This refinery is proof that we can build for ourselves at scale, to global standards.”

He noted that the Dangote Refinery is fully equipped to meet the petroleum needs of Nigeria and the entire West African region, countering claims that the facility would not produce enough for local and regional demand.

“There have been many claims suggesting that we don’t even produce enough to meet Nigeria’s needs, so how could we possibly supply other West African countries? But now, they are here to see the reality for themselves and, more importantly, to encourage other nations to embark on similarly large-scale industrial projects,” he said.

 

Noting that Africa will benefit greatly by encouraging trade among its countries, especially through value addition to the continent’s abundant resources, Dangote stressed how the refinery has helped Nigeria to bring down the cost of refined products and production costs across many sectors of the economy.

 

“Last year, when we began diesel production, we were able to reduce the price from N1,700 to N1,100 at a go, and as of today, the price has crashed further. This reduction has made a significant impact across various sectors. It has supported industries, benefited those of us in mining, and provided vital relief to the agricultural sector. The effect has been far-reaching,” he said.

 

He also noted that Nigerians are benefiting from local refining as the price of petrol has dropped significantly compared to neighbouring countries.

 

“In neighbouring countries, the average price of petrol is around $1 per litre, which is N1,600. But here at our refinery, we’re selling at between N815 and N820. Many Nigerians don’t realise that they are currently paying just 55% of what others in the region are paying for petrol. We also have a much larger initiative in the pipeline, something we’ve not yet announced but Nigerians should know that this refinery is built for them, and they will enjoy the maximum benefit from it,” he said.

 

He emphasised that this price reduction is a direct result of local refining, which continues to improve fuel affordability while enhancing energy security and reducing dependence on imports.

OBASANJO, ATIKU AND TINUBU AT A TIME LIKE THIS  

By Tunde Olusunle

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo was in his farmhouse address in Otta, Ogun State during the last weekend of January 2002. It was supposed to be a short get-away from work in Abuja where he was routinely out of bed before 6am and rarely retired before 2am the next morning. But work followed him to Otta, salient files from his Abuja office shipped over. Some of his senior aides and public officers also stopped by. From Otta, he was scheduled to undertake a two-day official visit to Katsina State. It was part of his countrywide tours, appraising the permeation of tangible dividends of democracy to Nigerians at all levels. I was on Obasanjo’s staff and had proceeded from Abuja on the advance team to tidy up preparations and to receive him. Sunday January 27, 2002, the evening before his scheduled departure from Otta en route Lagos to Katsina, however, unprecedented, massive explosions occurred in Lagos. The air was thick with uncertainty. Where could this earth-quaking “bombings” have taken place? Was it precedent to a coup to topple the nascent Obasanjo government?

The security ring around the President decided to be proactive. With the pervading confusion, the wisest probable thing to do was to move the President to safety, just in case it was a putsch. Should he be flown back to Abuja through Lagos? Should he drive to neighbouring Benin Republic as guest of his Beninoise counterpart? The genetically strong-willed Obasanjo would rather await security briefing. He wasn’t going anywhere, he said. Reports came in to the effect that the mishap occurred at the *Abalti Barracks, Ikeja Cantonment,* in Lagos. It occurred at the armoury of the military facility, where high calibre explosives were improperly stored. The tragedy claimed well over 1000 casualties, military and civilian. It displaced over 20,000, as it spread rapidly to adjoining districts and communities. Obasanjo had to be persuaded by his personal physician to get some sleep because of his loaded schedule ahead the following day. He stayed up, eyes wide open late into the night.

Obasanjo began his day on Monday January 28, 2002, at the Ikeja Cantonment. He toured the site of the occurrence and the adjoining areas which were flattened by the detonations and held a meeting with the military commanders. He considered rescheduling the Katsina trip in sympathy with the casualties. He was reminded by his protocol officials, however, that the Katsina visited had earlier been scheduled and cancelled because of the unavailability of the Governor of the state at the time, Umaru Musa Yar’Adua. Yar’Adua who succeeded Obasanjo in 2007, was abroad for a long spell, on cogent medical grounds. Before a sullen-faced Obasanjo addressed his hosts in Katsina when he eventually arrived, he called for two minutes of silence in memory of those that died in the Ikeja incident, and to empathise with the injured and displaced.

Ehigie Edobor Uzamere who represented Edo South Senatorial District in the seventh and eighth national assemblies, is 70 today. An elaborate event has been laid out to commemorate the landmark in Benin City, the Edo State capital. Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, GCON, is one of the very high profile dignitaries who was expected to grace the high profile programme. Reports indicate that members of Atiku’s entourage received reminders last night, detailing his itinerary. Earlier today, however, the Office of the Former Vice President put out the following statement:

*Cancellation of Benin Trip Due to Recent National Tragedies:*

*I write to inform you that His Excellency Atiku Abubakar, GCON, Waziri Adamawa, Vice President of Nigeria, (1999-2007), has reflected on the twin national tragedies in Niger and Kano States, where flooding and road traffic accidents have respectively claimed the lives of several Nigerians. In the light of this, he has decided to CANCEL his planned trip to Benin City, Edo State, this afternoon, June 1, 2025. This is to enable him mourn and pay his respects to the victims and their families.*

The statement was signed by Yahaya Ibrahim Zango, Principal Private Secretary to the former Vice President.

