Economy
e-Customs Project to Become Operational 2022—NCS
By Adedapo Adesanya
The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) said its digital platform called the e-customs project will become operation in 2022, noting that this will help in verifying the authenticity of documents by enforcement officers on patrol.
Speaking at a press conference in Lagos, the NCS National Public Relation Officer, Mr Timi Bomadi, this app will eliminate delays in verifying genuine Customs documents on our highways making it difficult for forgers to get away with their illegal acts, while easing the journeys of law abiding citizens.
He further stated that the service is also facilitating trade at ports and border stations through the modernisation/automation of import/export processes, aimed at reducing trade costs and the simplification and harmonisation of Customs processes to help in the development of local industries, improves economic prosperity, boost the revenue base of the Federal Government and enables foreign direct investment.
Currently, the image maker said the NCS has integrated and automated over 90 per cent of its activities and collaborated with the Federal Ministry of Finance for the introduction of the National Vehicle Registry VReg portal which among other things incorporates an automated vehicle valuation mechanism that authenticates Vehicle Identity Number (VIN) and validates the make, model and year of manufacture for easy assessment of value for Customs purposes.
“Members of the public have continued to avail themselves of copious information on both its web based and mobile applications.
“The e-customs project which is certain to take off next year will provide end to end automation aimed at eliminating physical contact and the potential for subjective judgments based on unethical considerations. Fast track and Authorized Economic Operator schemes are there to enhance and facilitate the experience of traders with track records for honesty and transparency,” he said.
“However, all trade across borders is associated with different levels of risk necessitating the establishment of control mechanism via risk management. In managing of goods in transit, the historical antecedents of importers/exporters and agents, countries of origin, fiscal policy, security, wellbeing, health and safety of citizens.
“The Nigeria Integrated Customs Information System II (NICIS II) meets the TFA criteria for the simplification of Customs processes and procedures. While it provides easy access to Customs information regarding trade regulations, it allows for easy interface and an enhanced user experience. Importers or their agents can access the Customs portal from the comfort of their homes and offices. Declarations, assessments and payments are made via web based applications on the trader zone. At the Customs zone, selectivity is triggered based on risk assessment and the required mode of examination indicated in the system. Release is activated when no infringements requiring interventions are discovered.
“NICIS II allows for the full integration of other regulating authorities like Standards Organization of Nigeria, (SON) and the Nigeria Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC). In so doing all regulatory issues concerning other agencies are expected to be treated expeditiously and simultaneously to facilitate trade. However, an important to note that the potential speed for execution under the NICIS II platform can be impeded by the operations of other agencies that are yet to fully define and automate their risk criteria for integration with the existing platform. In this case the efficiency of the system becomes defined by the slowest players in the team,” Mr Bomadi noted.
Although, he admitted that the valuation of goods by officers of the service is another area that has often drawn criticism from some stakeholders and importers, he said: “there is no market in the world where prices remain static over time Same is true for other components of Customs value, which includes insurance and freight charges. When we add the ever increasing rate of exchange into the mix, the inevitable result has to be commensurate increases in the value component of declared items used for calculating duty.
“Therefore situations where some insist on declaring fictitious values for customs purposes will always be met by adjustments reflecting current realities,” he said.
The customs officer used the occasion to inform newsmen that the agency generated over N2.3 trillion revenue between January and November this year, more that the N1.679 trillion revenue target for this year, based on its last year’s performance.
Mr Bomadi attributed the remarkable success to the current leadership of the Service, and to the diligent and hardworking officers of the NCS.
“In the current year, the Nigeria Customs Service has already exceeded expectations in revenue generation by going beyond the target set for it by the government. Also in its anti-smuggling activities, the Service has made landmark seizures of absolutely prohibited items and items prohibited by trade.
“In August, the service made seizures of 17,137 kg of pangolin scales, 44 kg elephant tusks and 60 kg in pangolin claws all valued at over N22 billion.
“This was made possible through active collaboration between NCS, US, British, and German officials who helped in tracking the suspicious shipment. It further led to the arrest and prosecution of some foreign nationals and their local collaborators.
