Category: Business

  • PTAD: Resolving pensioners’ issues

    PTAD: Resolving pensioners’ issues

    TSWANYA: Hello, my name is Tswanya. My monthly pension is N17000 but it was reduced to N9000. Why is this so? I am alive please.

    DANIYAN: Dear Omobola, I learnt about the coverage of pensioner’s complaint platform of The Nation newspaper. I am a retiree who lost contact with PTAD due to my absence during their first screening transition sometimes in 2018. I need your advice and assistant on what step I should take to be reinstated. I retired from Federal Ministry of Works, Niger State.

    ALEXANDER: Dear, Omobola my name is Alexander. I am a retiree of Power Holding Company of Nigeria. Following my complaint to you on the wrong computation exercise by Pension Transitional Arrangement Department (PTAD) of the year 2023, I received a call on July 30 from PTAD. They requested that I forward documents in support of my claim which I did. So for the third month running now, no changes or difference is affected.

    OLADIPO: Good day, One of our member from Ado Ekiti Nitel/Mtel didn’t receive his July monthly pension. We asked him to go and do his I am Alive which he has done it last week. What can we do? He retired from Ado Ekiti

    LIASU: Hello, my name is Liasu. Kindly help me look into my pension issue because I am sick and I need my pension to be paid so that I can treat myself medically.

    CHIEF BAIYEGUN: Good day, I am Chief Baiyegun. This is an SOS call, please save my soul. I have no other hope. I will like to remind PTAD that as at today, 16th April 2025, I have not received my token pension for the month of March.

    THE NATION: The Newspaper will intervene by sending your complaint to PTAD. Therefore, TSWANYA, DANIYAN, ALEXANDER, OLADIPO should watch out for the pension page on Wednesdays for response from PTAD and subsequently every Wednesday for pension news.

    READ ALSO: Still on Anthony Joshua’s car accident

    AWOSOJI: Good Day, my name is Awosoji. I will like to know why PTAD did not include N32000 inside our monthly payment of April and May which is our right as federal government pensioners.

    PTAD: Dear Awosoji, please be informed that N32,000 will be added to every pensioner under DBS as soon as the fund for that purpose is made available except for some agencies like PHCN, Peoples Bank, Nicon Insurance, Nigerian Reinsurance, Nitel, pti and Assurance Bank.  Thank you.

    OLIYE: Good day, my name is Oliye. I am a CSPD pensioner under PTAD. I retired from Federal Ministry of Education. I have not yet received my 20percent arrears and 32per cent pension arrears.

    PTAD: Dear OLIYE, please be inform that N32,000.00 will be added to each pensioner under DBS as soon as the fund for that purpose is made available except for some agencies like PHCN, Peoples Bank, NICON Insurance, Nigerian Reinsurance, NITEL, PTI And Assurance Bank. Thank you.

  • STI unveils MD/CEO

    STI unveils MD/CEO

    The Board of Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc have announced the appointment of Dr. Lucas A. Durojaiye as the new Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of the Company, following the retirement of the immediate past MD/CEO, Mr. Olaotan Soyinka, in December 2025.

    This was made known in a statement signed by the Deputy General Manager, Corporate Communications & Investor Relations, Segun Bankole.

    The statement read: “Mr. Soyinka served the organisation meritoriously for 27 years, including his last 10 years as Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, during which he contributed to the growth and stability of the company.  He has since formally exited the services of the underwriting firm.

    “The appointment of Dr. Durojaiye has received the approval of the Board of Directors and the regulatory body, the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) with the new MD/CEO assuming office with immediate effect.

    Prior to his appointment, Dr. Lucas served as General Manager, doubling as Head, Northern Area Operations as well as Head, National Public Sector, where he contributed immensely to the Company’s operational, technical and business development activities in the region.

    “Dr LAD” as he likes to be addressed holds a Master’s Degree from Anglia Ruskin University, London and a Post Graduate Diploma in Business Strategy from ABP United Kingdom. He also holds both a Doctorate and Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Nasarawa State University, Keffi having been a Graduate of Insurance from Lagos State Polytechnic, (LASPOTECH). He has attended several top management trainings in Nigeria and overseas.