It is important to provide this background as counterpoint to the momentary retirement of President Bola Tinubu to Lagos for some official engagements, and the observance of the forthcoming *Eid-el-Kabir* festival. Tinubu left Abuja on Tuesday May 27, 2025, to attend a string of programmes. According to the press statement which announced his movements, he will remain in Nigeria’s old capital city until the conclusion of the *ileya* event on Monday June 9, 2025. To this extent, he will be away from Abuja for two weeks. Thus far, the President has attended ceremonies commemorating the 50th anniversary of the setting up of the Economic Community of West African States, (ECOWAS). He is equally commissioning and inspecting projects completed or initiated by his administration, to mark the second year anniversary of his presidency.

Before Tinubu’s departure from Abuja, he had been duly briefed about recent heightened attacks and incursions into parts of the North East, especially Borno State, which has been troubled by insurgents, for several years. He was acquainted about renewed, genocidal-scale killings in parts of the North Central, especially Benue and Plateau states. Bandits and miscreants have equally recently unsettled the peace and quiet of the Yoruba-speaking section of Kogi State, Okunland, across its six local government areas. Flooding in Niger State, also in the Middle Belt region, has claimed over 100 lives and disconnected parts of Nigeria’s North and South West, by the collapse of the all-important North-South bridge in Mokwa, in Niger State. Just yesterday, 22 members of the Kano State contingent to the recently concluded National Sports Festival in Ogun State, were consumed in an automobile mishap. The President’s prototype message of commiseration, and his directives to relevant departments of government to step in and provide succour in these various instances, is in the public space.

While spontaneous press releases and phone calls have their places in state administration, nothing compensates for that essential human touch, that conscientious empathy, in circumstances and periods of grave nationwide anguish such as we are in. The nation’s streets are lacquered by the blood of innocents, across our luminous geographical perimeters. The belly of the earth chokes and suffers reflux beneath the tonnages of unceasing and ill-timed cadavers it daily receives. *Death, to borrow from the evergreen lyrics of the revered, veteran Yoruba music artist, Ebenezer Obey, has become “two for half a penny.* Communities are displaced by the intolerable activities of rampagers and marauders, echoing memories of the 30-month bitter civil war which our country survived between 1967 and 1970. The living and medical conditions of internally displaced persons, (IDPs) in Benue State for example, are better not discussed. Yet, one generation of Nigerian toddlers bred and raised in those hovels, have never glimpsed another home, another community.

Times like this call for true, sincere leadership. Times like this demand way beyond the commandist outsourcing of responsibilities to scheduled appointees. They demand beyond monarchy-style overlordship as Nigerians perceive their leaders. They call for proactive and compassionate leadership. The Nigerian President is easily one of the most pampered across the world. He possesses every equipment and facility to enable his locomotion around the country, even the world, by the snap of his fingers. In a season such as this when gloom and despair pervade the nation, Tinubu should intentionally extricate himself from fawning aides and grovelling courtiers and demonstrate physical identification and genuine concern and humanity for his beleaguered constituents.

Very clearly, the campaign for the 2027 presidential election has been flagged off. President Tinubu is receiving endorsements and adoptions in places. His morale about the continuation of his job beyond his subsisting mandate which ends on May 29, 2027, is high. Tinubu, however, has pressing, present obligations to Nigerians, well ahead of 2027. The way he redeems these commitments by way of good governance of some sort, will largely determine the direction the hand of the clock ticks, come 2027. Except if the polls have been predetermined as has notoriously become the vogue with *Naija-style* democracy and electoral system.

*Tunde Olusunle, PhD, Fellow of the Association of Nigerian Authors, (FANA), is an Adjunct Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Abuja*

Fatal Accident Rocks Ikorodu as Articulated Truck Kills Commercial Rider

 

The Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) deeply regrets to report a grievous lone road traffic fatality which transpired in the early hours of today along the Sabo Onimalu corridor, inward Itamaga, in the Ikorodu axis of Lagos State.

 

 

The harrowing incident involved a commercial motorcyclist who, while reportedly navigating at an uncontrollably high velocity, tragically collided with a fully loaded articulated truck transporting flour.

 

According to Mr. Adebayo Taofiq, Director of Public Affairs and Enlightenment at LASTMA, preliminary findings from the on-site investigation indicate that the motorcycle’s brake system failed catastrophically, causing the rider to lose control and crash into the moving trailer, resulting in instant death.

 

LASTMA Officers, who arrived promptly as the first emergency responders, took swift and decisive action to manage the ensuing chaos and secure the accident scene.

 

During this intervention, it was discovered that the driver of the articulated vehicle had fled the location in a bid to evade responsibility. Demonstrating commendable professionalism and presence of mind, LASTMA personnel embarked on a rapid pursuit, successfully apprehending the absconding driver.

 

Lastma personnel immediately transferred the arrested driver to the operatives of the Nigeria Police Force attached to the Shagamu Road Division, Ikorodu, for further investigation and potential prosecution under the relevant traffic and criminal statutes.

 

The mangled remains of the deceased motorcyclist were tragically found trapped beneath the truck. With clinical precision and due sensitivity, LASTMA officials extricated and evacuated the corpse. The body was thereafter handed over to members of his family who rushed to the accident scene after receiving phone calls from his other motorcyclists.

