Author: The Nation

  • China plans 7.2% rise in defence spending

    China plans 7.2% rise in defence spending

    China will boost defence spending by 7.2% this year, slightly outpacing last year’s increase and faster than the government’s modest economic growth forecast, as Premier Li Keqiang called for the armed forces to boost combat preparedness.

    The national budget released yesterday showed 1.55 trillion yuan ($224 billion) allocated to military spending.

    The defence budget will be closely watched by China’s neighbours and the United States, who are concerned by Beijing’s strategic intentions and development of its military, especially as tensions have spiked in recent years over Taiwan.

    In his work report to the annual session of parliament, Li said military operations, capacity building and combat preparedness should be “well-coordinated in fulfilling major tasks”.

    “Our armed forces, with a focus on the goals for the centenary of the People’s Liberation Army in 2027, should work to carry out military operations, boost combat preparedness and enhance military capabilities,” he said in the state-of-the-nation address to the largely rubber-stamp congress.

    This year’s hike in defense spending marks the eighth consecutive single-digit increase. As in previous years, no breakdown of the spending was given, only the overall amount and the rate of increase.

    The spending increase outpaces targeted economic growth of around 5%, which is slightly below last year’s target as the world’s second-largest economy faces domestic headwinds.

    Beijing is nervous about challenges on fronts ranging from Chinese-claimed Taiwan to U.S. naval and air missions in the disputed South China Sea near Chinese-occupied islands.

    China staged war games near Taiwan last August to express anger at the visit to Taipei of then-U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

    Li Mingjiang, associate professor at S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, said defense spending outpacing the economic growth forecast showed China anticipates facing greater pressures in its external security environment, especially from the United States and on the Taiwan issue.

    “Chinese leaders are clearly intensifying efforts to prepare the country militarily to meet all potential security challenges, including unexpected situations,” he said.

    China, with the world’s largest military in terms of personnel, is busy adding a slew of new hardware, including aircraft carriers and stealth fighters.

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    Beijing says its military spending for defensive purposes is a comparatively low percentage of its GDP and that critics want to demonize it as a threat to world peace.

    “The armed forces should intensify military training and preparedness across the board, develop new military strategic guidance, devote greater energy to training under combat conditions and make well-coordinated efforts to strengthen military work in all directions and domains,” Premier Li said.

    Takashi Kawakami, a professor of Takushoku University in Tokyo, said China would probably give priority to its nuclear capability.

    “As China strengthens the new area of cognitive warfare over Taiwan, I think it will also use the budget to build up its cyber and space capabilities, as well as its submarine forces to target undersea cables,” he said.

    China accuses U.S. of ‘creating factors of tension’ with Taiwan arms sale.

    China’s reported defence budget in 2023 is around one quarter of proposed U.S. spending, though many diplomats and foreign experts believe Beijing under-reports the real number.

    The fiscal 2023 U.S. defence budget authorizes $858 billion in military spending and includes funding for purchases of weapons, ships and aircraft, and support for Taiwan and for Ukraine as it fights an invasion by Russia.

    China has long argued that it needs to close the gap with the United States. China, for example, has three aircraft carriers, compared with 11 in active service for the United States.

    The Ukraine war has prompted some elements in China’s military-industrial complex to call for an increase in the defence budget.

    An article published last October in the official journal of the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense, a central government ministry responsible for wartime logistics, recommended an increase in the military budget given surges in defense spending from NATO member-states besides the United States.

    “This matter is not about participating in the international arms race, but defending our national security,” it said.

  • UK PM vows to deport illegal immigrants

    UK PM vows to deport illegal immigrants

    • ‘You will not be able to stay’

    UNITED Kingdom Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has warned illegal immigrants entering the country that they would be deported and “will not be able to stay”.

    Sunak made the vow yesterday in an interview as the UK faces a steady flow of migrants crossing its borders from Europe. 

    Sunak’s government is expected to push legislation cracking down on illegal immigration later this week, with a special emphasis on illegal immigrants arriving in boats across the English Channel.

    “Make no mistake, if you come here illegally, you will not be able to stay,” Sunak told UK media.

    Much like the U.S., Britain currently has laws allowing illegal immigrants to claim asylum after crossing the border. The migrants are typically allowed to stay while their case is being litigated, but the new legislation would prevent such migrants from claiming asylum in the first place, the BBC reported.