    READ ALSO: Still on Anthony Joshua’s car accident

    “With cognate experience from FBN Insurance Brokers where he rose to the position of Acting Managing Director, Cornerstone Insurance PLC, Mutual Benefits Assurance PLC to mention a few before joining Sovereign Trust Insurance PLC, his foray spans over 27 years well spread experience in Insurance administration, (Brokerage Services, Underwriting, General Insurance, Investment/Life operations, Technical/Claims, Risk Management, Business Development as well as Public Relations. A charismatic motivator and team player. Lucas’ latent managerial ability is hinged on effective leadership, sound communication and decision-making skills coupled with interpersonal and problem-solving abilities with a corporate focus and result-driven attitude.

    He is both an Associate Member of the Chartered Insurance Institute of Nigeria of Nigeria (CIIN) and the Nigerian Council of Registered Insurance Brokers (NCRIB) respectively. Dr LAD is a Chartered Fellow of the Institute of Credit Administration of Nigeria (ICA), Fellow of Chartered Institute of Loan & Risk Management (CILRM) as well as a Chartered Fellow of Certified Pension Institute of Nigeria (CPIN).

    “He is an alumnus of the Lagos Business School, having successfully completed the Senior Management Programme, SMP 51 of the school. He is an avid lover of jazz, an executive member of Abuja Jazz Club as Director of Socials, member of TYB Golf Club as well as a member of the IBB Golf Club, FCT, Abuja. In his new role as Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Dr LAD is expected to leverage his deep industry expertise and leadership capacity to drive the Company’s strategic objectives and sustain its growth trajectory”.

    The Chairman, STI, Mr. Abimbola Oguntunde, expressed satisfaction with the smooth leadership transition, describing it as evidence of the Company’s effective succession planning framework.

    He recalled that the immediate past MD/CEO also emerged through an internal transition in 2016, reinforcing the organization’s tradition of leadership continuity and institutional stability.

    The Chairman further stressed that, “the Company possesses the potentials of becoming a formidable pacesetter in the Insurance industry in Nigeria and beyond as he equally canvassed for support from all and sundry in making the ambition of the Underwriting Firm a reality.

  • Pensioners welcome N55.9b PTAD disbursement

    Pensioners welcome N55.9b PTAD disbursement

    • Call for final clearance of outstanding arrears

    Federal Government pensioners under the Defined Benefit Scheme (DBS) have reacted to the announcement by the Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) that it disbursed N55.9 billion as monthly pensions and outstanding arrears in December 2025, describing the development as a major relief after months of anxiety, while urging government to swiftly clear the few arrears still outstanding.

    The pensioners, drawn from different pension departments, said the payment which covered monthly pensions as well as arrears arising from the N32,000 increment and percentage increases of 10.66 per cent and 12.95 per cent has brought renewed hope to thousands of retirees struggling with rising living and healthcare costs.

    Several pensioners who confirmed receipt of arrears said the payment had eased financial pressure during the festive season.

    “For the first time in a long while, many of us were able to breathe in December. The arrears helped us settle medical bills and family obligations,” said a retired civil servant under the Civil Service Pension Department (CSPD).

    Pensioners also welcomed PTAD’s disclosure that over N42.5 billion was paid as arrears to more than 165,000 beneficiaries across the Civil Service, Parastatals, Defunct Agencies, Police, Customs, Immigration, Prisons, and Tertiary Education and Health sectors, describing the breakdown as a sign of improved transparency.

    However, retirees in the Parastatals Pension Department (PaPD) and Tertiary Education and Health Department (TEHD), where one month arrears remains outstanding, urged PTAD and the Federal Government to act quickly to complete the payments.

    READ ALSO: Reading Nigeria’s governance signals

    “We appreciate what has been paid, but at our age, even one month makes a big difference. We hope the promise to clear it will be fulfilled without delay,” a retired lecturer said.

    Pensioners also expressed appreciation for the payment of gratuity and death benefits to next-of-kin of deceased retirees, noting that such payments provide dignity and relief to bereaved families.