 

In a solemn response to the tragic event, the General Manager of LASTMA, Mr. Olalekan Bakare-Oki, conveyed his profound condolences to the family of the deceased. He invoked divine comfort and strength for them in this moment of irrevocable loss and emphasized the importance of heightened vigilance on the part of road users.

 

Mr. Bakare-Oki further used the occasion to deliver a firm appeal to the leadership of commercial motorcycle operators’ unions across the State. He urged them to intensify sensitization campaigns among their members, emphasizing the imperatives of vehicular integrity, adherence to safety protocols, and unwavering compliance with traffic regulations.

 

He reiterated the Lagos State Government’s policy on the restricted movement of commercial motorcycles along some corridors, highways and bridges, urging total conformity in the overriding interest of public safety and order.

 

“It is of utmost urgency that operators of commercial motorcycles assume greater responsibility by subjecting their bikes to routine mechanical checks—especially essential components such as brakes. The loss of life resulting from such preventable mechanical failures is both regrettable and unacceptable,” Mr. Bakare-Oki stated with gravity.

 

In conclusion, the General Manager enjoined the general public, particularly road users, to remain collaborative with LASTMA by reporting all traffic-related emergencies, infractions, or instances of personnel misbehavior via the Authority’s dedicated toll-free hotline: 0810000527862.

 

The Lagos State Traffic Management Authority reaffirms its unyielding commitment to the preservation of lives and the promotion of orderly conduct across the metropolis. Road users are urged to imbibe a culture of caution, respect for traffic laws, and civic responsibility at all times.

 

 

NDLEA busts syndicate sponsoring pilgrims with cocaine to hajj, arrests 3 kingpins in Kano.Nabs 2 Saudi-bound pilgrims, businessman going to Iran for ingesting 155 cocaine wraps; intercepts N9.3billion worth of opioids in Rivers

 

By Ebinum Samuel

Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have uncovered and dismantled a syndicate that sponsors hajj pilgrims who also serve as couriers to move cocaine to Saudi Arabia during pilgrimage. This followed the arrest of leaders of the cartel in Kano.

The arrest of the kingpins: Abubakar Muhammad, Abdulhakeem Muhammed Tijjani, and Muhammad Aji Shugaba on Tuesday 27th and Wednesday 28th May 2025 in Kano was a follow-up to the arrest of two pilgrims: Ibrahim Umar Mustapha and Muhammad Siraj Shifado at the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport, Kano on Monday 26th May during the outward clearance of passengers on Ethiopian Airline flight ET 940 to Jedda, Saudi Arabia. The interdiction of the intending pilgrims at the NDLEA final screening point at the Kano airport was based on credible intelligence. When they were taken for scanning, the result confirmed ingestion of illicit substances. They were subsequently placed on excretion observation during which they excreted 45 wraps of cocaine each, bringing the total for both to 90 pellets with a total weight of 1.04kg.

Investigation soon unraveled their sponsors as leaders of a notorious drug trafficking network, which specializes in trafficking illicit drugs to Saudi Arabia. A swift follow-up operation was carried out, and the trio of Abubakar Muhammad, Abdulhakeem Muhammed Tijjani, and Muhammad Aji Shugaba were arrested on Tuesday 27th and Wednesday 28th May 2025 in Kano.

In a related development, NDLEA operatives at the Kano airport on Wednesday 28th May intercepted a 60-year-old businessman Chinedu Leonard Okigbo during the outward clearance of Qatar Airways flight QR1432 to Iran. His body scan confirmed he ingested illicit substances as a result of which he was placed on excretion observation during which he excreted 65 wraps of cocaine weighing 1.41kg.

At the Port Harcourt Ports Complex, Onne, Rivers state, no fewer than seven watch-listed containers were positioned for joint examination by NDLEA officers, men of Custom Service and other security agencies between Wednesday 28th and Friday 30th May, during which 825,200 bottles of codeine based syrup and trodol worth Five Billion Seven Hundred and Seventy Six Million Four Hundred Thousand Naira Only (N5,776,400,000) in street value were seized while a total of Five Million One Hundred Thousand (5,100,000) pills of opioids especially tapentadol 225mg worth Three Billion Five Hundred and Seventy Million Naira Only (N3,570,000,000) were recovered. This brings the combined street value of the opioids to Nine Billion Three Hundred and Forty-Six Million Four Hundred Thousand Naira Only (N9,346,400,000.00)

In another operation in Kano, NDLEA operatives on patrol along Kano- Maiduguri road Friday 30th May intercepted the duo of Abubakar Hussein, 42, and Sahabi Adamu, 53, with Nine Hundred Thousand US dollars ($900,000) cash suspected to be counterfeit. The suspects and the exhibit will be transferred to the appropriate agency for further investigation.

While a total of 390 compressed blocks of skunk, a strain of cannabis weighing 275.300kg were recovered from a parked Toyota Sienna vehicle marked YLA-408GG along Ngurore – Yola road, Adamawa state on Tuesday 27th May, NDLEA operatives in Kwara on Saturday 31st May arrested a notorious female drug dealer, Alhaja Mutiat Abdul-Fatai at Oja Oba area of Ilorin where various quantities of opioids including tramadol, flunitrazepam and codeine-based syrup were seized from her.

