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  • 1.5m vulnerable households got N25,000 stipends, says NSIPA boss

    1.5m vulnerable households got N25,000 stipends, says NSIPA boss

    • ‘No compromise in $800m conditional cash transfer’ 

    The National Coordinator of the National Social Investment Programme Agency (NSIPA), Hajiya Halima Shehu, has said about 1.5 million households have received N25,000 monthly stipends under the Conditional Cash Transfer Programme since its launch in Kogi State.

    Shehu said the programme aimed to reach 15 million households with N25,000 each for three months. 

    The NSIPA national coordinator spoke at the weekend while highlighting the progress the agency had made since its launch. 

    She said: “Under my watch, we have successfully kick-started the conditional Cash Transfer Programme funded by World Bank with N25,000 monthly stipend for three months and we are targeting 15 million households. So far, over 1,500,000 beneficiaries have received this stipend.

    “We have flagged off the grants for vulnerable groups in Kogi State with N20,000 one-off grant and we target the higher percentage of persons living with disabilities. Both grants are to smoothen consumption and cushion the effect of the fuel subsidy removal.”

    Shehu also said the agency had re-launched and expanded the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP) which has the components of Traders Moni, Farmers Moni and Market Moni.

    The NSIPA national coordinator said the disbursement of the loans to beneficiaries would start next month.

    According to her, the National Home Grown School Feeding Programme, which has been moved to the Federal Ministry of Education, would resume as soon as schools resume.

    Also, Hajiya Shehu has reaffirmed the agency’s resolve to ensure accountability and transparency in the implementation of the $800 million World Bank Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) programme.

    Shehu spoke yesterday in Abuja while giving an update on the role of the NSIPA in poverty alleviation under President Bola Tibubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    Read Also: Stop disgracing our heritage – Internet users criticise Adeboye for sitting on Oyo monarch’s throne

    The NSIPA boss said the programme was designed for the poorest Nigerians across the country.

    She said it was fully funded by the World Bank, adding that the project was working with $800 million.

    Shehu said beneficiaries were being captured through a National Social Register sourced from the social registers of the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    “So, a collection of 36 states and the FCT social register makes up the National Social Register…”

    “Most people in the National Social Register are either rural poor, or urban poor. So, the office that is charged with the delivery of this cash, which is the National Cash Transfer Office, mines the beneficiaries out of the social register.

    “Most of the people in the National Social Register are not known to any political person. They are Nigerians that deserve to benefit from the grant. That is why no list is being collected by anybody,” she said.

  • E-CMR meant to boost national security, says Force PRO

    E-CMR meant to boost national security, says Force PRO

    The Nigeria Police Force (NPF) has confirmed the implementation of the upgraded electronic Central Motor Registry (e-CMR).

    It said the e-CMR is an information system aimed at enhancing the safety and security of all Nigerians. 

    The NPF also said the initiative is a crucial step towards improving law enforcement capabilities and ensuring the well-being of citizens.

    A statement yesterday in Abuja by the Force Public Relations Officer (FPRO), ACP Olumuyiwa Adejobi, an Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP), described CMR as a comprehensive system designed to streamline vehicle registration processes with a view to strengthening national security.

    The statement said: “Its full operationalisation would facilitate swift and efficient tracking of stolen vehicles, significantly increase the chances of recovery, lead to the maintenance of an accurate and up-to-date database of registered vehicles, which would aid the prevention and investigation of vehicle-related crimes, such as kidnapping and one-chance activities.

    “The system is also designed to make it impossible for stolen vehicles to be re-registered as an additional layer of security and discourages criminals from engaging in such activities.

    “To register for the e-CMR, individuals and corporate bodies can visit the official website at https://cmris.npf.gov.ng. The process is user-friendly, and all residents are urged to take advantage of the convenience it offers by completing the registration from the comfort of their homes.”

    Read Also: Rivers crisis: appreciate Tinubu for intervening  – Wike

    “While appreciating the cooperation of the public in this crucial initiative, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) emphasises that the NPF is committed to ensuring the welfare of the public, and the e-CMR and other applications designed by the police, like Rescue Me App and Police VGS, are vital tools in achieving this goal. 