    “Families of deceased pensioners often suffer quietly. Seeing death benefits paid gives confidence that the system is improving,” said Uche Madueke,  a pensioner.

    While commending PTAD and the Federal Government for the scale of the December disbursement, pensioners stressed that sustainability and predictability of payments remain critical.

    They called for continued release of funds to PTAD to ensure arrears do not accumulate again, and urged government to fast-track other approved welfare measures, including pension harmonisation and health insurance coverage for DBS pensioners.

    Overall, pensioners said the N55.9 billion disbursement represents a significant step toward restoring trust, but emphasized that confidence will be fully rebuilt only when all arrears are completely cleared and payments remain consistent.

    As one retiree summed it up: “This payment shows progress. What we ask now is consistency, completion, and compassion for senior citizens who have served this country.”

    Recall that PTAD had last week Friday said it has successfully disbursed a total sum of N55.9 billion as monthly pensions and pension arrears to eligible pensioners and Next-of-Kins of deceased pensioners under the DBS in December, 2025.

    Speaking on this milestone payments, the Executive Secretary of PTAD; Tolulope Odunaiya, stated that this payment covers N13,411,400,362.87 as monthly pensions across all operations pension departments, including diaspora pensioners, while N42,501,348,236.06 was paid as pension arrears.

    She disclosed that the payments reflect President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s unwavering commitment to the welfare of senior citizens, in line with the administration’s Renewed Hope Agenda.

    She further reaffirmed the Directorate’s commitment to clearing the remaining one month arrears owed to PaPD and TEHD, while continuing to implement initiatives aimed at improving the welfare and overall well-being of DBS Pensioners.

    “The arrears payment covers outstanding obligations arising from the N32,000 pension increment, as well as the 10.66per cent and 12.95per cent pension increments, in addition to other accrued pension arrears, gratuity, and death benefits owed to eligible beneficiaries”, she said:.

  • IEI shareholders okay N17.5b capital raise at EGM

    IEI shareholders okay N17.5b capital raise at EGM

    Shareholders of International Energy Insurance Plc (IEI) have unanimously approved key resolutions aimed at strengthening the company’s capital base and repositioning it for growth, following the successful conclusion of its Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM).

    At the meeting held virtually, shareholders ratified the conversion of a N2 billion deposits by Norrenberger Advisory Partners Limited into equity, through the issuance of 1.25 billion new ordinary shares priced at N1.60 per share. The move is expected to significantly boost IEI’s capital structure and reinforce investor confidence in the company.

    In a major step towards recapitalisation, shareholders also authorised the board to raise up to N17.5 billion through a combination of funding options, including private placement, rights issue, public offer or the introduction of a strategic investor, subject to regulatory approvals.

    The EGM further approved amendments to the company’s Memorandum and Articles of Association to reflect the enlarged share capital, in line with the provisions of the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) 2020. Shareholders equally granted the board and management full authority to implement all approved resolutions and ratified actions already taken in connection with the recapitalisation process.

    Industry watchers say the approvals mark a turning point for IEI as it accelerates its recapitalisation programme in response to regulatory requirements and ongoing reforms in the insurance sector. The company is expected to benefit from improved solvency, stronger balance sheet fundamentals and enhanced capacity to create long-term shareholder value.

    READ ALSO: Still on Anthony Joshua’s car accident

    Speaking on behalf of the Chairman, Alhaji Bukar Goni Aji, the company’s Non-Executive Director, Dr Adeyinka Hassan, thanked shareholders for their overwhelming support, noting that it reflects strong confidence in IEI’s transformation agenda.

    According to him, the resolutions underscore shareholders’ commitment to building a more resilient, competitive and growth-oriented insurance business.

    International Energy Insurance Plc is Nigeria’s pioneering energy-focused insurance company, with a strong presence in offshore and onshore risk underwriting, alongside a broad portfolio of general insurance products. Founded in 1969 and headquartered in Lagos, the company is a subsidiary of Norrenberger Financial Group and is licensed and regulated by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM).