The War Against Drug Abuse, WADA, social advocacy activities by NDLEA Commands equally continued across the country in the past week. Some of them include: WADA sensitization lecture delivered to students and staff of Government Day Senior Secondary School, Kwasarawa, Katsina; Corpus Christi College, Achi, Enugu; Epignosis Standard College, Onitsha, Anambra; Government Girls Secondary School, Utai, Wudil LGA, Kano; and Government Girls Secondary School, Calabar, Cross River, among others.

While commending the officers and men of MAKIA, PHPC, Kano, Kwara, and Adamawa Commands of the Agency for the arrests and seizures of the past week, Chairman/Chief Executive Officer of NDLEA, Brig. Gen. Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd) equally praised their counterparts in all the commands across the country for pursuing a fair balance between their drug supply reduction and drug demand reduction efforts.

Two Years of President Tinubu: A Business Perspective

  By Abdul Samad Rabiu   As Nigeria marks two years under the leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, I believe it is important to reflect, not from the lens of politics, but from the perspective of business, of industry, and of the economy. I speak not only as the Chairman of BUA Group – one of Africa’s largest conglomerates, but also as someone who has lived through the complexity of Nigeria’s reforms. I have seen the cost of dysfunction, the burden of inefficiency, but more importantly, the promise of a level playing field and the dividends of decisive governance.     FUEL SUBSIDY REMOVAL   The removal of the fuel subsidy is one of the most important decisions taken by this administration. Before that, Nigeria was selling PMS at 200 or 250 Naira per litre, which was about 25 or 30 cents. I doubt there was any country in the world where fuel was being sold at that price. During my trip to Saudi Arabia for the lesser Hajj in February this year, I checked the pump price at one of the petrol stations as we drove from Jeddah to Mecca. When I converted the price to Naira, it was almost 1,500 Naira per litre. That was Saudi Arabia.   We could simply not afford the subsidy. It was not just Nigerians who were benefiting from it. We were subsidising the entire region. I remember visiting Niger Republic a few years ago when President Bazoum honoured us. During dinner, he joked and said, “Thank you for the subsidy.” He said 100 percent of all PMS consumed in Niger was coming from Nigeria because it would cost them three times more to import. There was no incentive for them to bring in their own fuel or refine crude at their own refinery. This was the situation across the region.   Today, I understand that our fuel consumption has dropped by almost 40 to 50 percent. It is not because Nigerians are consuming less, but because neighbouring countries have stopped tapping into our subsidised fuel. The PMS is still cheaper in Nigeria, even at 800 or 900 Naira per litre, but the logistics no longer support easy access. Countries like Niger and Benin Republic still take fuel from Nigeria, but others have stopped.   The removal of subsidies was needed not only to save the economy but to ensure that Nigerians alone benefit from what is imported. Even if there must be subsidy, it should be for Nigerians only. The money saved is now being channelled to infrastructure, to better support for states, and to other developmental priorities. All the states are receiving more money now, and that has made a real difference.   I am of firm opinion that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu made the right decision, and he made it boldly. On the first day he took office, he did what everyone knew had to be done but no one dared to do. He acted immediately. Many criticised him, but he did the right thing, and it saved the country. Had we continued under that burden, only God knows where we would be today. I always say, Mr President is probably the only one who had the courage to take such hard and necessary decisions.   ON THE UNIFICATION OF THE FOREIGN EXCHANGE REGIME   The unification of the foreign exchange market is another critical reform. Before this, many of us in the business community spent most of our time chasing foreign exchange. I personally spent half of my time trying to get FX from the Central Bank of Nigeria. The CBN was the only source of official exchange, offering FX at around 500 Naira when the parallel market was 800 or 900. No business could survive outside the CBN structure.   Every two weeks, we would go to Abuja to seek allocations. It was exhausting and inefficient. You had to camp there for three or four days before Allocation Monday, waiting for the CBN to allocate dollars. Today, I have met the new CBN Governor, Mr Cardoso, only once in two years. The reason is simple: I do not need to go to Abuja now to get foreign exchange. The system is open. It is working.   This was also a bold move by President Tinubu. It was necessary, and he took that decision as well. We are very glad because today we can focus on our businesses. These reforms are saving the economy.   FAIRNESS, SANITY AND STABILITY IN BUSINESS   Under this administration, we have seen a return to fairness and stability in business. We no longer worry about arbitrary shutdowns or politically motivated disruptions. Let me give a real example. We started a new business in Port Harcourt four or five years ago under BUA Foods, operating at the Rivers Ports under a concession with the Nigerian Ports Authority. It was going very well. One day, we woke up to a letter stating that the concession had been revoked, the terminal shut down, and the lease agreement terminated. There was no prior warning, no issue, no conflict.   Later, we discovered that the Managing Director of NPA at the time decided to close the business simply because our operations were competing with those of her friend. She wanted to impress her friend. That was the only reason. Today, that kind of thing cannot happen. Nobody would dare take such an action under President Tinubu. You can wake up now without fear that your business has been shut down by an agency or politician.   That stability is critical. That Port Harcourt plant alone has seen over 500 million dollars in investment and has employed over 4,000 people. The confidence this government has brought is real, and it is helping us plan better.   I must also personally acknowledge former President Muhammadu Buhari. When our Port Harcourt plant was unfairly shut down, it was his intervention that saved it. I had the privilege of explaining the situation to him. He agreed it was wrong and acted. He said he would not permit injustice under his watch. That decision saved the business. But the reality is, I had access. What if I did not? That is the difference today. Now, nobody needs access to the President to be treated fairly. Everyone knows that if you do something wrong under President Tinubu, you may lose your job or even face prosecution and go to jail. That is why I can now spend more time focusing on the business and relaxing.   The President Tinubu reforms are creating a level playing field. Like I said previously, every business had to lobby the CBN for FX. If you did not, your business would collapse. Now, you do not need to go to Abuja. You just focus on your operations.   INFRASTRUCTURE AS A KEY DRIVER OF DEVELOPMENT   In infrastructure, the difference is also clear. Look at the Lagos-Calabar highway. Look at the Sokoto-Badagry road. Look at the Kwara projects we are executing under the tax credit scheme. Look at Kano-Kongolam. Look at the Okpella to Kogi State corridor. These projects are progressing because of the savings from subsidy removal and FX unification. With more revenue, Nigeria is building.   These roads and others being built are critical because logistics have become a major challenge. Transporting goods from Lagos to the North is very expensive due to bad roads. Now, the President is addressing this. With better infrastructure, logistics will improve, and businesses will grow. These reforms have enabled long-term planning and serious investment.   BUA WILL CONTINUE TO BET ON NIGERIA   Since President Tinubu took office, BUA Group has invested over one billion dollars in the Nigerian economy. We are expanding our food business, doubling our flour and pasta facilities in Port Harcourt and building another in Lagos. Demand is increasing. People are earning more. Confidence is returning. We have also completed the first POP plaster manufacturing plant in Nigeria which is now operating and are soon starting construction of a 30MW solar energy project in Sokoto State.   In the oil and gas sector, we are completing our LNG project in Ajaokuta, Kogi State. These investments are possible because of stability that has been brought about by President Tinubu’s reforms. We can plan now. The exchange rate has been fairly stable for almost a year. FX is accessible. Money is coming in from different sources, and investors are responding. If you want 200 million dollars a week for trade, you can get it without lobbying anyone at the Central Bank. These are the results of good policies.   ON FOOD SECURITY   When I met President Tinubu recently, he raised concerns about food prices. He wanted to know what BUA Foods was doing. I explained that his six-month tariff waiver had worked. It disrupted hoarding in the rice market. In Nigeria, the rice harvest is short and runs for about three months. Middlemen were buying paddy rice, hoarding it, and raising prices post-harvest. This artificial scarcity drove prices to as high as 110,000 Naira per bag. The farmers did not benefit. Farmers just wanted to sell and move on yet some people were buying from them, hoarding it, and creating a food crises in the country.   The temporary waiver allowed rice to be brought in, and milled immediately. The hoarders were cut out. Prices began to drop. It was a short-term solution, but it worked. It showed foresight. I told the President it helped and that if the situation persists, further steps can be taken. But for now, it has made a difference.   PRESIDENT TINUBU’S NIGERIA FIRST POLICY AND BACKWARD INTEGRATION   President Tinubu’s Nigeria First policy has aligned well with our own belief in backward integration. Our cement business is almost entirely local. We mine our own limestone. We use Nigerian gas even though it is dollar-denominated. The only foreign element is the equipment, and even that benefits from government concessions for mining equipment which everyone else in the industry benefits. If we had to import cement today, prices would be over 15,000 Naira per bag. Nigeria does not have the port infrastructure to even handle the import volume. Producing locally has saved the economy and stabilised the sector.   We are doing more, and we will continue to do more. Nigeria has everything—population, arable land, resources, water, and now, strong leadership under President Tinubu. We believe in Nigeria because the fundamentals are now strong. My advice to all is to take a Bet on Nigeria. This is the place to be.   So for me, what has this administration done right? First, it removed the fuel subsidy which was the biggest economic scam in our history. Second, it unified the foreign exchange market and third, it restored stability, fairness, and confidence in the economy. These are the foundations of growth. Nigeria is full of potential. With the right leadership, which we now have, there is no limit to what we can achieve.   – Rabiu is the Founder and Chairman, BUA Group