    “The police acknowledge the concerns about e-CMR enforcement and assure that it would be done in the most professional manner with ample notice for registration by all individuals and corporate bodies. We urge all and sundry to spread awareness about e-CMR for a safer and more secured Nigeria.”

  • Tax reforms panel eyes revenue from national assets 

    Tax reforms panel eyes revenue from national assets 

    Nigeria can earn more revenue by putting its national assets into use, the Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms (PCFPTR), Taiwo Oyedele, has said.

    He said most of the national assets had been idle, instead of contributing to the country’s revenue.

    Oyedele spoke in Abuja during the civil society consultation and stakeholders’ engagement forum on strengthening fiscal policy and tax reforms in Nigeria.

    The event was organised by Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre with support from Christian Aid.

    The chairman said the committee was working to harmonise taxes and aid economic development.

    He said: “We want to be able to accomplish tax harmonisation and an environment that aids economic development, stable and predictable economic environment, including key economic indicators, like interest rate and exchange rate, so that people can plan, not just for the short term but for the medium to long term.

    “We hope to accomplish a tax to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio of currently about under 11 to 18 per cent in the next three years. We want to be able to earn more revenue from government assets and government-owned entities. We don’t even know the value of assets we have today.

    “There is ongoing work with Finance Incorporated to try and bring it together. Some estimates have it that we should have assets worth between N80 trillion and N100 trillion.

    “As a country, if you are getting only 10 per cent annually, which is conservative, you are talking about N8 trillion. That is more than the revenue collected by all the states and the local government areas combined. “

    “Some of the assets are just laying all over the place with people taking advantage of them. Some of the assets are not productive.”

    Oyedele said with a good use of the assets, the government could rely less on borrowing, particularly from “ways and means” from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), which he said was fueling inflation.

    The chairman noted that with the work of the committee, there would be improved quality of spending by government at all levels and accountability to increase public trust.

    Read Also: Stop disgracing our heritage – Internet users criticise Adeboye for sitting on Oyo monarch’s throne

    He said: “You will agree with me that there is a significant trust deficit across Nigeria today. It doesn’t matter who you are – whether President or governor – people are suspicious of anything that comes from the government. You really can’t blame the people because they take their behaviours from past experience.

    “Overtime, the government has been insincere; they have lied to us and their actions have not really aligned with what they have said. Therefore, we just take it like it is a part of politics not to be honest.

    “We need to be sincere with our people and we need people-centred policies. We need to be transparent and accountable and build trust with our people. That way, it is easier to implement government policies.”

  • Support Tinubu for more democracy dividends, NGO urges Nigerians

    Support Tinubu for more democracy dividends, NGO urges Nigerians

    • A for A donates 22,200 bags of rice for Christmas

    A non-governmental organisation (NGO), Asiwaju For All (A for A), has urged Nigerians to continue to support President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration for it to implement the Renewed Hope Agenda, various developmental programmes and deliver democratic dividends to the people. 

    The NGO said the President remained committed to providing dividends of democracy in all sectors and to different strata, stressing that it is the support and prayers of Nigerians that would enable the government to succeed.

    A for A’s National Coordinator Aminu Sani Jaji spoke at the distribution of 22,200 bags of 50 kilograms of rice to various states at the weekend in Abuja.

    The ceremony, which took place simultaneously in state capitals across the six geopolitical zones of the country, was meant to support the less privileged, particularly Christians, to enable them celebrate today’s Christmas.

    Jaji, who was represented by Mansur Khalifa, said each state was entitled to 600 bags of 50kg rice.

    The lawmaker said the gesture was meant to complement government’s efforts at ensuring that the masses enjoy dividends of democracy.

    He said an effective mechanism had been put in place to ensure that the rice was delivered to those it was meant for.

    Presenting seven trucks of 4,200 bags of rice to the Northcentral Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Rev. Dr. Jonah Samson, the A for A’s National Coordinator said: “We are calling on all our brothers, the Christians – and Muslim brothers – to come together and support this government of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. We want to assure Nigerians that more is coming. You will see dividends of democracy in different strata and different sectors of life. This is just the beginning.

    Read Also: Rivers crisis: appreciate Tinubu for intervening  – Wike

    “I am assuring that the dividends of democracy are coming to your doorsteps. All we want of you is to support the government and pray for the success of the government. Let the laudable programmes of the government be achieved.”

