Author: The Nation

  • Firm raises $5m pre-seed capital

    Firm raises $5m pre-seed capital

    Tech startup, Sparkli, raised a $5 million pre-seed round to bring its multimodal learning engine to families and schools around the world.

    The pre-seed round will allow Sparkli to scale its generative learning engine and prepare for a private beta launch in January 2026. The company is currently validating its platform through a strategic pilot with one of the world’s largest private school groups. This partnership provides Sparkli with a powerful testing ground across a network of more than 100 schools and over 100,000 students.

    Sparkli’s approach is shaped by three shifts essential for modern childhood education, a strategy designed to solve the ‘Agency and Curiosity Gap’. First, it forces a Velocity Shift by moving away from static curriculums to real-time relevance where children explore new topics the moment they emerge. Second, it drives an Engagement Shift by replacing the dry ‘AI chatbot wall of text’ and passive screen time (watching videos, playing video games) with a multimodal playground of visuals, voice, and playable simulations. This turns consumption into active, gamified inquiry rooted in educational value. Finally, Sparkli prioritizes a Skills Shift that focuses on capabilities such as creativity and complex problem solving rather than memorization.

    Underpinning these interactions is a system that builds an interest and knowledge graph for every child over time, enabling the platform to deliver truly personalized and adaptive learning.In practice, this means if a child asks to build a city on Mars, Sparkli doesn’t just list facts but instantly generates an interactive expedition where they learn age-appropriate physics, simulate the environment, and build their own city.

    As they design the infrastructure and explore logistics, the platform challenges them to engage in debates, make strategic choices based on real arguments, and ultimately reflect on and defend their decisions.

     “Our goal is to build agency in the next generation,” said Lax Poojary, CEO and founder of Sparkli. “Children learn by exploring, making choices, asking questions, and discovering what inspires them. Sparkli turns screen time into a place where curiosity grows rather than fades.”

    Sparkli’s early pilots illustrate these shifts in action. In one classroom, eight-year-olds used the platform to simulate building their own mini food cart businesses, where teachers observed students debating concepts like budgeting and customer experience. In another pilot, students took control during an unstructured ‘Freedom Friday’ session, initiating their own expeditions into topics ranging from game design to the Big Bang. Parents testing the consumer version described a notable difference in the quality of their children’s screen time, with one parent remarking that their son returned from a session eager to outline his sustainability plan if he were Mayor for a day.

     Realizing the potential to reimagine this learning experience, CEO Lax Poojary and his co-founders, who are veterans of Google Area 120, Search, and YouTube, assembled a team of engineers and designers, including experts from ETH and the education sector. Together, they are building a platform that fuses generative AI, pedagogy, motion design, and game mechanics to address a fundamental failure in how content is delivered. Existing systems are often slow, standardized, and unable to keep pace with discovery. Textbooks take years to update, traditional edtech depends on static libraries and drills, and open-ended AI tools and chatbots, though powerful for adults, are unsafe or overwhelming for young users. This growing gap creates a major market opportunity for Sparkli to deliver a capable yet safe platform that pairs modern generative technology with strong guardrails and age-sensitive design.

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    By solving this, Sparkli positions itself to disrupt the $7 trillion global education market, a sector widely predicted to be one of the most significant use cases for artificial intelligence. While Duolingo has built the largest consumer EdTech business to date by digitizing rigid language drills, Sparkli targets a significantly larger addressable market by reimagining how the next generation acquires knowledge

     “Sparkli represents a step change in how children can interact with knowledge,” said Lukas Weder, Partner at Founderful. “The team is applying high caliber engineering and thoughtful pedagogy to a space that desperately needs innovation. Their traction with schools shows a real appetite for tools that foster curiosity and agency rather than passive consumption.”

    Sparkli’s vision is to become the AI-native operating system for childhood development. The company plans to extend its platform from curiosity into creation, giving children tools to build and prototype projects directly inside Sparkli. It seeks to connect classroom learning with home exploration and ultimately support learners as they grow into adolescence and beyond. The long-term goal is to give every child a lifelong AI companion that remembers what they cared about at age six and helps them develop those passions at 17.

