Connect with us

General

Tinubu Ministerial List Not Ready—Dele Alake 

Published

on

Bola Tinubu saved Nigeria from needless political

By Adedapo Adesanya

There have been speculations lately that President Bola Tinubu would submit his ministerial list to the National Assembly for screening and approval, but his spokesman, Mr Dele Alake, has said his boss was yet to conclude on who will serve in his government.

Addressing reporters in Abuja on Thursday, Mr Alake stressed that, “There is no iota of truth in all of those things,” referring to the ministerial list.

“When the President is good and ready, you will be the first to know about his intentions,” he added.

Mr Tinubu, sworn in as president on May 29, has to submit his ministerial list to the Senate before July 29 as mandated by law.

The Nigerian constitution allows for the President to name his cabinet within 60 days, a change that was pushed for after former President Muhammadu Buhari took more than six months to name his cabinet.

Provisions to the amended law also say the President must pick a minister from each of the 36 states of the federation for equal representation.

Many rumours have been flying around that some of his loyalists, including Mr Nyesom Wike, Mr Ibikunle Amosun, Mr Nasir El Rufai, Mr Isa Bagudu, Mr Abubakar Kyari, and Mr Mike Okiro, among others, will be in the cabinet but the correspondence settles this as mere speculations.

Recently, Dr Muhammad Pate, who was supposed to resume as the CEO of Gavi (the Global Alliance for Vaccine and Immunization), also known as the Vaccine Alliance, on August 3, quit the position because he was needed back home.

This raised eyebrows that he could be heading to Abuja to take over as the next Nigeria’s minister of health under the new administration.

He was a junior minister, serving as Minister of State for Health under former President Goodluck Jonathan (2011-2015). He also served as Global Director for Health, Nutrition, and Population of the World Bank and Director of the Global Financing Facility at the World Bank between 2019 and 2021.

Adedapo Adesanya is a journalist, polymath, and connoisseur of everything art. When he is not writing, he has his nose buried in one of the many books or articles he has bookmarked or simply listening to good music with a bottle of beer or wine. He supports the greatest club in the world, Manchester United F.C.

Advertisement
2 Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

General

FCT Council Elections: Police Impose 12-Hour Curfew

Published

on

FCT Council Elections

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Command of the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) has announced a 12-hour restriction on movement across Abuja and its environs ahead of the council elections scheduled for Saturday, February 21, 2026.

In a statement, the Police Public Relations Officer of the FCT Command, Mrs Josephine Adeh, said the movement will be restricted to ensure security and the smooth conduct of the polls.

“The Commissioner of Police, FCT Command, Miller G. Dantawaye, psc., has announced a restriction of movement across the Federal Capital Territory from 6:00 AM to 6:00 PM on Saturday, 21st February, 2026, in view of the scheduled Area Council Elections,” the statement read.

The police clarified that the restriction will apply to all residents, except essential service providers and duly accredited election officials.

The command also called on residents to remain peaceful and cooperate with security agencies.

“The FCT Police Command urges residents to remain peaceful, law-abiding, and cooperate with security agencies to ensure a safe, free, and credible electoral process,” the statement added.

Meanwhile, the FCT Minister, Mr Nyesom Wike, declared Friday a work-free day ahead of the council elections.

In a broadcast, Mr Wike said the decision, approved by President Bola Tinubu, is to enable residents to travel to their communities to vote.

In contrast to the police announcement, the minister declared a separate restriction of movement across the FCT from 8:00 p.m. on Friday to 6:00 p.m. on Saturday, directing security agencies to ensure compliance.

Mr Wike urged residents to turn out in large numbers and conduct themselves peacefully, expressing optimism that the polls would produce leaders who would promote development and stability in the territory.

In the meantime, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) says preparations for the elections are at an advanced stage, with strong voter participation recorded during the PVC collection exercise.

INEC disclosed that 1,587,025 Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) have been collected across the FCT, representing a 94.4 per cent collection rate out of the 1,680,315 registered voters.

Security agencies have assured residents of adequate deployment across the territory to maintain order, as authorities emphasise the need for a peaceful, free, and credible electoral process.

Continue Reading

General

Banks, Telcos Resolve N300bn USSD Debt Dispute

Published

on

Nigerian telcos

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) says the four-year N300 billion debt dispute with Nigerian banks over Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) services has been resolved.

Chairman of ALTON, Mr Gbenga Adebayo, confirmed this on Thursday during an official visit to the Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Mr Idris Olorunnimbe.

He lauded the intervention of the NCC, led by its Vice Chairman, Mr Aminu Maida, in bringing the long-standing dispute to a close.

“When Dr Maida assumed office, he inherited significant industry challenges,” Mr Adebayo said. “One of the most difficult was the USSD debt crisis, a debt burden that grew over four years to nearly N300 billion. It had become a systemic risk to our sector and the digital financial ecosystem.”