TEARDROPS FOR SHEHU IYAL, “CAPTAIN OF THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC”

 

By Tunde Olusunle

It was not the kind of news you expected, when it rode on the wings of the evening breeze of Thursday May 15, 2025. The opening months of the year have been bad enough with reference to the very sad, untimely departures of well-known colleagues with whom we served in the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo. The ranks of “alumni” of principal officers who served in that circa, had been depleted this year alone by the eternal exits of notable members of that team. Major General Christopher Jemitola, who was aide-de-camp to Obasanjo, during his second term, and Dr Doyin Okupe, the first of three media advisers who served the former President, had passed in quick succession in the months of February and March this year. But here on the telephone was Oladimeji Jimoh, a technician who managed heavy duty appliances for the genial Captain Shehu Usman Iyal and I, relaying the unpalatable news of his transition.

 

Iyal and I first met in the earliest days of the politicking which produced Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria’s former military Head of State, as presidential candidate of the Peoples’ Democratic Party, (PDP). His aviation outfit, *Dana Afri-Air International Ltd,* it was, which flew Obasanjo around and about Nigeria during those tasking meetings with prominent individuals, engagements with various political tendencies and jaw-jawing with disparate groups, preceding the party’s primary and the subsequent presidential poll. Iyal’s Afri-Air provided the 19-seater *Dornier 228* turbo-prop airplane, which we flew between October 1998 and February 1999, when Obasanjo was elected President. I was Obasanjo’s campaign media attache which implied I travelled with him wherever he went. I managed a trim team which consisted of a photographer, Tumo Ojelabi, and a videographer, Taiwo Akinyemi, who moved around with us.