  • Leadway Assurance begins verification for African Alliance Annuitants

    Leadway Assurance begins verification for African Alliance Annuitants

    Leadway Assurance Company Limited has begun a comprehensive verification exercise for all African Alliance Annuitants following the successful takeover of the African Alliance Insurance Annuity portfolio.

    The Executive Director, Technical & Operations at Leadway Assurance, Olufunmilayo Amanwa in a statement said this critical validation process is the first step in the transition, designed to accurately identify all existing annuitants and update their records.

    According to her, the primary objective of this exercise is to safeguard the immediate welfare of retirees and ensure that every individual’s benefits are secured for efficient and timely payment.

    She stated that the verification exercise is a direct response to the regulatory measures introduced by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) to protect policyholders and strengthen confidence in the sector.

    She said: “By participating in this exercise, retirees under the African Alliance portfolio can transition seamlessly to the Leadway brand, ensuring the continuity of their payments without disruption.

    READ ALSO: Reading Nigeria’s governance signals

    “The verification of annuitants is more than just a process; it demonstrates our commitment to retirees. We want to ensure that their years of service and contributions are rewarded with financial certainty and dignity. The validation exercise establishes a solid foundation for timely benefit payments and maintaining the trust placed in us.

    “This transfer follows NAICOM’s intervention in appointing an interim management team as part of the process in settling outstanding annuity payments. The successful transfer to Leadway not only secures the immediate welfare of annuitants but also represents a broader step toward strengthening Nigeria’s insurance ecosystem”, she added.

    On how to complete the verification, Amanwa said all African Alliance Annuitants are encouraged to utilize the some channels to validate their information quickly and seamlessly.

    They include Dedicated Leadway Customer Support Lines; Email; and Visit to nearest Leadway Assurance Office, she noted.

    Leadway Assurance is one of Nigeria’s leading insurance companies, providing a wide range of financial protection services including life insurance, general insurance, among other financial solutions. With 55 years of experience, Leadway is dedicated to delivering innovative solutions and superior service to its customers.

  • UK urges Elon Musk to act over ‘appalling’ Grok AI deepfakes

    UK urges Elon Musk to act over ‘appalling’ Grok AI deepfakes

    The UK government has urged Elon Musk to take immediate action to prevent Grok, the artificial intelligence tool built into X, from being used to generate fake and non-consensual sexualised images of women and children.

    UK Technology Secretary Liz Kendall made the call in a statement, following growing reports that Grok has been exploited to create deepfake images targeting X users.

    In recent weeks, several media investigations have uncovered complaints from users who say they were victimised by Grok-generated deepfakes, including cases involving sexualised images of women and minors.

    One reported case involved a manipulated image of 14-year-old Stranger Things actor Nell Fisher, which Grok allegedly altered to depict her wearing a banana-print bikini, according to The Guardian. Concerns surrounding Grok intensified in late December after an update enabled users to upload photographs and request AI-generated edits.

    Read Also: Elon Musk becomes first person to exceed $600bn net worth

    On Monday, UK media regulator Ofcom said it had made “urgent contact” with X and was investigating allegations that Grok had been used to produce “undressed images” of individuals. The platform had earlier issued a warning to users, cautioning against the generation of illegal content, including child sexual abuse material.

    Reacting to the development, Kendall described the images created using Grok as “absolutely appalling” and called on X to respond swiftly.

    “No one should have to go through the ordeal of seeing intimate deepfakes of themselves online,” Kendall said. “We cannot and will not allow the proliferation of these demeaning and degrading images, which are disproportionately aimed at women and girls.”

    She added, “X needs to deal with this urgently.”

  • Abigborodo reaffirms ownership of PPL 220 oil field, dismisses Sapele Okpe’s claims

    Abigborodo reaffirms ownership of PPL 220 oil field, dismisses Sapele Okpe’s claims

    The Abigborodo community has restated its ownership of Ugbekoko, Uton Iyatsere and all lands comprising the PPL 220 oil field, rejecting recent claims by leaders of the Sapele Okpe community as baseless and misleading.

    In a detailed position paper, the Chairman of the Abigborodo Management Committee, Hon. Misan Ukubeyinje, faulted assertions published on an online platform which called on the Federal Ministry of Environment, oil companies and other government authorities to disregard Abigborodo’s claim and alter the long-established name of PPL 220.