    The UK saw tens of thousands of migrants cross its borders via the English Channel last year.

    “Illegal migration is not fair on British taxpayers, it is not fair on those who come here legally and it is not right that criminal gangs should be allowed to continue their immoral trade. I am determined to deliver on my promise to stop the boats,”

    The illegal immigration crackdown from America’s closest ally comes as the U.S. itself faces an unprecedented crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border. The U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has tracked more than 230,000 migrant encounters each month since October, up from 100,000 per month when President Biden took office.

    In comparison, the U.K. tracked just 45,000 migrants crossing the English Channel in 2022, according to Reuters.

    U.S. immigration authorities are tracking more than 230,000 migrant encounters each month, far more than the U.K.

  • Buhari urges Chadian factions to support transition process

    Buhari urges Chadian factions to support transition process

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday day urged the various factions in the Chadian political crisis to be patriotic and protect their homeland by joining the country’s transition government to see the ongoing process through.

    President Buhari made the call in Doha, Qatar, in a meeting with Chad’s transition President and Head of Government, General Mehmet Idris Deby-Itno, on the sidelines of the ongoing United Nations Conference on Least Developed Countries.

    Speaking about the developments in Chad, according to a statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, the President said: “I watch developments in your country from a safe distance. As a close neighbour, I go to sleep and wake up with the issue on my mind.

    “I sympathise with you, not only as a youth, but due to the position of some of the groups operating outside the country, including Libya, even though this is a problem you inherited from your father.

    “I am really reduced to praying on this matter. Other groups who think they are strong should be patriotic, settle down and secure their own country”, he said.

    President Buhari thanked the Chadian leader for the visit, giving assurances that, “as a good neighbour, I am prepared at any time to listen to your representations, political, security or any other matter.”

    President Deby-Itno said he had come to say thank you to the President for the support he provides to him and his country as they undertake the ongoing transition to democracy, which he said is going well.

    He wished President Buhari long life and congratulated him on the ongoing democratic process in Nigeria, adding that “we hope we will continue to see you even after your departure from office.”

  • Nigeria’s, others’ energy demand to grow by 50%, says Afreximbank

    Nigeria’s, others’ energy demand to grow by 50%, says Afreximbank

    The energy demand of Nigeria and other African countries is expected to grow by 50 per cent over the next two decades, spurring large scale investment in logistics, storage facilities for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), a pan-African multilateral trade finance institution, African Export–Import Bank (or Afreximbank), said at the weekend.

    Its Global Head and Director for Client Relations, Rene Awambeng, who pushed for energy investment in London during the International Energy (IE) Week, said: “Energy demand in Africa is expected to grow by 50 per cent over the next two decades. This growing demand will create opportunities for decarbonised energy infrastructure projects, logistics, storage, notably natural gas and LPG, that enable regional trade, and will create opportunities for renewable energy projects which will, in turn, increase energy security for Afreximbank member states.”

    He added that to ensure bankability, energy infrastructure projects would need to account for the energy transition.

    Nigeria and other parts of Africa are home to some of the world’s largest oil and gas reserves – boasting over 125 billion barrels of proven crude oil reserves and 220 trillion cubic feet of proven gas reserves – major investment opportunities have arisen across gas exploration and monetisation, gas-to-power, energy storage, infrastructure development.

    Major gas finds in Mozambique, Uganda, Tanzania, Egypt and Senegal – alongside flaring reduction across the continent, to decarbonise Africa’s exploration and production (E&P) sector – are expected to accelerate gas utilisation and monetisation activities.

    “These create opportunities for investments in LNG, FLNG trains and LPG for local industry and domestic consumption,” Awambeng said, amid Africa’s rapidly growing population and heightened industrialisation and rising power demand

    Aside Awambeng, other Afreximbank execs that made presentations at the London forum included Regional Chief Operating Officer for Anglophone West Africa, Eric Monchu Intong and Senior Manager for Syndications, Babajide Bode-Harrison. They all unpacked Africa’s hydrocarbon investment prospects and the key drivers of global oil and gas demand growth.