    Children today have an unprecedented ability to explore ideas, yet their digital world gives them so few ways to do it. When an eight-year-old asks how to build a city on Mars, the answer should ignite imagination, not flatten it into a wall of text. Built for this moment, Sparkli is launching a new model of learning shaped for the developing brain, using real-time multimodal artificial intelligence (AI) that gives children the agency to build their own interactive learning expeditions on any topic in minutes.

    Sparkli transforms these inquiries into multi-disciplinary, real-life journeys that foster future-ready skills, including technology, design thinking, sustainability, financial literacy, entrepreneurship, emotional intelligence, and global awareness.

  • NLNG trains journalists on digital media

    NLNG trains journalists on digital media

    Nigeria Liquified Natural Gas (NLNG) has concluded the training of the first batch of 32 journalists drawn from both the print and electronic media on how to use digital tools to enhance journalism practice.

    The three day training which took place in Abuja is organised by the Journalism Clinic and sponsored by the leading operator in the nation’s gas industry and offered new insights into the rapidly evolving role of artificial intelligence and digital communication in the newsroom.

    Participants were drawn from Voice of Nigeria, The Nation Newspaper, Blueprint, Daily trust, AIT, TVC, News Agency of Nigeria, Galaxy TV, Daily Times, Democracy Radio, Independent Television, Arise News, among others.

    Addressing the participants, NLNG’s General Manager, External Relations and Sustainable Development, Sophia Horsfall said the company was focused on building capacity which she described  as a key pillar of its Corporate Social Responsibility.

    Tagged #NLNGChangeYourStory, she said the initiative has continued to equip journalists with the required skills and confidence needed to professional media content in an increasingly fast-paced and technology-driven media environment.

    She described journalism as a calling that informs, educates, and influences society. She encouraged the participants to apply the knowledge they gained to amplify their impact, and expressed optimism that journalists will continue to enlighten the public, and inspire valuable synergies through stories that reflect NLNG’s vision of being a globally competitive energy company improving lives sustainably.

    She further highlighted NLNG’s broader support for the media sector, citing the NLNG Prize for Energy Reporting at the Diamond Awards for Media Excellence (DAME) among others.

    Manager, Corporate Communications and Public Affairs, Anne-Marie Palmer-Ikuku, said NLNG is deliberate with its investments to raise professional standards in Nigeria’s media practice.

    She said the training reinforces NLNG’s commitment to strengthening stakeholder capability and advancing professionalism within Nigeria’s media space.

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    “This workshop moved beyond theory to address the real pressures of a digital newsroom, including speed, verification, audience trust, and relevance. Our support for these competencies is aimed at strengthening a resilient media ecosystem that produces accurate, impactful journalism that is capable of shaping public understanding and contributing to national progress,” she said.

     It featured hands on sessions and expert-led discussions with participants exploring how new media tools can be effectively deployed to deliver real-time reporting, expand audience reach beyond borders, and foster meaningful engagement across platforms.

    The workshop which was facilitated by digital communication specialist Dan Mason and media veteran Taiwo Obe guided participants through practical approaches to digital storytelling, data visualisation, online fact-checking, audience engagement, and the effective management of digital presence.

    The #NLNGChangeYourStory has so far empowered over 180 journalists with enhanced digital communication and social media skills across its various editions.

  • UN warns of hunger after global funding collapse

    UN warns of hunger after global funding collapse

    Nearly 35 million Nigerians are at risk of hunger this year, including 3 million children facing severe malnutrition, following the collapse of global aid budgets, the United Nations (UN) said Thursday.

    Speaking at the launch of the 2026 humanitarian plan in Abuja, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Mohamed Malick Fall said the long-dominant, foreign-led aid model in Nigeria is no longer sustainable and that Nigeria’s needs have grown.

    Conditions in the conflict-hit northeast are dire, Fall said, with civilians in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states facing rising violence. A surge in suicide bombings and widespread attacks killed more than 4,000 people in the first eight months of 2025, matching the toll for all of 2023, he said.

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    The UN can only aim to deliver $516 million to provide lifesaving aid to 2.5 million people this year, down from 3.6 million in 2025, which in turn was about half the previous year’s level.

    “These are not statistics. These numbers represent lives, futures and Nigerians,” Fall said.

    He also said the UN had no choice but to focus on “the most lifesaving” interventions given the drop in available funding.