    Ukubeyinje described the claims as legally untenable, historically inaccurate and unsupported by verifiable documentary evidence, insisting that Abigborodo remains the rightful owner of the oil field and the adjoining communities.

    He said colonial records obtained from the National Archives in Ibadan, and cited in correspondence by Emmanuel Oritsejolomi Uduaghan, the Alema of Warri Kingdom, clearly establish Abigborodo’s ownership of Ugbekoko and Uton Iyatsere.

    According to him, the records include judicial proceedings and official investigations conducted by British colonial authorities, which upheld the claims of Abigborodo leaders to the disputed areas.

    The Abigborodo chairman further stated that Itsekiri communities, including Abigborodo, Obotie, Aruwun, Ogorode, Ajimele, Ogwanja and Aja-Ojigwo, were aboriginal settlements in Sapele long before the migration of the Okpe people from Orerokpe in the early 1900s. 

    He cited colonial intelligence reports documenting the Okpe migration between 1900 and 1907, noting that Sapele had already been established as a British colonial administrative and commercial centre by 1891.

    He also referenced a 1940 judgment of a colonial magistrate court which discharged Abigborodo farmers accused of trespass within the Okpe-Sobo forest reserve, as well as protest letters written in the 1930s by the Olu of Warri and the Alema of Warri. Ukubeyinje said these petitions were investigated by the colonial administration and resolved in favour of Abigborodo.

    Ukubeyinje dismissed arguments that Abigborodo land does not extend into Sapele Local Government Area, explaining that administrative or political boundaries created for governance purposes do not extinguish ancestral land ownership, which predates the creation of local governments and even Nigeria as a sovereign nation.

    He also cited the 2021 Judicial Panel of Enquiry into the Okpe-Urhobo forest reserve, which recognised Ugbekoko, Obotie and Aja-Ojigwo as Itsekiri communities and affirmed Uton Iyatsere as an Itsekiri settlement.

    Read Also: Land dispute: Abigborodo community asks Sapele Okpe to provide proof of ownership

    Raising concerns over reports of a closed-door meeting allegedly involving the Delta State Commissioner for Oil and Gas, Navante Exploration and Production Limited and representatives of the Sapele Okpe community, Ukubeyinje said such an action, if true, amounted to institutional bias. 

    He questioned the authority of any government official to direct the renaming of a long-established and gazetted oil field.

    He maintained that extensive research, independent investigations and stakeholder consultations were conducted before the naming of PPL 220, adding that no individual or agency has the legal power to alter its name.

    Ukubeyinje insisted that the PPL 220 oil field lies entirely within Abigborodo land, that those to be directly impacted by oil operations are Abigborodo people of Itsekiri extraction, and described the Sapele Okpe claim as trespass.

    He therefore called on the Minister of Environment, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, the Delta State Government and other relevant authorities to disregard the claims of the Sapele Okpe Community and uphold the position of the Alema of Warri Kingdom on the rightful ownership and naming of the PPL 220 oil field.

  • CORAN backs downstream, says policy neutrality no longer enough

    CORAN backs downstream, says policy neutrality no longer enough

    The Crude Oil Refinery Owners Association of Nigeria (CORAN) has expressed  confidence in Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sector.

    It declared  that the industry has reached a defining moment where policy neutrality can no longer drive sustainable growth.

    In a statement  on Monday titled: “True Faith in Nigeria’s Downstream: Why Local Refinery Companies Built While Importers Traded,” the association said Nigeria is gradually moving away from decades of structural dependence on imported petroleum products towards a locally driven refining industry, although significant challenges remain.

    CORAN noted that after years marked by fuel subsidy distortions, massive foreign exchange losses and weak domestic refining capacity, the emergence of local refinery investments has reopened a crucial national debate: who has truly demonstrated faith in Nigeria’s downstream sector, those who built refineries or those who relied on fuel importation?

    According to the association, the answer lies in capital commitment, risk exposure and long-term investment behaviour rather than rhetoric or market positioning.