    Intong said Africa’s downstream sector currently requires a significant amount of infrastructure development including pipelines, refineries and storage facilities – presenting an opportunity for investors to develop associated infrastructure and logistics projects.

    An increase in fossil fuel production and refining is expected over the next two decades. Pipelines to power stations to fertilizer plants, for example, will precipitate significant industrial development.

    Bode-Harrison said product import programmes, partnership opportunities and trade finance programmes were also key to unlocking development in Africa’s hydrocarbons domain and presented strategic areas for collaboration.

    In response to the increasing refined product import needs of the continent, a more formalized process of aggregating, reorganizing and financing refined product supply has arisen, with Afreximbank working with national oil companies (NOCs) to develop product import programs to ensure energy security.  At present moment larger financing packages were required to meet Africa’s rising product demand, especially in the current geopolitically-induced price increase environment.

    “With financing African oil and gas projects representing a point of debate globally, the African Energy Chamber remains resilient in its support for investing in African hydrocarbons, recognizing the role these resources will play in making energy poverty history by 2030. African-based organizations such as Afreximbank have remained committed to African people and African energy, and its support for Africa’s energy future remains unwavering,” Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber,” NJ Ayuk, said.

    Investment into Africa’s oil and landscape and its associated trade and partnership opportunities will be discussed at African Energy Week 2023, taking place in Cape Town from October 16-20. The event will unite African energy leaders, global investors, and executives from across the entire energy value chain to discuss the future of the African energy industry.

  • Farmland prices continue to rise

    Farmland prices continue to rise

    Farmland values across the country have continued to rise with an acre selling for between N600,000 and N2 million depending on the area.

     Since 2020, the average value of farmland has gone  up by 100  per cent in places like Badagry, Ikorodu, in Lagos, Iseyin in Oyo State and Papalanto in Ogun State.

    This, however, is  not supported by strong farm cash   to warrant the increases.

    For  instance, two acres  of  farmland were put up for sale at N3.6 million at Atan, Ota, Ogun State. These would have been half the price in 2018.

    Acres of farmland for sale at Siun, Ogun State, off Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, are selling for N1.5 million per acre. In Ijebu, Ogun State, an acre of farmland sold for N500,000.

    There has been a bit of variability in farmland values in states, with farmlands costing ]much more in Abuja than in the southern part.

    From The Nation findings, farmlands are only affordable at the outskirts.  For example, six hectares of farmland at Paiko around Abuja sold for N6 million.

    Four thousand acres of virgin farmland at Komu, Itesiwaju Local Government Area (LGA) of Oyo State  was advertised  for sale at N40,000 per acre. However, the seller insisted the minimum purchase was 1,000 acres.

    Three acres of virgin farmland were put up for sale at Butubutu Village, off Ife-Ibadan Road, Ona-Ara LGA of Oyo State, at N300,000 per acre.

    At Ilero Village, Iseyin, Oyo, an acre of farmland sells for N200,000.

    In Iseyin, before 2017, farmland values were around N80,000 per acre. At the moment, the price has doubled  per acre.

    According to the President, Federation of Agricultural Commodities Association of Nigeria (FACAN), Dr. Victor Iyama, farming has been a challenge to make a living with issues such as insecurity, weather, financing and foreign competition confronting farmers.

    He noted that the cost of a farmland was becoming a deterrent to next generation of farmers, with  prices and demand rising so rapidly.

    Unless something is done to give aspiring farmers some relief from the high cost of acquiring farmland, he said many  youths  would not have access to farmland.

    Iyama has urged for  infrastructure improvements and farmland expansion to increase food production to prevent a food crisis.

    He wants increased efforts to revamp irrigation systems, build modern farming machines, and create more arable land as the nation faces the urgent task of improving the agricultural sector. According to him,further policy action was  required to address new and emerging challenges

    He lamented that economic reforms have not  generated impressive results in the  agricultural sector, adding that much have to be done to increase  farm production , lift rural incomes, reduce poverty, combat under-nourishment and send agro-food exports soaring.

    He indicated that Nigeria has to  radically boost its place in global agro-food markets,calling for an improved policy environment, to enable investments that will allow the farm sector to continue to adapt to the opportunities created by rising demand and the challenges of climate change and limited resources. Rising labour costs,he maintained, should  open opportunities to adopt new technologies .Stakeholders had advocated for  improved data collection that shows who owns land and how it is being used. They noted this was critical given that land is so important to the agricultural industry.