    “Each state is entitled to one truck of rice consisting of 600 bags of 50 kilograms. Some bags are 25 kilograms. So, if you receive 25, you are going to receive 1,200 bags that will make 600 bags of 50 kilograms. We have our method of making sure that these items reach the target populace,” Jaji said.

    Dr. Samson described the gesture as a service to humanity as well as part of the dividends of democracy.

    The CAN regional chairman assured the NGO that the items would be equitably distributed to the intended beneficiaries.

    The cleric said every government comes from God, hence Christians are admonished to pray for leaders.

    He assured the Tinubu administration and the NGO of the prayers of the church and for God’s guided in its programmes.

  • Stop using my office to issue fake appointments, says SGF

    Stop using my office to issue fake appointments, says SGF

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Senator George Akume, has warned those using his office to issue fake appointments to members of the public to desist.

    Akume gave the warning in a statement by the Head of Information in the Office of the SGF, Mr. Segun Imohiosen, yesterday in Abuja.

    The SGF said the warning was borne out of the purported fake appointments emanating from his office by unscrupulous elements to swindle unsuspecting individuals.

    He debunked the information circulating on the social media, emails, text messages, and other outlets, which lured members of the public to submit their curriculum vitae (CV) at a fee to a non-existing desk in his office.

    “The culprit has been using the name of the former Director Information, Willie Bassey, and these fraudulent contacts: Aliyu Isah; +234 9168487156, +234 8035557865 and email draliyu95@gmail.com, among others, to defraud unsuspecting Nigerians.

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    “The general public is by this notice advised to be wary of the perpetrators of these dubious activities and their cohorts and disregard such information being peddled around.

    “Any official enquiry and clarification should follow the official communication channels of the OSGF via www.osgf.gov.ng and info@osgf.gov.ng,” the statement said.

    The SGF warned peddlers of such fraudulent requests to desist from using the office of the SGF to fleece unsuspecting members of the public or face the full wrath of the law.

  • We’re here to stay, says Unilever Nigeria MD at centenary

    We’re here to stay, says Unilever Nigeria MD at centenary

    Unilever Nigeria has no plan to leave the country, the Managing Director Tim Kleinebenne, has said.

    He reinforced its commitment to Nigeria, saying the company is here to stay.

    “Unilever Nigeria’s remarkable journey of a hundred years signifies our unwavering commitment to excellence, sustainability, interest and passion to remain in Nigeria for the long haul.

    “We are here to stay. We are the future and a force for good through our brands and operations,” he said.

    Ogun State Governor Dapo Abiodun and his Lagos counterpart Babajide Sanwo-Olu joined other stakeholders to celebrate Unilever Nigeria for its centenary anniversary commemoration.

    Abiodun led the way, lauding the dedication of Unilever Nigeria to social responsibility initiatives, such as educational programmes and environmental sustainability projects, which have made positive differences in the lives of Nigerians.

    He highlighted the relevance of Unilever, saying: “The presence of Unilever Nigeria has spurred socioeconomic developments in Ogun State, which has its largest factory in Nigeria.

    “Through its operations, it is enhancing the local capabilities of our people with the right skills to add value to themselves and the country.

    “We will continue to foster and improve the ease of doing business in our state to spur more developments by manufacturers like Unilever Nigeria.”

    Lagos Commissioner for Commerce, Cooperatives, Trade, and Investment (CCT&I), Folasade Ambrose-Medebem, who represented Sanwo-Olu, said: “Unilever’s century-long journey is not just a testament to corporate excellence, but a legacy of impact, partnership, and innovation that has woven itself into the fabric of our lives.

    “From humble beginnings to a beacon of sustainability and social responsibility, Unilever Nigeria’s commitment to collaboration and progress as a guiding light for a brighter future.

    “As we celebrate this remarkable milestone, let us not only applaud the achievements of the past but also embrace the promise of the future.

    “Congratulations, Unilever Nigeria, on a century of excellence. May even greater success and positive impact mark the next hundred years!”

    Other guests present at the event included the Deputy British High Commissioner, Jonny Baxter, Dutch Consul-General. Michel Deelen, members of the Unilever Board led by the Chairman, His Majesty, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe, Obi of Onitsha, the Unilever Nigeria Leader Team led by Tim Kleinebenne and other critical stakeholders from the public and private sectors.