“In October FOU operatives in Zone A seized 751 bullets concealed in garri sacks, while arms, ammunition and military uniforms were intercepted at Tin Can port Lagos in September 2021 just to mention a few. Our warehouses in all border formations are overflowing with seizures of rice, groundnut oil, used clothing, used vehicles etc.
“At Apapa Area I Command, through the cooperation of other sister agencies and the Nigerian Navy a landmark seizure of cocaine with a DPV of $54 million was made. This seizure was unique for the fact that the illicit substance was found in one of the components of a bulk carrier of sugar. In the same command, 97 containers carrying illicit, expired drugs and other offensive goods with a Duty Paid Value (DPV) of N17.5 billion was seized,” Mr Bomadi said.
Economy
Binance Connectivity in 2026: Why Some Traders Now Rely on Proxy Servers and What to Watch For
Binance is still the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, but access to it has become one of the more complicated conversations in the digital asset space. Some countries retain full access. Others sit in a grey zone where the platform loads but key features are missing. A few, including Nigeria at various points in the last two years, have moved between “available” and “restricted” on very short notice.
The result is that a growing number of traders, particularly in markets where regulatory action has been sharp and sudden, have begun using proxy servers to manage their connection to the exchange. The practice is more common than most traders will admit publicly. This article walks through why it is happening, the actual mechanics, the risks that come attached, and what to check before setting anything up.
Why Some Regions Restrict Binance Access
Binance operates in more than 100 countries, but the list of jurisdictions with full or partial blocks has been growing rather than shrinking. It is worth understanding that a full block is only one form of restriction.
- International sanctions. Binance is prohibited from serving customers in countries such as Iran, Cuba and North Korea under OFAC rules, with additional UN and EU sanction regimes layered on.
- Regulatory exits. In some markets, Binance either did not obtain or did not pursue local licensing. The United States saw the earliest such move, with Binance withdrawing and being replaced by a separate US-facing platform in 2019.
- Government bans. Some governments have moved quickly and with minimal notice. Nigeria transitioned from active access to a heavily restricted status over the course of a few days in early 2024, following a broader crackdown by authorities on cryptocurrency platforms, a case that traders here remember well.
- Binance Futures. Not available in 44 countries, including all EU member states, the UK, Australia and Canada.
- Staking and lending. Disabled in the UK, Canada, Australia and Japan.
- Fiat deposits. Removed in a number of markets, including the eurozone and Canada.
For Nigerian traders in particular, the ongoing tension between the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Securities and Exchange Commission and international exchanges has produced a shifting landscape. Access that works today is not guaranteed to work next month, and prudent traders have started to prepare for both scenarios.
How Proxy Servers Enter the Conversation
A Binance proxy server sits between your device and the exchange. Instead of your real IP address reaching Binance, the proxy’s IP does. From Binance’s perspective, the connection appears to originate wherever the proxy is located. For traders in restricted regions, this becomes a way to route their connection through a country where the exchange remains accessible.
Geographic access is not the only reason traders use proxies, though it is the most common.
Controlling API Rate Limits
Binance allows 1,200 requests per minute per IP. For traders running bots across multiple pairs simultaneously, that ceiling is reached quickly. Rotating proxies spread requests across different IPs so the bot continues without being throttled.
Running Multiple Accounts
Binance tracks multiple accounts originating from the same IP address. Traders operating several accounts use different proxies for each to keep the accounts from being associated with one another.
Accessing Region-Specific Features
Available tokens, trading pairs and pricing vary across regions. Traders can view and interact with region-specific offerings by routing through the relevant location.
Keeping WebSocket Connections Stable
Real-time price feeds and order book data run over WebSocket connections. Binance may throttle these if requests from a single IP look irregular. Clean residential IPs help hold those streams stable and reduce reconnection loops.
Security and Account Risks Traders Should Watch
Binance Uses Multiple Signals to Detect Location
IP is only one factor. On mobile, Binance also verifies GPS location, SIM card country code and device fingerprint. Mismatches raise flags. A proxy IP that shows the United States while the SIM card is registered in a restricted country is exactly the kind of inconsistency the system is designed to catch.