He praised the NCC helmsman for his leadership, structured engagement, and decisive coordination to see a resolution to the dispute.

“There is no outstanding USSD debt. The ecosystem has fully migrated to end-user billing. What was once a looming crisis has been converted into a sustainable framework,” he said, describing the resolution of the debt crisis as a milestone for the telecom and digital finance ecosystem, ensuring sustainability and predictability for operators and service providers.

Nigeria’s telco and banking sectors switched to an End-User Billing (EUB) model for USSD services in August 2025. Under the new system, customers are now charged directly from their mobile airtime instead of their bank accounts, with telcos deducting the fees.

The change ended a long-running dispute between telcos such as MTN and Airtel and commercial banks over unpaid USSD charges. By 2024, banks’ outstanding debts to operators had risen to between N250 billion and N300 billion.

The NCC, working with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), introduced the EUB framework to standardise billing, improve transparency, and strengthen financial inclusion, especially for unbanked Nigerians who depend heavily on USSD services.

Continue Reading

General

GenCos, NLC Trade Words Over N6.5trn Power Debt

Published

on

power sector debt

By Adedapo Adesanya

The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Association of Power Generation Companies (APGC), an umbrella body for power generation companies (GenCos), have traded words over the N6.5 trillion in power debt.

The labour union attacked the association over the payment of the N6 trillion as well as a proposed N3 trillion federal bailout, describing the move as a “heist” and an attempt to loot public funds.

The NLC accused the power firms of attempting to transfer the burden of their operational failures to Nigerians, insisting that electricity consumers and taxpayers must not be made to pay for what it called the “collapse of a flawed privatisation model.”

In a rebuttal, the APGC has warned the NLC to stop victimising the GenCos and refuted the allegation that the power sector has “institutionalised extortion.”

The chief executive of APGC, Mrs Joy Ogaji, said the group firmly rejects the NLC’s characterisation of the sector’s challenges, adding that labelling the legitimate operations of power firms as “robbery” and a “grand deception” is a simplistic and inflammatory narrative that ignores the complex realities of the industry.

“We view these allegations, which include claims of “institutionalised extortion” and a phantom subsidy, as a misrepresentation of the facts and a disservice to the ongoing efforts to stabilise Nigeria’s electricity supply industry,” said Mrs Ogaji.

The association also strongly refutes the insinuation that the proposed government support for the sector is a clandestine plan to “settle the boys” ahead of elections.

In a statement reacting to the recent press release by the APGC, the NLC rejected allegations that it lacked the competence to speak on power sector matters, maintaining that its members work within the industry and understand its dynamics.

“We categorically reject their self-serving narrative and misleading characterisation of our position. First, the NLC stands firmly by every word of its earlier statement. The privatisation of the power sector was, and remains, a grand deception that has shortchanged the Nigerian people. The APGC’s claims of “victimisation” cannot conceal the persistent failure that has defined the sector since privatisation.

“The core issue is simple and troubling. The entire power sector assets were reportedly sold for approximately N400 billion. Yet today, GENCOs are demanding N6 trillion, while the Federal Government is said to be considering a N3 trillion bailout for companies that have not demonstrably increased generation capacity beyond pre-privatisation levels.

“This contradiction raises fundamental questions. How can assets purchased for N400 billion become the basis for a bailout running into trillions of naira? It is neither sound economics nor responsible governance to socialise losses while privatising profits. Public funds belonging to workers, pensioners, and ordinary Nigerians must not be diverted to rescue private investors from the consequences of their own operational shortcomings. We challenge the APGC to address this contradiction transparently.”

“The NLC is not a bystander in the power sector. Our members work in generation plants across the country. Our affiliate, the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE), operates daily within the system. The NLC played a leading role in the national debate around privatisation and consistently warned that, without proper safeguards and capacity, the exercise would fail. Those warnings appear increasingly justified.

“Regarding our reference to “settling the boys,” our position remains clear: public funds must not be used to enrich a select few under the guise of policy intervention. Nigerians deserve transparency and accountability, not opaque financial arrangements.
“In the interest of openness, we call on the APGC to publish a comprehensive list of the beneficial owners of all GENCOs and associated power assets. Nigerians have a right to know who stands to benefit from this N6 trillion demand,” parts of the statement said.

It also criticised Nigeria’s power sector privatisation for failing to significantly improve electricity generation or service delivery despite rising tariffs, questioned the lack of measurable returns and dividends to the government, raised concerns over labour rights violations, and firmly rejected the proposed N6 trillion bailout as unjustified and contrary to public interest.

Business Post reports that the federal government disclosed plans in December to raise N1.23 trillion by the first quarter (Q1) of 2026 to settle verified arrears owed to generation companies and gas suppliers. On January 27, the government said it had successfully issued a N501 billion inaugural bond under the presidential power sector debt reduction programme (PPSDRP).

However, the APGC has said that this is inadequate, comparing the debt to “garri soaked in water.”

Continue Reading

Trending