    Commending Unilever for the milestone achievements that have made the company the longest-serving manufacturing British company in Nigeria, the British Deputy High Commissioner in Lagos, Jonny Baxter said: “There are still many opportunities to invest in Nigeria across various sectors, including energy, infrastructure development, financial services, education, agriculture, technology and more. We would like to see more UK businesses setting up here in the long term to increase our bilateral trade ties and mutual prosperity.”

    Read Also: Stop disgracing our heritage – Internet users criticise Adeboye for sitting on Oyo monarch’s throne

    The Chairman of Unilever Nigeria PLC, His Majesty Igwe Nnaemeka Alfred Achebe, Obi of Onitsha, in a celebratory mood, expressed his delight to have been a part of the success stories of the longest-standing manufacturing company in Nigeria. “Unilever Nigeria has a rich history of innovation and has played a significant role in developing Nigeria’s economy and society. The company is committed to making sustainable living commonplace and is working to reduce its environmental impact and improve the lives of its employees and the communities it serves. Unilever Nigeria is proudly a Nigerian company committed to continuing to invest in and support the country’s future.”

    As Unilever Nigeria celebrates its centenary, the company looks forward to a future of continued growth, sustainability, and positive impact with a commitment to continue working with its partners to build a brighter future for Nigerians. In the next hundred years, the company will continue to harness the power of its people, brands, and partnerships to tackle the most pressing issues and make sustainable living commonplace.

    Unilever is one of the world’s leading suppliers of Beauty, Wellbeing, Personal Care, Home Care, Nutrition, and Ice Cream products, with sales in over 190 countries and products used by 3.4 billion people every day. Unilever Nigeria is a locally listed business that has been operating for 100 years selling brands such as Knorr, Vaseline, Closeup, Pepsodent, Royco and Pears.

  • Yuletide: LASEPA, commission embark on environmental safety enforcement

    Yuletide: LASEPA, commission embark on environmental safety enforcement

    The Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA) and Lagos Safety Commission (LSC) will be carrying out joint monitoring and enforcement operations to ensure a hazard-feee Yuletide.

    A joint statement by LSC Director-General Lanre Mojola, and LASEPA General Manager Babatunde Ajayi, said the enforcement will focus on event/social centres to ensure strict compliance with safety and environmental regulations during the Yuletide.

    The statement reads: “The government is committed to ensuring that residents and holiday makers have a safe, fun and memorable experience during the Christmas and New Year celebrations.

    “Thus, the LSC and LASEPA will be carrying out joint monitoring and enforcement operations across the state, especially at social centres. These centres include bars and lounges, event centres, night clubs, parks, gardens, children play areas, among other locations with high human traffic. This is to facilitate accident-free yuletide and ensure strict compliance to extant safety and environment laws, regulations and guidelines.

    Read Also: Rivers crisis: appreciate Tinubu for intervening  – Wike

    “The agencies have also begun a safety and environmental advocacy campaign programme, tagged ‘Socialize Responsibly’, aimed at promoting safety and environmental awareness and moderation during the Yuletide.

    “The public is hereby encouraged to notify the aforementioned agencies of any safety and or environmental infractions observed during the festivities through the following numbers 07000SAFETY for Safety Commission and 07046351295 for LASEPA.”

  • Court bars impostors claiming to be  NANS President, Senate Leader

    Court bars impostors claiming to be  NANS President, Senate Leader

    An Abuja High Court has restrained one Pedro Chibuzo and Ekundinu Segun Elvis from parading themselves as National President of National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) and Senate President respectively. 

    The duo  had been claiming to represent the interests of students despite not being officially elected. 

    The court ruled that their actions were misleading and damaging to the reputation of the organisation and the entire Nigerian students both home and in diaspora.

     It noted that the duo  had been using their false status as student leaders to influence decisions that affect the lives of students, and that this had caused significant harm to  Nigerian students.

     The court also noted that they had been using their position to take advantage of other students,describing it  as  ‘unacceptable behaviour’.

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     The court ordered them to stop engaging in any activities related to student leadership, and warned them that further violations of the ruling could result in harsher penalties.