Mid-Session IP Switching Can Trigger Verification
Changing IPs while already logged in is one of the fastest ways to receive an additional verification prompt or a temporary account freeze. This is why sticky sessions matter — holding a single IP for an extended period rather than rotating aggressively.
Dirty IPs Are a Real Problem
Not every proxy IP is clean. Shared or previously compromised addresses may already have a history of suspicious activity attached, and Binance may have flagged them before you connect. A provider with a well-maintained IP pool reduces this risk substantially.
Funds Can Be Frozen
Binance may freeze accounts quickly if it detects unusual activity or determines that the account is being accessed from a restricted region. Recovery through support can take time, and in some cases access is not restored at all.
Choosing Between Residential, Mobile and Datacenter Proxies
Residential Proxies
Residential proxies use IP addresses assigned to real home internet connections. They appear as normal user traffic and are much harder for Binance to flag. This is the most common recommendation for traders needing consistent access. They are slower than datacenter and more expensive.
Mobile Proxies
Mobile proxies use IPs from real cellular carriers. Because mobile networks share IPs across many users naturally, distinguishing individual traffic is difficult. These are the strongest choice for traders in higher-risk areas who prioritise clean connections. They are also the most expensive option.
Datacenter Proxies
Datacenter proxies are fast and cheap, but Binance has invested heavily in detecting them. They originate from server farms rather than real devices, which makes them straightforward to identify as non-human traffic. They can still work for casual browsing and API data collection, but they are more likely to be blocked for account access in restricted regions.
What to Watch For When Setting Up
Match Your Proxy Location to Your KYC Country
If your account was verified with documents from one country and your proxy routes you through another, the mismatch can trigger review. Choose a proxy address that lines up with the country on your account.
Use Sticky Sessions for Account Access
Proxies that rotate IPs frequently are useful for scraping and bot work, less useful for logins. For anything involving direct account access, use sticky sessions that hold the same IP throughout the session. Quality providers offer sessions up to 24 hours.
Test the Connection Before Trading
Before using real money, confirm that the proxy is not leaking your real IP and is functioning as expected. A basic IP leak test will show what Binance actually sees when you log in. Several free tools online can display your visible IP and location.
Disable GPS on Mobile
If you are using the Binance app on a mobile device, turn off location services for the app. GPS data reveals your true location, and if it does not match the proxy location, Binance’s system will notice.
Pick a Provider With Clean IPs
Avoid free proxies. Their reputations are almost universally poor and their integrity questionable. Paid providers maintain IP pools and replace flagged addresses on an ongoing basis. Look for providers who are transparent about how they source IPs and who offer some form of IP quality filtering.
Final Thoughts
Proxy servers can be useful for traders dealing with Binance connectivity issues, but they are not a guaranteed solution and they come with real risks. The platform’s detection systems are more sophisticated than most users realise, and a poorly configured setup can create more problems than it solves, from repeated verification prompts to account freezes.
If you go this route, the setup matters more than the proxy itself. Having a proxy is not enough. Match the proxy location to your KYC country, use sticky sessions, and choose a provider with clean IPs for stability.
For most traders, residential proxies are the sensible starting point. They are reasonably reliable, sufficiently anonymous, and priced within reach. Traders in higher-risk regions or those needing additional trust signals may consider mobile proxies. Datacenter proxies are best reserved for tasks that do not involve direct account access.
The Nigerian context in particular calls for caution. Regulatory positions can change quickly, and traders who set up their connectivity today should also be prepared for the possibility that the ground shifts again. Backup plans, cold storage discipline, and awareness of the local legal landscape are as important as any proxy configuration.
Economy
Luno Secures SEC Approval in Principle to Operate in Nigeria
By Adedapo Adesanya
Luno Nigeria has received Approval in Principle (AIP) from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) through admission into its Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Programme (ARIP), marking a significant milestone in the country’s evolving digital asset regulatory landscape.
The approval follows an extensive engagement process between the company and the regulator and represents a major step in Luno Nigeria’s regulatory journey. As a result, it becomes the first global cryptocurrency exchange to be admitted.