  • CISI Nigeria gets new executives

    CISI Nigeria gets new executives

    The Chartered Institute for Securities and Investment (CISI) in Nigeria has appointed new executives to drive its activities in Nigeria.

    Mrs Ijeoma Onwu emerged President while Mr Obinna Okafor and Mr Abiodun Adebimpe were elected First Vice President and Second Vice President.

    The CISI is the global professional body offering certification and continuing professional development opportunities across the breadth of financial services.

    The growing membership supports practitioners in the capital markets, risk and compliance, wealth management and operations and settlement. All these functions are represented.

    Country Representative, CISI, Nigeria, Dr. John Osuoha, said the new principal officers have shown great commitment towards its growth in Nigeria, noting that they were elected based on their commitment and support over the years to the vision of CISI.

    “With their many years of valuable experience in various capacities in the financial services space, including corporate board room exposure. They are set to promote and deliver the benefits of the Institute across the financial sector in Nigeria.

    “We would also like to thank inaugural President Mr Bola Ajomale for his inspiration and leadership and the outgoing President Mr Ade Buraimo,” Osuoha said.

    Assistant Director, Global Business Development, CISI, Helena Wilson said the institute was delighted to welcome such esteemed member practitioners to help it shape the CISI’s growth in Nigeria.

    “It is an exciting time for the CISI with a growing number of universities, including Covenant, Elizade, Mountain Top and Babcock all training students for CISI certificates. We are also working closely with the Nigerian Exchange Group to deliver training for our globally recognised wealth management and derivatives modules. We are thankful for the support of our strategic membership partners, the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS) and Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) as we work together to deliver global continuing professional development,” Wilson said.

    Onwu is a senior member of CISI in Nigeria and a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN). She has vast experience in audit and advisory services and as a chartered stockbroker and certified information systems auditor, she has over 20 years of working experience, with over 10 years in leadership positions.

    Onwu said CISI has a lot to offer in Nigeria, noting that the importance of professionalism and integrity should be at the heart of the Nigerian member community.

    “The knowledge, skills and behaviour the CISI offers contribute extensively to a practitioner’s employability and I look forward to working on behalf of, and meeting members during my term of office,” Onwu said.

    Okafor holds a BSc and MSc in Accounting and an MBA in Marketing. He is the Managing Consultant and Chief Executive of Vicosbin Consult Limited, a firm of compliance, risk management, audit & investigation, strategies and management consultancy. He has more than 20 years experience in financial services where he rose to executive positions in accounting, audit, compliance and risk management.

    Okafor is a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (FCA), a Certified Anti-Money Laundering Specialist (CAMS) and a Fellow of the Compliance Institute, Nigeria (FCIN). Okafor is the Chairman, Governing Council of The Society for West Africa Internal Audit Practitioners (SWAIAP). He is a Director in Mamoru Digital Technology Nigeria Ltd, a mentor with Tony Elumelu Entrepreneurial Foundation and a Chartered Tax Practitioner (ACTI).

    Adebimpe is the West African regional head of Custody Services for Rand Merchant Bank (RMB), a division of First Rand Group headquartered in South Africa. He also worked for Stanbic IBTC and Standard Chartered Bank where he held managerial positions. Adebimpe is a graduate of Accounting from the University of Ilorin, Nigeria where he emerged the best graduating student in the Accounting & Finance Department and faculty of Business & Social Sciences for the 2002-2003 academic session. He also emerged as the overall best professional examinations student of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) in 2004 and he is a Fellow of ICAN, and Honorary Senior Member of the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN).

  • Fintech revenue projected to hit $30 billion

    Fintech revenue projected to hit $30 billion

    Fintech revenue could hit $30 billion by 2025, a report by McKinsey & Company has said.

    It explained that as the fastest-growing start-up industry in Africa, African fintech raised over $13 billion in 2021 alone, the success of fintech companies is being fuelled by several trends, including increasing smartphone ownership, declining internet costs,  expanded network coverage, and a young, fast-growing, and urbanising population.

    It said African fintech has a significant impact on day-to-day life on the continent and with its current upward trend it can be perfectly poised to rapidly advance Africa’s global competitiveness with an increase in the exporting of fintech services globally.  