    Shortfalls last year led the World Food Programme to also warn that millions could go hungry in Nigeria as its resources ran out in December and it was forced to cut support for more than 300,000 children.

    Fall said Nigeria was showing growing national ownership of the crisis response in recent months through measures such as local funding for lean-season food support and early-warning action on flooding.

  • Mubarak is MD for BOI Investment & Trust Company

    Mubarak is MD for BOI Investment & Trust Company

    Bank of Industry (BOI) has appointed  Olayinka Mubarak as the Managing Director of BOI Investment & Trust Company Limited (BOI-ITC), its wholly owned subsidiary.

    Olayinka brings over 25 years of experience in banking and financial services, spanning development finance, treasury management, public sector, commercial and retail banking, corporate and private banking, and investment banking. She has also attended numerous local and international training programmes, equipping her with global perspectives and best practices in financial services, leadership, and governance.

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    Prior to her appointment, she held various senior leadership roles at the Bank of Industry, where she was part of the team that drove significant impact across key sectors of the economy.

    In 2017, she was appointed by the Federal Government to the Board of the Solid Minerals Development Fund (SMDF), further underscoring her experience in governance and public sector oversight.

    As Managing Director, Olayinka will provide strategic leadership for BOI-ITC, overseeing its core business areas of trusteeship, custodial services, financial planning, and advisory services, with a focus on strong governance, operational excellence, and sustainable value creation.

  • Businessman, company convicted of $80,000, N953m fraud

    Businessman, company convicted of $80,000, N953m fraud

    Justice Modupe Nicole-Clay of an Ikeja High Court yesterday convicted one Victor Ogiemwonyi and his company, Partnership Securities Limited, for stealing N953,535,861.57 and  $80,000.

     The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Lagos Zonal Directorate 1, had arraigned the defendants on a two-count charges bordering on stealing, contrary to Section 285(1), (9) (b) and (c) of the Criminal Law of Lagos State, 2011.

     The case arose from a petition filed sometime in October 2016 by the nominal complainant, Mr. Arnold Onyekwere Ekpe, through his counsel, Margaret Onyema.

     The petition alleged that Ekpe instructed the defendants to sell his 96,077,872 units of Ecobank Transnational Incorporated (ETI) shares, which were sold for N1,296,885,311.02.

     Of the proceeds of the sale, the defendants paid only  N300 million to the complainant, while they diverted the balance for personal use.

    Following investigations, the defendants were charged with two counts of stealing.

    During the trial, the prosecution, led by Ola Sesan, called five witnesses and tendered 67 exhibits, all of which were admitted and marked by the court.

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    The defence, on its part, called three witnesses, including the first defendant.

     Count one reads: ”Victor Ogiemwonyi and Partnership Securities Limited between June and September, 2016 at dishonestly stole N953, 535,861.57 being part of the proceeds of sale of 96, 077, 872 Ecobank Transnational Incorporated shares, property of

    Mr. Arnold Onyekwere Ekpe”.

    Count Two reads: Victor Qgiemwonyi and Partnership Securities Limited sometime between June, 2016 and July, 2016 at Lagos  dishonestly stole the sum of USD$80,000, which formed part of the accrued dividends on 96, 077,872 Ecobank Transnational incorporated Shares, property of Mr. Anold Onyekwere Ekpe”.

     Delivering judgment on the matter, Justice Nicole-Clay found Victor Ogiemwonyi, Chairman of Partnership Securities Limited, and the company guilty on all counts.

     The court sentenced the first convict to pay a fine of N10 million, while the second convict was ordered to pay a fine of N20 million. 

    The court directed the convicts to pay back the money stolen from the petitioner, both in naira and dollars.

  • Fire guts commercial building in Lagos

    Fire guts commercial building in Lagos

    A   fire outbreak in the early hours of yesterday razed a one-storey commercial building and adjoining shops on Amore Street, Ajegunle Boundary area of Lagos, destroying goods worth millions of naira.

    The Lagos State Emergency Management Agency (LASEMA) confirmed that the incident was reported about 2:40 a.m. through its toll-free emergency lines, prompting the activation of the state’s emergency response plans from its Cappa Base in Oshodi.

    According to a preliminary report signed by the Permanent Secretary of LASEMA, Dr. Olufemi Damilola Oke-Osanyintolu, emergency responders arrived at the scene by 3:22 a.m. and found flames on the complex, which housed several clothing dealers.