     The applicants in the case are Lucky Emonefe and Babatunde Akinteye on behalf of the elected executives of NANS.

     The student body  in a statement noted that the ruling is a major victory for student rights and sets an important precedent across the country.

  • Nigerians skip ‘luxury’ items in Christmas celebration

    Nigerians skip ‘luxury’ items in Christmas celebration

    Faced with prospects of bleak Christmas and New Year celebrations forced by the asphyxiating cost of basic food items, many Nigerians are literally between the rock and the hard place with regards to coping with the hard times.

    Checks by The Nation show that few days to Christmas and New Year celebrations, soaring inflation has pushed prices of most staple food items beyond the reach of most Nigerians, putting them in quandary over how to enjoy the yuletide. 

    According to data from National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), consumer inflation rose 18-year high on surging food prices, reaching 28.20 per cent in November from 27.33 per cent in October, this year.

    Food inflation, which accounts for the bulk of Nigeria’s inflation basket, rose to 32.84 per cent last month from 31.52 per cent a month earlier.

    Accordingly, across the country, prices of basic food items like rice, beans, garri, tomato, vegetable oil, noodles, yam, bread, chicken, meat, condiments for making stew such as maggi, curry, time; and even sachet water, more popularly called ‘pure water,’ have skyrocketed.

    For instance, the price of a 50 kg bag of foreign rice ranges between N65, 000 and N70, 000, while a local brand goes for as much as N55, 000. A 50kg bag of Oloyin beans cost between N60, 000 and N70, 000. A tuber of Abuja yam sells for between N1, 000 and N3, 000. Two packs of sachets water (pure water) cost N50; a bag goes for N300.

    Boxed to a corner by the exorbitant cost of these items, especially during this festive season, many families, who are already grappling with low purchasing power, besides the sudden scarcity of naira notes, are weighting other options, including deleting some of the ‘luxury’ food items from their menu list and opting for alternatives.

    For instance, a banker, Mrs. Funmilayo Oyinlola, has sworn never to have anything to do with rice this festive season because of the high cost of the commodity.

    She told The Nation that she had discussed with her children that it wouldn’t make sense to eat rice and chicken and forgo their education. “l have a young family with four children and I had to make them understand why rice would be missing from the menu table this time

    “In place of rice, I promised them a good pot of soup with pounded yam. I can’t see myself buying rice at this time, so l will wait till January or February to buy. It’s sad that our government is not empathetic to the average Nigerian family. Though l can afford it, l see it as a waste of resources,” Mrs. Oyinlola said.

    Also lamenting, a couple, Mr. and Mrs. James Sunday, said they would look for alternative food this period as they can’t afford rice. Mr. James said their rent would be due by February, so the family could not feast on the ‘expensive habit’ of cooking rice this yuletide  to the detriment of their comfort.

    He, however, made a passionate plea on the Federal Government to intervene and possibly share rice and other expensive food items as palliatives to families who couldn’t afford them because of their high cost.

    After taking a critical look at the hike in the prices of food items in the market, especially rice, an author, Kennedy Ambrose, also swore his family would consider other food options besides Africa’s number one staple meal – rice.

    “I will never buy a bag of rice for N65, 000. There are other things for my family to eat like ponded yam, and plantain. But I’ll never bring myself to buying a bag of rice for that amount,” Ambrose stated irately.

    Also lamenting, a Lagos-based lawyer, Joseph Adekunle, asked: “How on earth are you going to celebrate Christmas in the midst of binding constraints caused by high price of basic food items? “Now that a fowl is even harder to slaughter, rice is like gold, costing nearly N70, 000 for a 50kg bag. It is survival and not merriment because the poor cannot afford it,” he stated.

    Adekunle maintained that while many small businesses, employees of private companies, and even civil servants are struggling daily with meagre salaries, with no sign of relief in sight, only a few organisations have managed to increase staff salaries in response to the high cost of living brought on by high inflation.

    A businessman, who simply identified himself as Richards, said he anticipated the harsh economic reality in the country due to the twin effect of the devaluation of the naira and rising inflation.

    “I could tell from the way the naira was losing value and prices were skyrocketing that this December would be difficult,” Richards said, revealing that as a way of getting round the crisis, “I paid someone to buy and raise broiler chicks for me at her home. She has space in her compound.