    These fertile grounds do have challenges. Regulatory uncertainties and differences between countries are a bottleneck, throttling the expansion of financial inclusion in Africa.This has led to the continent’s fintechs calling for a Pan-African regulatory body to define comprehensive regulatory policies for regions rather than countries.

    Certain governments and the private business sector continuously work on providing regulatory policy frameworks for businesses, customers, and economies with the current focus on regulations – digital-only banks and fintech are influenced by but independently regulated from the traditional financial system regulations.

    Also, anti-Money Laundering Scrutiny – more regulatory bodies are insisting on compliance herewith, worldwide there is a clamp down on non-compliant companies. This requires the verification of information received from the client to avoid fraudulent, terrorist, or other illegal activities being facilitated, supported by other processes such as Know Your Customer.

    It said consumer centrism – fintech must be vigilant in consumer education, especially the consequences of services and products that did not exist before, protecting the consumer from being exploited.

    On protection of privacy and security of data, it said stored personal consumer information is susceptible to cyberattacks. Fintech companies must comply and have the necessary security systems and protocols to secure sensitive data.

    The Global fintech Index of 2020 lists the top 100 fintech ecosystems,  four sub-Saharan African cities’ features that are leading this sector, namely Johannesburg, Nairobi, Lagos and Cape Town, and account for most of the continent’s fintech start-up funding.

  • PMI report: Business activities dip on cash shortage

    PMI report: Business activities dip on cash shortage

    The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) data indicated that cash shortages across the  economy had a severe impact on the private sector midway through the first quarter of the year.

    The PMI report for January released yesterday said substantial declines were seen in both output and new orders, while firms scaled back their purchasing activity and employment.

    It saidcompanies were also impacted by shortages of fuel, which added to price pressures and led to supplier delivery delays.

    “The headline figure derived from the survey is the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI¨). Readings above 50.0 signal an improvement in business conditions on the previous month, while readings below 50.0 show a deterioration,” it said.

    According to the report, the headline PMI dropped below the 50 no-change mark in February, posting 44.7 from 53.5 in January. Business conditions deteriorated markedly, ending a 31-month sequence of expansion.

    The decline in operating conditions was the sharpest since the survey began in January 2014, excluding the opening wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the second quarter of 2020.

    “The most severe impacts of cash shortages were seen with regards to output and new orders, which both fell substantially as customers were often unable to secure the funds to commit to spending. The decline in new orders was the first since June 2020, while the fall in output ended a seven- month sequence of growth. In both cases, the reductions were the most pronounced in the survey’s history, apart from during the opening wave of the COVID-19 pandemic,” it said.

    It added that with new orders and output falling, companies reduced their input buying and staffing levels accordingly. The declines were the first in 32 and 25 months respectively. The decrease in purchasing reflected not only a drop in customer demand but also difficulties for companies to find the funds to pay for items.

    “Alongside cash shortages, the private sector was also

    impacted by a scarcity of fuel in February. This had a notable impact on suppliers’ delivery times, which lengthened for the first time in close to six-and-a-half years and to the greatest extent since April 2016″.

    In turn, shortages led to a rise in fuel costs which were widely mentioned as having been behind a further marked increase in purchase prices. Higher raw material costs and currency weakness were also factors pushing up purchase prices. The rate of inflation was the softest since June 2020, but marked nonetheless and stronger than the series average. Staff costs also rose again in February, but at a modest pace.

    The passing on of higher input costs to customers resulted in a further sharp rise in output prices.

    Hopes that economic conditions will improve, alongside business expansion and investment plans, led to confidence in the year-ahead outlook for business activity. Sentiment was at a five-month high but still relatively muted.

  • Controversies over N2.9b attack on Flutterwave

    Controversies over N2.9b attack on Flutterwave

    There are reports that hackers have transferred about N2.95 billion from the accounts of African fintech unicorn, Flutterwave.

    Flutterwave’s legal counsel, Albert Onimole, had earlier reported the case to the Deputy Commissioner of Police, State Criminal Intelligence Department, Panti, Yaba, Lagos.