    “The high volume of combustible materials contributed to the rapid spread of the intense fire,” the agency stated, noting that the blaze also affected surrounding shops used for storing and selling clothes,’’ he said.

     The fire was triggered by a power surge following the restoration of public electricity supply, the report added. LASEMA, however, confirmed that no lives were lost or injuries recorded.

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    It said: “Upon arrival, the LASEMA Response Team conducted a Risk Assessment of the incident scene and cordoned off the activity area. Agency’s Response Team activated Safety and Precautionary Measures to forestall damages to adjoining buildings and immediate environs of the incident scene.

    “Prompt interventions were implemented by LRT, in collaboration with other responders to forestall escalation of fire to adjoining buildings and eventually extinguish it. LRT coordinated the multi-agency response to ensure a quick and safe operation

    “The entire one-storey shopping complex and surrounding shops were razed by the fire. All goods and properties stored were destroyed,” the statement said, adding that parts of the structure were compromised and would require immediate structural assessment.

    Fire-fighting operations contained the blaze within the affected area, while damping-down are ongoing to eliminate residual heat and prevent re-ignition. LASEMA said rescue and recovery have been concluded, although monitoring of the site would continue.

    The agency urged commercial property owners in the area to review fire-safety measures and storage protocols to prevent similar incidents in the future.

  • Delta police bust kidnapping syndicate, nab 10 suspects

    Delta police bust kidnapping syndicate, nab 10 suspects

    Delta State Police Command has arrested 10 kidnap and armed robbery suspects on the Jeddo/Ughoton-Warri axis.

    Operatives of the Special Anti-Kidnapping and Cybercrime Squad (SAKCCS) of the command arrested the suspects, following reported cases of kidnapping and armed robbery in Obinoba, Obiaruku, Abraka, Orerokpe and neighbouring communities.

    Police Public Relations Officer, Superintendent of Police Bright Edafe, in a statement, said the operatives trailed a suspect to a notorious criminal hideout allegedly operated by Oke Jerry Ekokodjie and one Ibori (surname unknown).

    During the raid, the two principal suspects and three others were arrested, while some gang members escaped through nearby creeks, Edafe stated.

    Recovered exhibits include a local Beretta pistol with three rounds of 9mm ammunition, another local pistol, a black Mercedes-Benz GLK vehicle, a battle axe, illicit substances in commercial quantity and a Point-of-Sale (POS) machine.

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    The Commissioner of Police, Aina Adesola: “Our operatives acted with professionalism and precision, leveraging actionable intelligence to achieve this success. We remain unwavering in our commitment to rid Delta State of criminal elements through sustained, proactive and intelligence-led policing.’’

    In another operation, the spokesman said operatives from Obiaruku Division raided a suspected cultists’ hideout at Amai Community, Ndokwa East Local Government Area.

    He said during the operation, which took place about 0256 hours yesterday, five suspects were arrested.

    The arrested suspects were Frank Etiyemonu, 36; Chinedu Emeka, 25; Festus Nwadiche, 26; Azuju Onowu, 29 and Ozor Blessing, 29.

  • Edo community leader for burial Jan. 29

    Edo community leader for burial Jan. 29

    Patriarch of the Egbede Okunbor family from Uhunmwode Local Government Area of Edo State, Pa. Emmanuel Osarenogowo, who died on September 28, last year, will be buried in Benin City on Thursday, January 29, 2026.

    According to a statement by Kelvin Osa-Okunbor, Assistant Editor, The Nation, the body will leave Suyi Medical Centre on Murtala Murtala Way for his residence for family rites and Service of Songs officiated by clerics from Christ Chosen Church of God before he will be laid to rest.

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    It will be followed by a wake on Friday, January 30, at his residence in Benin City.

    There will be entertainment of guests at Ehanire Gardens on Second East Circular Road, by Uwa Junction.

    The burial ceremonies will be concluded with a thanksgiving service at Ogiso branch of Christ Chosen Church of God and social dance at his residence in Benin City.

  • Rehabilitation of Lekki-Epe Expressway begins Sunday

    Rehabilitation of Lekki-Epe Expressway begins Sunday

    The Lagos State government has announced that major rehabilitation on the 20-kilometre stretch of the Lekki–Epe Expressway will start on Sunday and last for about 64 days.