    “The faith in an economy is best measured by what investors are willing to build and what risks they are prepared to carry over time,” CORAN said.

    It explained that local refinery companies, ranging from large-scale plants to mid-sized and modular refineries, have committed huge capital to fixed industrial infrastructure within Nigeria. Refining, it stressed, is one of the most capital-intensive and risk-exposed segments of the petroleum value chain.

    “Investors must contend with construction and commissioning risks, uncertainties around crude supply, foreign exchange volatility, power and logistics constraints, evacuation challenges, regulatory inconsistencies and evolving policy frameworks,” the association stated.

    CORAN added that once built, a refinery represents immobile capital that cannot be easily relocated, sold or exited without heavy losses. Beyond construction, refineries require strict operational discipline, compliance with product specifications, environmental responsibility, host community engagement and sustained participation in the domestic market.

    “In this sense, refining is not a trading strategy but an industrial commitment,” CORAN said, noting that local refinery companies have collectively invested tens of billions of dollars in downstream assets whose value depends on Nigeria succeeding as an energy-secure and industrialised economy.

    By contrast, the association observed that Nigeria’s downstream sector over the past three decades has been dominated by an import-dependent trading model that failed to deliver structural progress. During the fuel subsidy era, petroleum importation became highly lucrative, driven by price arbitrage, preferential access to foreign exchange, weak consumption verification and subsidy reimbursement systems.

    CORAN recalled that several investigations revealed Nigeria paid for volumes of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) far above realistic domestic consumption, costing the country billions of dollars in a short period. Despite the enormous profits generated during this era, reinvestment into domestic refining capacity largely failed to materialise.

    Quoting data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), CORAN said Nigeria imported over 20 billion litres of PMS in 2023, only slightly below 2022 levels, showing how deeply entrenched the import model remains even after subsidy removal.

    It added that trade data reported by Reuters indicate petrol imports rose to about ₦15.4 trillion in 2024, more than double the ₦7.5 trillion recorded in 2023, representing massive foreign exchange outflows.

    “These resources could have circulated within the domestic economy through refining operations, logistics, storage infrastructure, petrochemical development and industrial employment,” the association said, arguing that importation consumed national wealth without building enduring capacity.

    CORAN also questioned the destination of fortunes accumulated during the importer-dominated era, noting that if importation reflected genuine belief in Nigeria’s downstream potential, substantial reinvestment into refining and processing infrastructure would have followed.

    “Instead, capital largely flowed into real estate, financial assets and other non-productive investments, as well as upstream acquisitions where crude was often sold to international traders rather than refined locally,” it said.

    The association noted that Nigeria is now facing the consequences of two contrasting downstream philosophies: local refinery operators focused on domestic value addition, energy security and long-term resilience, and import-reliant operators whose business models depend on access to ports, foreign exchange windows and permissive import regimes.

    Acknowledging that both groups contribute to the economy, CORAN said their positions diverge sharply during policy reform discussions. According to the association, local refiners advocate transparent crude supply mechanisms, coherent pricing and foreign exchange policies, and conditional import controls when domestic capacity can meet demand, while importers often push for unrestricted import access.

    As the umbrella body for Nigeria’s refining industry, CORAN insisted that the country has reached a stage where deliberate policy choices are required. It called for guaranteed and transparent crude supply to domestic refineries through enforceable, rule-based allocation mechanisms insulated from discretion.

    It also advocated conditional import licensing, stressing that imports should serve only as a balancing tool rather than a default option where local refining meets volume and specification requirements. In addition, CORAN urged alignment of foreign exchange and pricing policies to prevent structural disadvantages for local refiners.

    Read Also: CORAN urges govt to protect local refineries from unfair competition

    “This is a wake-up call for clear policy differentiation. Companies that refine locally should not be treated the same as those limited to importation,” the association said, adding that such measures are standard industrial policy tools in serious energy-producing economies, not protectionism.

    CORAN stressed that the debate is not about corporate rivalry but about the kind of downstream sector Nigeria wants to build. It warned that continued reliance on imports exposes the country to foreign exchange shocks, supply disruptions and fiscal instability, while supporting local refining strengthens energy security, creates skilled jobs and deepens industrial capacity.