 

Travelling together in that small plane the days, weeks and months was something of a unifier. As the unmistakable regulars on every trip, we all became close-knit working on the same project with a unanimity of resolve. Apart from Obasanjo, there were Otunba Oyewole Fasawe; Chief Tunde Osunrinde; Dr Femi Majekodunmi; Ad’Obe Obe; Tokunbo Adeola; Bodunde Adeyanju; Andy Uba; Onukaba Adinoyi-Ojo, among others. It was a function of Iyal’s commitment to the Obasanjo presidential project, that he elected, dedicatedly, to travel with us all through the campaign trail, rather than sit back in the comfort of his office. He diligently ensured operational fluidity and availed his pilots his variegated experiences garnered over the years.

 

Following Obasanjo’s inauguration as President, Commander-in-Chief on May 29, 1999, Iyal was appointed *Special Assistant to the President on Aviation Matters.* True, there was an Aviation Minister and a Commander for the Presidential Air Fleet, (PAF), Obasanjo usually needed second opinions on issues. To be sure, it was the same way Obasanjo benefited from the aggregate wisdoms of retired, very senior military officers, who served in his administration. Generals Theophilus Yakubu Danjuma and Aliyu Mohammed Gusau, for instance were both former Chiefs of Army Staff, (COAS). Abdullahi Mohammed was pioneer head of the defunct Nigeria Security Organisation, (NSO). They are all very distinguished and decorated military icons, who were within earshot to dissect issues with the President. Such was the multilayered, experiential resources Obasanjo benefited from in many sectors.

 

As the Obasanjo administration settled down, his appointees who were quartered in hotels for several months, were finally allocated residences, mostly in housing estates. Providentially, Captain Iyal and I found ourselves in the same estate in Maitama District, Abuja. Our colleagues in the State House who were in the same estate included: Dr Gbolade Osinowo, (of blessed memory); Handel Okoli; Tokunbo Adeola; Ajuji Ahmed and Ambassador Baba Gana Zanna, Director of Protocol to the Vice President. It soon became imperative to have an estate chairman to coordinate common services, principally security and sanitation, in the estate. At the very first meeting we had, Iyal nominated me for the job. Since we had 13 houses in the compact estate, the thinking was that the brief would be rotated on an annual basis. When we called a meeting to effect change after a year, Iyal suggested that I had done well and should be retained on the assignment. I thought he took advantage of my being the youngest landlord in the estate who he fondly addressed as his “junior brother.” And that was how I served as Chairman of the estate for over 20 years!

 

I had a special relationship with Captain Shehu Iyal. We flew around the world with President Obasanjo as he strove to imprint the name of Nigeria on global consciousness after long years of military rulership had strained the country’s relationship and perception in the eyes of the world. We enjoyed jokes and banters in our corners of the presidential jet. Our relationship went on the ascendancy when he realised that I was born in Kaduna, capital of the primordial North Central State, his home state. He hailed from the historical city of Zaria, reputed for being host to one of Nigeria’s largest concentrations of citadels of learning within one city. Iyal and I were never short of subjects to talk about. Iyal indeed attended the famous *St Paul’s College, Kufena, Zaria,* an Anglican school, despite being from a Muslim family. The realisation that my brother, Dr Toba Olusunle attended the same institution years after he, Iyal, graduated, brought Iyal and I even closer. Since he had adopted me his younger sibling, I deferred to him being evidently younger.

 

His cultivated, cosmopolitan, carriage became clearer to me after these findings. The puzzle around his liberal outlook began to straighten out as I pieced aspects of his constitution together. His vocation as an aviator would also have exposed him to people and publics, across tongues, creeds and cultures. Captain Iyal loved dialogue. He would invite me for dinner and the meeting would snowball into robust discussions, typically about contemporaneous issues, the state of the nation. He “conferred” a doctorate on me before I eventually got one. He would hail me as *Mallam Tunde, PhD English,* usually because of what he perceived as my grammatically elevated perspectives. We would both laugh. I reciprocated by serenading him as *Captain of the Federal Republic, (CFR)!* Iyal, by the way, never served spirits or liquors in his house. Occasionally, however, he indulged me. Especially whenever feigned I couldn’t put my thoughts together because I needed a kick by way of a tot or two. He seemed to have a liking for journalists and had many friends amongst us. On a casual visit to his home, you were likely to find Steve Itugbu or Yomi Odunnuga or Henry Ugbolue, all experienced media practitioners. He trusted our analytical objectivity.

 

Captain Iyal listed me on the inaugural British Airways direct flight from Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, (NAIA), Abuja, to London Heathrow Airport, (LHR), back in February 2001. Segun Runsewe, my friend and former Director-General of the National Council for Arts and Culture, (NCAC), was on the same trip. That innovation by BA which has been sustained into the 25th year now, has reduced the hassles, troubles and traumas of travellers who previously had to board local flights from Abuja to Murtala Mohammed International Airport, (MMIA), Lagos, before connecting to London. He had so much belief in my ability to make so much authorial capital out of situations and experiences with my pen, even when others cannot seem to find that pin in a haystack. His generosity of spirit knew no boundaries. When yuletide hampers streamed in for him, he would typically invite me to his home to take my pick from a host of gifts, boxes and baskets in his place.