Nigeria has a sordid regulatory minefield when it comes to digital assets; while it encourages new technologies, it has not fully lifted restrictions placed on crypto transactions via official channels.
Admission into ARIP means the cryptocurrency platform has met the commission’s requirements to participate in the programme and is authorised to operate within its defined scope, subject to ongoing compliance obligations and regulatory conditions, thus limiting full utilisation.
Founded in Africa in 2013, Luno has operated in Nigeria since 2015 and was among the first cryptocurrency exchanges to serve the Nigerian market. It was affected by a blanket ban announced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). The company said the latest approval reinforces its commitment to operating within Nigeria’s emerging regulatory framework for digital assets.
Commenting on the development, the chief executive of Luno Nigeria, Mr Ayotunde Alabi, described the approval as a landmark achievement for the company.
“This is an important milestone for Luno Nigeria and a strong validation of our commitment to building responsibly in one of Africa’s most important cryptocurrency markets. Admission into ARIP gives us a clearer regulatory pathway, strengthens trust with customers and partners, and provides a stronger foundation for the next phase of our growth, particularly as we expand our focus on institutional and B2B opportunities,” Mr Alabi said.
He expressed appreciation to the regulator for its continued engagement throughout the approval process and commended the Luno team for its resilience and commitment in achieving the milestone.
Luno said the regulatory approval comes at a time when it is expanding its business-to-business operations by engaging banks, fintech companies, payment providers, asset managers and corporate institutions seeking digital asset solutions.
According to the company, increasing regulatory clarity has become a key requirement for institutional adoption of digital assets. It noted that admission into ARIP would strengthen its ability to provide compliant digital asset infrastructure, including stablecoin applications, treasury solutions, crypto-as-a-service offerings and secure access to digital assets.
The Accelerated Regulatory Incubation Programme is the SEC’s regulatory sandbox designed to accelerate the onboarding of digital asset and investment service providers, including Virtual Asset Service Providers and tokenised product platforms.
The initiative enables the commission to assess emerging technologies and business models in a controlled environment while ensuring adequate investor protection and market integrity.
Building on the initial licensing rollout in 2024, Luno’s admission into the second batch of the programme underscores Nigeria’s efforts to establish a structured and transparent regulatory framework for the digital asset ecosystem, while strengthening confidence among investors, institutional partners and other market participants.
Economy
Trading in Fortis Global Insurance Shares Resumes After Share Reconstruction
By Aduragbemi Omiyale
The Nigerian Exchange (NGX) Regulation Limited has allowed the trading in the shares of Fortis Global Insurance Plc.
This followed the completion of the share capital reconstruction of the organisation, which triggered the suspension a few weeks ago.
In a notice dated June 17, 2026, NGX RegCo announced the suspension of the underwriting company because of the exercise.
Yesterday, another notice was issued to inform the investing public of the lifting of the embargo on the securities of the organisation.
A total of 12,911,030,586 ordinary shares of Fortis Global Insurance were delisted, with 3,227,757,647 ordinary shares relisted at N3.96 per share.
“We refer to our market bulletin with reference number NGXREG/IRD/MB68/26/6/17, dated June 17, 2026, wherein the Market was notified that trading in the shares of Fortis Global Insurance Plc was placed on suspension effective Wednesday, June 17, 2026, in preparation for the share reconstruction of the company’s issued shares.
“The market is hereby notified that the entire 12,911,030,586 ordinary shares of Fortis Global Insurance were delisted from the daily official list of Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX) on July 2, 2026, while the newly reconstructed issued share capital of 3,227,757,647 ordinary shares of 50 Kobo each were also listed on the daily official list of NGX at N3.96 per share.
“The delisting of 12,911,030,586 ordinary shares and listing of 3,227,757,647 ordinary shares on NGX is pursuant to the approval received from the company’s shareholders at its Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM) of April 4, 2025, and the no-objection received from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
“Consequently, following the completion of the share reconstruction, the suspension placed on the securities of the company has been lifted,” the circular signed by Bonaventure Onwuji, on behalf of the Head of Issuer Regulation Department at NGX RegCo, stated.
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