    In conclusion, the association said local refinery companies have already answered the question of faith through concrete actions by building plants and committing capital within Nigeria, while the importer model historically relied on cargoes and margins.

    “As Nigeria charts the future of its downstream sector, policy must align with demonstrated commitment. In the downstream petroleum industry, faith is defined not by claims or trading volumes, but by what is built, what is sustained and what investors are willing to risk in the national interest,” CORAN said.

  • Oil fields dispute: Court orders Lokpobiri, others to maintain status quo

    Oil fields dispute: Court orders Lokpobiri, others to maintain status quo

    The Federal High Court in Abuja, yesterday ordered the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), Heineken Lokpobiri, and others to maintain status quo pending the hearing and determination of a case involving four oil fields.

    Justice Emeka Nwite gave the order after Ambrose Unaeze, who appeared for the plaintiffs; Hi-Rev Oil Limited and Hi-Rev Exploration and Production Ltd, moved the application to the effect.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the 2nd and 3rd defendants in the suit, marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/2678/2025, are the Attorney-General of Federation (AGF) and Nigeria Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC).

    Justice Nwite had, on Dec. 22, 2025, ordered the minister, the AGF and NUPRC to show cause why the reliefs of the plaintiffs in their motion ex-parte should not be granted.

    The judge made the order after Unaeze moved the motion dated and filed on Dec. 11.

    The oil and gas companies had sought an order of interim injunction restraining the defendants or whomsoever is acting on their behest from selling, assigning or allocating the Yorla South (Petroleum Prospecting Licence (PPL) 2A32 – OML 11) located in Rivers.

    The order is to also restrain the defendants from allocating Akiapiri (PPL 2A48 – OML 25) located in Bayelsa; Diebu Creek East (OML 32) also located in Bayelsa and Idiok (PPL 2A41 – OML 67) located in Akwa Ibom, “same being direct replacements for Utapate Oil Field (formerly part of OML 13) and OPL 2002, previously allocated to the plaintiff but was later withdrawn by the defendants, pending the hearing of the interlocutory application in this suit.”

    Giving four grounds why their application should be granted, the lawyer said the companies were previously allocated the Utapate Oil Field (formerly part of OML 13) and OPL 2002, but were unreasonably withdrawn by the Federal Government.

    He said parties had a settlement agreement for the replacement of the Utapate Oil Field, which was accepted or adopted and it became consent judgement.

    Unaeze stated that the firms had taken substantial steps and offered consideration in respect of the grant of the licence to operate OPL and licence to establish a petroleum refinery.

    Read Also: Lokpobiri mourns passing of Bayelsa deputy gov Ewhrudjakpo

    He argued that the companies’ legal right is being threatened by the defendants, pursuant to the threat to sell or allocate the oil fields at Yorla South, Akiapiri, Diebu Creek East, and Idiok to third parties via the defendants’ offer to the public for round bid, hence, the need for the interim order.

    Although the judge did not grant the order, he, however, ordered the defendants to appear on Jan. 5 (today).

    When the matter was called yesterday, Unaeze informed the court that an order was made for the defendants to show cause why their relief should not be granted.

    The lawyer said the 1st and 3rd defendants (minister and NUPRC) just served on him their memorandum of conditional appearance, counter affidavit and preliminary objection in court and that he would need time to respond.

    Unaeze, however, applied that the defendants, who were duly represented in court by their lawyers, should give an undertaking not to take any action that might affect the subject matter pending the hearing and determination of the case.

    “This is because of the nature of the case and the risk the res (subject matter) may face before the next adjourned date,” he said.

    Speaking, Oyinlade Koleoso, who appeared for the 2nd defendant (AGF), said they filed a counter affidavit and a preliminary objection, though they were yet to serve same.

    When the judge asked him if he had filed affidavit to show cause, Koleose said he believed that the processes he had filed would take care of that.

    The lawyer told the court that based on Unaeze’s application, their submission was that the AGF was not in the position to allocate oil blocks.