 

Iyal, who would have been 70 this year, was an alumnus of the Ahmadu Bello University, (ABU), Zaria. He was trained in some of the best flying schools around the world, beginning from the iconic Nigeria College of Aviation Technology, (NCAT), Zaria. He was certified as assistant flying instructor at Rogers Aviation, Belford, United Kingdom, and logged four full decades in the cockpit, classroom and administrator’s desk, all within the aviation ecosystem. He was knowledgeable, immensely articulate and was never shy of facing the cameras and mini-recorders of prying journalists who desired information on the state of the aviation industry. He once served as a Board Member of the Skyway Aviation Handling Company Ltd, providers of ground handling services. He equally headed the aviation committee of the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, (NAHCON), responsible for the safe and seamless freighting of Nigerian pilgrims to Saudi Arabia, for years.

 

Captain Shehu Usman Iyal, who was deservedly decorated with the respected national honour of *Officer of the Order of the Niger, (OON),* for his services to national development was a genuine gentleman. He would typically walk his guests to their cars or to their homes, like when we resided in the same housing estate. This was the same way he accompanied them to the elevators of the serviced apartment he lived in Abuja in recent years. He will be missed for his inquisitiveness, his laughter, his smiles, his infinite capacities as an exemplary brother and host. He passed in Lagos Thursday May 15, 2025, and his body was flown to Zaria his birthplace early the next day, Friday May 16, for interment. May his soul rest peacefully in the bosom of the Most High God.

 

 

*Tunde Olusunle, PhD, Fellow of the Association of Nigerian Authors, (FANA), is an Adjunct Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Abuja*

Lawyer Writes IGP On Policeman’s Involvement In N10m Debt Recovery

 

By Ebinum Samuel

The human rights lawyer, Giwa-Amu, has petitioned the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mr Kayode Egbetokun, urging him to look into the case of a particular police officer’s involvement in a civil case, stressing that the Nigeria Police Force is not a debt recovery institution.
Giwa-Amu also copied the Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, Federal Ministry of Justice, the Commissioner of Police, Anti-Human Trafficking/Visa Fraud, Force Criminal Investigations Department (FCID), the Nigeria Police, Force Headquarters, and the Deputy Inspector-General of Police, Nigeria Police Force, Force Criminal Investigations Department (FCID), Abuja.
The petition, dated 29th of May 2025, is titled: “Re: Investigation Activities – Police Invitation Letter Dated 12th May, 2025 Ref No: CR:3000/X/FHG/AHTU-VF/T.B/Vol. 7/23 Prince Akenzua Eghe Niyi; Giwa-Amu Obafemi (The Directors/CEO, Felix Stevenson Limited Of 318, Akin Ogunlewe Street, Victoria Island, Lagos.)”
The Notice Of Suits No, Ref No: 1035902025 – Obafemi Giwa-Amu And ORS. VS. Lexy Nigeria Limited And ANOR, And Suit No. FHC/L/CS/1018/25 – Obafemi Giwa-Amu And ORS. VS. The Nigeria Police Force And ORS.

The petition reads: “We act as Solicitors to Felix Stevenson Limited, Prince Akenzua Eghe Niyi and Giwa-Amu Obafemi, hereinafter referred to as “our clients” on whose direct instructions we write.
“We wish to bring to your attention the above suits which are pending in Court, and are the subject matter of your investigation activities, under which your Police Investigation Letter dated 12th of May, 2025, with Ref No: CR:3000/X/FHQ/AHTU-VF/T.B/VOL. 7/23 was issued and directed to our clients. Please find attached a copy of the Police Investigation Letter dated 12th of May, 2025, for ease of reference.
“It is important that you are informed, and please, note that while Suit No/Ref No: 1035902025 – Obafemi Giwa-Amu and Ors. Vs. Lexy Nigeria Limited and Anor touches directly on the breach of contract between our client and your complainant, Lexy Nigeria Limited represented by Prince Leye Adepite, as Defendants, your complainant seeks to employ a criminal complaint against your office, under the guise of criminal investigation, to influence the outcome of the suit in Court through self-help.
“We advise against your falling prey to the antics of your complainant, as it has been laid to rest by the Supreme Court in DIAMOND BANK PLC VS. HRH EZE, PETROL CONTINENTAL NIG. LTD V. EFCC (2018) LPELR-SC 375/2012, that:
“ ‘…. I say this now and again, our security agencies,
particularly the police, are not debt recovery agencies.’

“The above Supreme Court decision was followed in other Supreme Court decisions in OGBONNA VS OGBONNO (2014) LPELR-22308 CA (2014) 23 WRN 48 and FAJEMIROKUN V. COMMERCIAL BANK (CREDIT LYONNAIS) NIG. LTD & ANOR (2002) 10 NWLR PT.774, PAGE 95 AT 100.
“On the instructions of our clients, and in the protection of their fundamental human rights, given the fear of imminent breach of fundamental human rights by your office, we have equally filed against your office in Suit No. FHC /L/CS/1018/25 – Obafemi Giwa-Amu and Ors. vs. The Nigeria Police Force and Ors, whose Originating Summons have been duly served on your office directly and through your Legal/Prosecution Department, Force Criminal Investigation Department (FCID), Force Headquarters, Abuja.
“We have equally petitioned your Inspector-General of Police on the conspiracy, connivance and condoning of your office with your complainant to bring about a false allegation of a criminal charge against our clients, to set up our clients for arrest, unlawful detention and malicious prosecution.
“The facts of the case which have given birth to a false criminal complaint before you by the complainant are as follows: That on the 5th day of April 2024, your complainant entered into a contract for Sourcing Of Third Party Collateral For Loans with our clients.

