Category: City Beats

  • Omi Eko appoints Alabi head of communications

    Omi Eko appoints Alabi head of communications

    The Omi Eko Project, a 410 million euro initiative to transform water transport across Lagos, has appointed Dr Segun Alabi as its Head of Communications and Media on Thursday.

    The appointment was announced in Lagos by the Special Adviser on Blue Economy to the Governor of Lagos State and Project Coordinator of Omi Eko, Oluwadamilola Emmanuel, who expressed confidence in Alabi’s capacity to drive the project’s communications agenda at a critical stage of its implementation.

    Emmanuel said Alabi brings extensive experience in communications, media relations, and public affairs, describing him as a seasoned corporate affairs professional with a proven track record across multiple sectors.

    In his new role, Alabi is expected to lead the development and execution of comprehensive communication strategies, manage media engagement and project stakeholder relations, while promoting the vision and sustainability objectives of the Omi Eko Project.

    “Dr Alabi is a highly accomplished corporate affairs professional with diverse experience spanning pay television, financial services, real estate, business membership organisations, and the manufacturing sector,” Emmanuel said.

    Until his appointment, Alabi served as Assistant Director, Corporate Affairs and Communications at the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, where he coordinated corporate communications, public affairs, and event management functions for the association.

    His professional expertise covers reputation management, government relations, corporate social responsibility, stakeholder engagement, public policy advocacy, and social media strategy, areas considered central to the successful delivery of a large-scale public infrastructure project such as Omi Eko.

    Reacting to his appointment, Alabi said he was delighted to join the Omi Eko Project team, describing the opportunity as a personal milestone.

    “I am excited to join the Omi Eko Project team. This opportunity is truly a dream come true. While the task ahead is enormous, it is certainly achievable,” he said.

    Alabi holds a PhD in English from the University of Lagos, with specialisation in language use and communication.

    The Omi Eko Project is a flagship sustainable water transport initiative designed to ease road congestion in Lagos by unlocking the state’s vast but underutilised waterways.

    The project, supported by the European Union and private sector partners, is expected to play a significant role in reshaping urban mobility while promoting environmentally responsible transportation across the metropolis.

  • Adeyanju commends Tinubu over Oyedepo’s appointment as director of public prosecutions

    Adeyanju commends Tinubu over Oyedepo’s appointment as director of public prosecutions

    Human rights activist and lawyer, Deji Adeyanju, has commended President Bola Tinubu over the appointment of Rotimi Oyedepo, SAN, as the new Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP).

    In a statement on Thursday, Adeyanju described the appointment as a positive step toward strengthening the rule of law and reforming Nigeria’s justice sector.

    He said Oyedepo’s “demonstrated independence of mind” makes him well-suited for a position that plays a central role in the administration of justice.

    Read Also: Niger youths solidly behind Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda — Limateef

    “By entrusting such a sensitive office to a seasoned professional, the President has shown that reform of the justice sector can be driven by capacity and respect for due process,” Adeyanju said.

    According to him, the decision signals a commitment to professionalism and could help rebuild public confidence in the prosecution system.

    “It is a step in the right direction and one that, if sustained, can help restore faith in public prosecutions as a tool for justice,” he added.

    Adeyanju concluded that the appointment “deserves to be applauded,” urging that merit-based decisions continue to guide key appointments in the justice sector.

  • Delta infrastructure drive gains momentum as Oborevwori breaks ground for Otovwodo flyover

    Delta infrastructure drive gains momentum as Oborevwori breaks ground for Otovwodo flyover

    Delta State Governor Sheriff Oborevwori will on Monday, January 12, 2026, officially break ground for the construction of the Otovwodo Junction Flyover in Ughelli, further accelerating his administration’s aggressive push to transform the state’s urban infrastructure.

    The groundbreaking ceremony, scheduled for 11:00 a.m., marks another major milestone in the governor’s infrastructure renewal agenda.

    A statement by the Governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Festus Ahon, said guests are expected to be seated by 10:30 a.m. ahead of the flag-off.

    Construction work has already begun at the site, with Julius Berger Nigeria Plc mobilised and actively working, reinforcing the administration’s determination to deliver the project on schedule.

    The Otovwodo Junction Flyover is one of two newly approved flyover projects by the State Executive Council (EXCO), coming on the heels of the near completion of three major flyovers at PTI Junction, DSC Roundabout, and Enerhen Junction—projects widely regarded as game-changers for traffic flow in the state and executed by Julius Berger.

    Read Also: Okowa, Morka rally APC chieftains, members for Tinubu, Oborevwori

    The second newly approved flyover is sited at Uromi Junction in Agbor, Ika South Local Government Area, further underlining the Oborevwori administration’s relentless drive to decongest major urban corridors and modernize Delta’s road infrastructure.

    In preparation for the Otovwodo flyover project and to ease traffic flow during construction, Oborevwori had earlier directed the construction of four adjoining roads at Ovie Palace Road, Okogbe Road, Oyakemeagbegha Street, and Edo Road, to decongest the busy junction and minimise disruption to motorists and residents.

    Similarly, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc has also commenced preliminary works at the Uromi Junction flyover site, while the groundbreaking ceremony for that project is expected to be announced at a later date.

    The flyover projects form part of the Oborevwori administration’s broader infrastructure renewal agenda aimed at improving traffic management, enhancing safety, and boosting economic activities across Delta State.