    Commissioner for Transportation, Oluwaseun Osiyemi, said this during an inspection of the corridor, noting that traffic management would be implemented in phases across key intersections to minimise disruption.

    Osiyemi said the rehabilitation would not involve a shutdown of the expressway, adding that traffic control would be concentrated at specific intersections.

    According to him, the first phase of the project, tagged, “Intersection One,” will cover the stretch from Chevron to Igbo-Efon, with construction carried out on the Lagos-bound carriageway using an eight-intersection phased approach.

    “To ensure construction progresses while traffic continues to move, the Lagos-bound carriageway will be closed in segments,” he said.

    He added that traffic would be diverted to the Epe-bound carriageway through a dynamic lane-sharing arrangement, especially during the morning peak period between 4.00 a.m. and noon.

    Osiyemi explained that two lanes would be available for motorists heading towards Lagos, while one lane would be accessible on the Epe-bound side.

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    He also said road shoulders on the Epe-bound carriageway were being graded to create additional space for traffic diversions.

    The commissioner advised motorists to explore alternative routes during the construction period, including the Coastal Road from Ogombo via Abraham Adesanya.

    He assured road users that adequate traffic management personnel, directional signage, proper illumination and other safety measures would be deployed throughout the duration of the project to reduce inconvenience.

    He added that the state government was engaging relevant stakeholders, including the Lekki-Epe Residents Association, to intensify public sensitisation ahead of the rehabilitation works.

  • Ilaje communities protest delay in release of relief fund, storm OSOPADEC office

    Ilaje communities protest delay in release of relief fund, storm OSOPADEC office

    Residents of Obe Nla, Obe Adun and Obe Jedo communities in Ilaje Local Government Area of Ondo State yesterday protested the alleged delay in the release of a purported N400 million relief fund approved for victims of violence in the oil-producing area.

    The residents besieged the Oba Ile office of the Ondo State Oil Producing Areas Development Commission (OSOPADEC) in Akure, accusing the commission of withholding the fund meant to cushion their losses.

    The communities had last year accused operatives of the Nigerian Navy Forward Operating Base (FOB) in Igbokoda of attacks that allegedly left houses destroyed and residents injured. Obe Nla, one of the affected communities, is the hometown of Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa.

    In a petition to the Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Zone 17, Akure, the residents, through their solicitor, Obayemi Williams of J.W. Obayemi & Co, alleged that Naval personnel invaded the communities on October 19, harassing residents, burning properties, and inflicting injuries.

    The protesters blocked the entrance to the OSOPADEC office, locked the gate and prevented staff members from leaving the premises, insisting that the protest was aimed at drawing the attention of the state government to what they described as the continued suffering of victims months after the incident.

    The residents’ representative, Omosohanne Obadiah, alleged that following the intervention of Ilaje Omuro Worldwide Connect, the  state government approved and released N400 million to OSOPADEC last November to compensate verified victims.

    He claimed, however, that the fund had not been disbursed to beneficiaries, saying victims of the alleged attack are still nursing their wounds.

    “Four months after the release of this fund, victims are still suffering. Many families have no shelter or means of livelihood. I personally lost a bakery and other valuable properties,” Obadiah said.

    He further accused the commission of allegedly keeping the fund in a government account since November, thereby delaying its release.

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    According to him, the delay has deepened hardship in the affected communities and eroded confidence in government interventions.

    The protesters demanded the immediate release of the fund and a transparent investigation into its handling and urgent intervention by the state government to prevent a recurrence of the crisis.

    Some of the victims, including Inuejulawo Adewunmi and Precilia Omogbemi, recounted how they lost their homes and livelihoods during the attacks, lamenting that no form of palliative had been extended to them since then.

      Secretary of OSOPADEC, Abike Bayo-Ilawole, appealed for calm, assuring them that the commission was committed to transparent disbursement.

    She said the delay was due to ongoing efforts to properly identify victims and assess the losses.

    “We want to ensure that the right people benefit. Some residents lost houses, others lost boats and fishing equipment. We will return to the communities for verification,” she said.

    Bayo-Ilawole added that OSOPADEC officials would visit the affected communities by Monday, assuring the protesters that failure to do so would justify further engagement.