    “The chicks were quite cheap back then. It paid off. They are really big now and ready for consumption. So, my Christmas and New Year chickens are set. “As for rice, I always buy in bulk. I still have a substantial quantity from the full bag I bought some months back, so I’m covered for the yuletide.”

    For Martha Okezie, a mother of five, Christmas clothes are off the shopping list for the time being. Besides, most tailors, according to her, are less busy due to low patronage occasioned by the harsh economy.

    “Who is sewing new cloths again if not Aso-Ebi, when fairly-used outfits and even the Nigeria-made (Aba) wears have now saturated the market and are also cheaper? Okezie quizzed.

    A father of five, Mr. Darius Ating, however, cautioned that Nigerians shouldn’t be carried away by the festivities, because the economy usually bites hardest in the first few months of every New Year, particularly January.

    He said in light of the fact that parents will need to pay for their children’s and wards’ tuition, as well as other required expenses, Nigerians should make the most of what they have and save money for that occasion.

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    However, the Federal Government is not unaware of the challenging times Nigerians are faced with especially with regards to high cost of living hence, the President Bola Tinubu-led administration recently offered a form of succor for Nigerians who wish to travel this festive season.

    The President approved a 50 per cent reduction in inter-state transport fares and free train rides for those travelling between December 21, 2023, and January 4, 2024.

    The Federal Government, through the Chairman, Inter-ministerial Committee on the Presidential Intervention on Public Transportation, Dr. Dele Alake, announced the plan to subsidise all mini and luxury buse fares for ease of transportation for citizens willing to travel during the festive holidays on Wednesday, December, 20, 2023.

    “President Tinubu wants Nigerians to be able to travel within Nigeria to wherever they want to go to meet their loved ones without the extra burden of paying exorbitantly for inter-state public transportation,” Dr. Alake said.

    He, however, said air travel was not included in the initiative because it only aims to benefit the masses, stating: “The initiative is for the masses. Air transport is a luxury. The masses don’t use air transport. So they are our main target.”

    While many praised President Tinubu for his timely intervention, some others pleaded for expansion of the designated routes beyond 28.

  • NLRC refutes allegation of zero remittance

    NLRC refutes allegation of zero remittance

    The National Lottery Regulatory Commission (NLRC) has disassociated itself from a report falsely alleging that the Commission generated N6.3 billion in 2022 but remitted zero naira.

    In a statement by the Commission, its Director-General, Mr. Lanre Gbajabiamila, said NLRC has become aware of a misleading report circulating on social media on a video from the National Assembly Committee on Finance interrogating an agency.

    He stated that the report did not pertain to the NLRC.

    He emphasised: “This deliberate dissemination of misinformation threatens the reputation and trustworthiness of the lottery sector and the credibility of the NLRC itself.

    “Our bedrock of trust and credibility, which we have painstakingly built over the years, is eroded by these deliberate attempts to mislead, and we are deeply troubled by this. 

    “Let me be unequivocal in stating that the NLRC disassociates itself from the recent false claims erroneously or deliberately linking us to alleged fund misappropriation by the Nigerian Lottery Trust Fund (NLTF). The House of Representatives Committee on Finance quizzed the NLTF on the mentioned day.

    “However, confusion arose when the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) and Channels Television mistakenly referenced the NLRC instead of the intended entity, the NLTF, in their reports. Both media agencies promptly issued an apology to the NLRC for this error. “

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    He   clarified that the trillions of Naira the NLTF is purportedly asserting as the Nigerian lottery industry valuation are unfounded and merely sensationalist, seeking attention rather than truth. “The assertion becomes even more ridiculous when juxtaposed with the current GDP. Moreover, the NLTF is neither the regulator nor custodian of lottery figures in Nigeria.”

    He added that the much-needed Central Monitoring System (CMS), which the NLRC will deploy to monitor all lottery activities in the country and provide an accurate figure of the worth and revenue generation, has not taken off yet.

     He noted: “it will be misleading to project and brandish unverified numbers in this regard. These baseless assertions distort reality and cast an unwarranted shadow on the NLRC’s unwavering commitment to transparency and fairness. Such misleading information demands decisive action to rectify the damaging narratives that threaten the very integrity of our industry.”