    It was reported that the hack on Flutterwave’s accounts occurred about two weeks ago from February 13. It was said the money was initially transferred to 28 accounts in 63 transactions. While the incident was reported to the police on February 13, this year, with the list of accounts that had received the money, the police could not freeze the funds.

    According to Flutterwave, some commercial banks allowed the money to be moved to other accounts, widening the money trail.

    To investigate accounts holding the stolen funds across various financial institutions in Nigeria, S.A. Adedesin, Legal Officer, State CID, Panti, Yaba, Lagos, filed a suit in the Magistrate Court of Lagos (Yaba Magisterial District sitting at Yaba) to support Flutterwave’s claims.

    The suit is between the Commissioner of Police and the affected 28 commercial banks.

    According to reports, 107 accounts, including fifth beneficiaries of those accounts, are to be placed on lien/Post-No-Debit.

    Howevet, Flutterwave’s co-founder and Chief Executive, Olugbenga Agboola said: “Flutterwave has not been hacked”.

    According to him, “this is a typical user profile compromise by a user who did not activate the relevant security on their profile. Our transaction monitoring system detected it as it should and notified the user.”

    This implies that Flutterwave’s merchant account was hacked not the company’s.

    “During a routine check of our transaction monitoring system, we identified an unusual trend of transactions on some users’ profiles. Our team immediately launched a review (inline with our standard operating procedure), which revealed that some users who had not activated some of our recommended security settings might have been susceptible,” Yewande Akomolafe-Kalu, Head of Branding and Storytelling at Flutterwave, said in a statement.

    Akomolafe-Kalu said: “…no user lost any funds, and we take pride in the fact that our security measures were able to address the issue before any harm could be done to our users. We collaborate with other financial institutions and law enforcement agencies to keep our ecosystem safe and secure.”

    It should be recalled that in May 2022, an online gambling company, 86fb/86z alleged that “(Flutterwave) maliciously froze [its] funds and intends to take the funds as their own and extort [the company] by cooperating with the local police”. Flutterwave denied the allegations stating that “some merchants were passing transactions on behalf of 86FB/86Z…without approval or authorisation.” According to the fintech, the merchants involved were suspended from using the platform and all funds due to these merchants were settled.

  • Dangote Sugar Refinery’s profit rises by 142% to N82.3b

    Dangote Sugar Refinery’s profit rises by 142% to N82.3b

    Dangote Sugar Refinery (DSR) Plc witnessed appreciable growths in sales and profitability in 2022 with pre-tax profit rising by 142 per cent to N82.3 billion.

    Key extracts of the audited report and accounts of DSR for the year ended December 31, 2022 showed that profit before tax grew to N82.3 billion in 2022 as against N34.billion recorded in 2021. Profit after tax also rose to N54.74 billion, representing an increase of 148 per cent on N22.05 billion posted in 2021. Total revenue had risen by 45 per cent from N278.05 billion to N403.25 billion. Earnings per share thus rose from 182 kobo per share to 451 kobo per share, an increase of 269 kobo or 148 per cent.

    The report showed that DSR is significantly scaling up its investment in the sugar sub-sector in line with the requirement of the Nigeria Sugar Master Plan (NSMP), with huge investments in Adamawa State through the expansion of DSR Numan Sugar Refining capacity from 3,000 tonnes of cane per day (tcd) to 6,000 tcd, and to 9,800 tcd.

    Chairman, Dangote Sugar Refinery (DSR) Plc, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, explained that increasing the sugar refining capacity would require a corresponding increase in sugarcane production capacity.

    He said the company has concluded plans to increase its sugar plantation from the current land area under cane production of about 8,700 hectares in 2022 to about 24,200 hectares within the next seven years.

    He pointed out that the company has doubled its scholarship and empowerment schemes in its host communities and will continue to introduce more initiatives to support our host communities.

    He noted that the company had already spent billions of naira in developing infrastructural facilities for host communities.

    According to him, through these initiatives and its numerous corporate social responsibility activities, DSR Numan will be able to touch the lives of the people, bringing social, economic, and infrastructural development to host communities.

    “We are thus committing over $700 million to our investment in the Backward Integration Programme (BIP) to enable us to put in place needed infrastructure for the eventual commencement of full-scale production,” Dangote said.

    He assured that the sugar company would change the trajectory by making Nigeria self-sufficient in the sector.