“That your complainant, in breach of the said contract, led our clients to suffer the loss of N102,000,000 in general damages, and N12,000,000 in Special Damages.
“That your complainant, in line with the contract, voluntarily deposited N10,000,000 as a “commitment fee” towards the Sourcing of Party Collateral for Loans needed by your complainant.
“That upon delivery of the said Third Party Collateral for the said Loan, your complainant failed to provide post-dated cheques to ensure repayment of the loan and failure to utilise the said collateral within the 60 days, leading to a fundamental breach of the said contract.
“It is this commitment fee of N10,000,000 which your complainant demanded a refund in the letter dated 29th of January 2025 titled: “Request for refund of deposit for third party collateral sourcing”, that has become the basis for the frivolous, vexatious and false criminal allegations against our clients, which your office has been called upon to investigate and recover the said N10,000,000 under the guise of criminal investigation.

“Kindly be advised that this matter is sub judice i.e. that they are pending before Courts of competence jurisdiction, and any attempt or further attempt by your office to, in any way howsoever, assist your complainant by way of self-help or any other illegal way disguised as criminal investigation or investigation activities, to seek to recover or recover the said amount, will amount to contempt of Court, and our office shall be unsparing in applying all legal means to get justice for our clients.”
Giwa-Amu added: “We urge you, in the interest of justice, salutary police practices that your office is known for, dedication to duty that your office has been celebrated for, and decorum, which is your forte, to refuse the complainant’s complaint as civil and sub judice.”

Ogun Community Cries Out Over Activities of Suspected Land Grabbers

 

Ogun Community Cries Out Over Activities of Suspected Land Grabbers
… As residents Ogun flee for safety

Residents of Maso Community in Sagamu Area of Ogun State have sent a save Our Soul message to the Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun, the Ogun State Governor, Prince Dapo Abiodun and other eminent Nigerians over the activities of suspected land grabbers who had invaded the community.

Speaking to Journalists in an emotional ladden message, the head of the Maso Odumeru Family, of Odelemo Road, Sagamu, Ogun State Chief (Mrs) Memunat Otujonwo said the invaders have made living a nightmare in the community through daily invasion and threatening them with sophisticated weapons.

While narrating the ugly incident, Chief (Mrs) Otujonwo explained that the land grabbers hiding under the disguise of hoodlums and cultist numbering over 300 invaded Maso village, destroyed the family landed properties and started shooting sporadically in an attempt to chase away residents.

She said the residents have lodged several complaints at the Sagamu Area Command in Ogun State expressing shock that the Police have yet to make any arrest, calling on the Ogun State Commissioner of Police, to urgently intervene in the matter.

She stressed further that a petition has been submitted to the office of the Inspector General of Police (IGP) and the Commissioner of Police at Eleweran.

Chief (Mrs) Otujonwo said that after her investigation on the reason for the invasion of the community, she noticed that they came illegally for the possession and ownership of MASO Community Land, saying that her forefathers are the rightful owners of the landed properties with a court judgment on it.

The head of the MASO Odumeru Royal family also alleged that one Chief Tajudeen Allison, Lateef Mukaila, Rasaki Onowoga who claims to be a Police Officer in Abuja, Abeeb Onosanya (A.K.A) Oniwata name dropping and Azeez Olaitan including Awobo aka Ponpo, who claimed to be working for Chief Kamorudeen Lamina(A.K.A) sir Kay Oluwo allegedly led hoodlums to the Community since last week terrorizing the people with dangerous weapons like gun’s cutlasses and charms resulting in the residents scampering for safety.

The Head of the Maso family said the residents of Maso Village are law abiding and peaceful people, urging the security agencies to intervene so as to forestall any security breach in the community.

Chief (Mrs) Otujonwo appealed to the State Governor Prince Dapo Abioudun and the Inspector General of Police, Kayode Egbetokun to save the community from impeding bloodshed through the activities of land grabbers.

However, when contacted, Chief Kamorudeen Lamina (aka) Sir Kay Oluwo, denied ever sponsoring any attack on the Community. He also denied ever leading any hoodlums to invade the town.

Chief Lamina told our reporters that the disclaimer became necessary following the allegations made against individuals bearing the names Chief Tajudeen Allison and Awobo (aka) Ponpo who falsely claimed to be his leader in the land grabbing business.

He categorically denied any involvement in or authorization of any activities involving hoodlum or any form of violence including sporadic shootings in the community, dismissing the allegations as entirely false and not in accord with his character position or values of his company.

He said, “I Chief Kamorudeen Lamina popularly known as Sir Kay Oluwo” hereby issue this formal disclaimer regarding the allegations bearing the names Chief Tajudeen Allison and Awobo (aka) Ponpo, who have been falsely claimed to be personal assistants to him.

The spokesperson of the Ogun State Police Command CSP Omolola Odutola could not be reached and the message sent to her phone yet to be attended to before filling these reports.