    The 3rd defendant (NUPRC)’s lawyer, J. A. Olugbade, disagreed with Unaeze’s application.

    He said he opposed the plaintiffs lawyer’s prayer since he had already filed a counter affidavit and a preliminary objection.

    B. J. Tabaya, counsel for the 1st defendant (minister), said he did not have the instruction of his client to make such undertaking sought by Unaeze.

    “But when a case is in court, what are you supposed to do?” the judge asked Tabaya.

    “Party will maintain status quo,” the lawyer responded.

    “So go and tell your client that as far as this matter is before the court, parties should maintain status quo,” the judge said.

    Delivering the ruling, Justice Nwite, who granted Unaeze’s application, ordered the parties to maintain status quo pending the hearing and determination of the matter. The judge then adjourned the matter until Januaty 26 for hearing.

  • Flutterwave acquires Mono to drive payment

    Flutterwave acquires Mono to drive payment

    Flutterwave, Africa’s leading payments technology company, has acquired Mono, a pioneer in open banking infrastructure across the continent.

    The transaction deepens Flutterwave’s long-term commitment to building a connected, interoperable financial system for Africa and positions open banking as a core pillar in the evolution of alternative payment methods across the region.

    Mono’s API-driven platform enables secure access to financial data, identity verification, and account-to-account payments; capabilities that are increasingly critical as African markets move toward more trusted, data-led financial services.

    Under the terms of the acquisition, Mono will continue to operate independently, with no changes to its leadership structure, team, or day-to-day operations.

    Flutterwave’s stake enables strategic alignment rather than operational control, allowing Mono to maintain its pace of innovation while contributing its open banking infrastructure to Flutterwave’s broader payments ecosystem.

    Read Also: Flutterwave co-founder mobilises support for Kwara Education Trust Fund

    The acquisition reflects a growing recognition that the next phase of Africa’s payments growth will be driven less by card rails and more by bank-based, authenticated, and locally relevant payment methods.

    By integrating Mono’s open banking APIs, Flutterwave strengthens its ability to support faster onboarding, improved verification, reduced fraud, and seamless account-to-account payments. The collaboration also creates a clear pathway for expanding into richer alternative payment methods, authenticated payment flows, and, over time, open banking-enabled stablecoin use cases.

    It also carries implications well beyond product expansion. Businesses gain access to infrastructure that simplifies compliance-heavy processes such as identity checks and bank verification, while improving conversion and reliability at scale.

    Developers and partners benefit from a unified environment where payments and financial data coexist, reducing complexity and accelerating time to market.

    The integration enhances Flutterwave’s vertical depth, reinforcing long-term value creation through stronger margins, deeper platform stickiness, and differentiated infrastructure. Regulatory stakeholders benefit from increased standardization, stronger data protection, and adherence to global security frameworks, including PCI-DSS and ISO 27001.

    Commenting on the acquisition, Olugbenga ‘GB’ Agboola, Founder and CEO of Flutterwave, said, “This acquisition reflects how we think about the future of financial infrastructure in Africa. Payments, data, and trust cannot exist in silos. Open banking provides the connective tissue, and Mono has built critical infrastructure in this space.

    This acquisition allows us to expand what’s possible for businesses operating across African markets, while staying grounded in security, compliance, and local relevance.”

    Adding to this, Abdulhamid Hassan, Founder and CEO of Mono, said,  “We built Mono to unlock Africa’s Open Banking potential, and since our first partnership with Flutterwave in 2021 and working together over the years, we’ve seen the power of a coordinated effort towards this goal.

    Mono’s capabilities across financial data access, direct bank payments, and identity verification, combined with Flutterwave’s unmatched scale and global reach, create something more defensible and comprehensive. This acquisition allows us to build the infrastructure layer that powers the next generation of African fintech at the speed and scale the continent deserves.”

    At a time when Africa’s digital economy is demanding infrastructure that is open by design and built for trust, the investment signals a deliberate move toward systems that are interoperable, data-driven, and designed to support long-term growth across the continent. The transaction was advised by Nichole Yembra, Founder and Managing Partner at The Chrysalis Advisors Africa, who supported the parties through strategic positioning and execution