  • Doctor gets certificate after Lawal settles N25m tuition

    Doctor gets certificate after Lawal settles N25m tuition

    Governor Dauda Lawal has settled a N25 million debt of Zamfara medical student who graduated in 2017 in India.

    Dr. Ibrahim Aliyu, a Zamfara-born medical graduate, has received his certificate from India’s SHRI B.M. Patil Medical College, after intervention by Governor Lawal.

    Aliyu completed his studies in 2017 but was unable to claim his certificate due to unpaid tuition fees—a legacy issue from the previous administration.

    His career prospects remained stalled until Governor Lawal’s administration stepped in.

    Commissioner for Health, Dr. Nafisa Muhammad Maradun, announced the payment during a briefing at the Polio Emergency Centre in Gusau.

    Read Also: Governor Lawal inspects projects in Shinkafi, says Zamfara rescue on course

    She hailed the move as emblematic of the governor’s “Rescue Agenda,” emphasizing its alignment with human capital development and citizen welfare.

    Dr. Aliyu expressed overwhelming gratitude, thanking the governor, Commissioner Maradun, and Alhaji Mustapha Marafa of the Hospital Services Management Board, describing the intervention as “career-saving.”

    Dr Maradun urged Aliyu to “justify the investment” through diligent service to Zamfara’s health sector.

    The intervention not only revives Aliyu’s professional aspirations but also signals the administration’s prioritization of education and healthcare—a critical need in Nigeria’s northwestern region

  • ZACCIMA: Zamfara entrepreneurs receive N263 million gov’t grants

    ZACCIMA: Zamfara entrepreneurs receive N263 million gov’t grants

    Governor Dauda Lawal has disbursed N263 million to entrepreneurs and members of the Zamfara Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (ZACCIMA).

    This was revealed by the President of ZACCIMA, Dr. Hassan Buhari at the weekend during the General Annual Meeting of the chamber held at Gusau Guest House.

    He said, “Through the strong support and political will of His Excellency, the Executive Governor of Zamfara State, grants totaling N263,000,000 was disbursed to ZACCIMA members: 1,000 beneficiaries received N150,000 each; 60 strategic entrepreneurs received N1,000,000 each.”

    This intervention, he said, was a clear demonstration of government’s confidence in ZACCIMA as a credible channel for economic empowerment.

    “I sincerely appreciate: His Excellency, the Executive Governor of Zamfara State, for his unwavering support Members of the Executive Council for their loyalty and cooperation Government agencies and development partners All members of ZACCIMA for their trust and resilience. Dr. Buhari said.

    The president said the chamber was institutionally weak, financially constrained, and largely disconnected from policy and governance processes prior to the interventions of Governor Lawal to provide grants to it members.

    Dr. Buhari said ZACCIMA has strengthened structured engagement with the Zamfara Investment Promotion Agency (ZIPA), Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning.

    He said through these engagements, ZACCIMA has became a recognized consultative partner in economic planning, investment promotion, and private-sector advocacy.

    In his remarks, Zamfara state Commissioner For Commerce, Industries and Tourism, Abdulrahaman Tumbido, said Governor Lawal’s administration remains steadfast in its commitment to moving the economy beyond primary resource extraction to value addition, manufacturing, and sustainable agribusiness.

    Represented by the permanent secretary in the ministry, Abdulrahman Guraguri Shinkafi, the commissioner assured the state government support for ZACCIMA.

    “Let me, first, on behalf of the Ministry and the Government of Zamfara State, congratulate the leadership and entire membership of ZACCIMA on the successful hosting of your 2025 AGM. Your mission on Sustainable Economic Diversification through Harnessing Local Resources for Industrial Growth and Job Creation, is not only timely but is in perfect symphony with the core objectives of His Excellency, the Executive Governor Dauda Lawal,” he said.

    Tumbido said Governor Lawal’s administration is on the final touch to complete the construction of Gusau International Airport and the 7-story Hotel will also be completed soon.

  • Zamfara govt distributes motorcycles to sanitation officers

    Zamfara govt distributes motorcycles to sanitation officers

    The Zamfara state government has distributed motorcycles to sanitation officers to deepen environmental sustainability and green policies.

    Governor Dauda Lawal, represented by his deputy, Mani Malam Mummuni, distributed the 65 bikes to the beneficiaries at the weekend in Gusau, the state capital.

    The gesture was part of Governor Lawal administration’s commitment to creating a cleaner, healthier, and more resilient state, the deputy governor said.

    The exercise was carried out under the Zamfara Youth Sanitation Programme (ZAYOSAP).

    The environmental supervisors were drawn from Gusau’s five wards, and were tasked with the responsibility of ensuring clean environment across the nooks and crannies of the state capital.

    The deputy governor urged the beneficiaries to utilize the motorcycles for the purpose of the work, urging them not to dispose them of.

    Others dignitaries present include Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resources in Zamfara State, Nigeria, is Kasimu Sani Kaura, and his local government and chieftaincy affairs counterpart, Engr Ahmad Garban Yandi, among others.

    Earlier, Governor Lawal had distributed 10 refuse-dumping trucks, four mechanical sweeping machines, two sweeping trucks, 65 motorcycles for field operatives under the programme.

    Also, through the Agro-Climatic Resilience in Semi-Arid Landscapes (ACReSAL) project, the state has received450 plastic trash bins for government offices, 55 iron-steel trash bins for urban areas.

    Governor Lawal said the Zamfara Youth Sanitation Programme is not only a sanitation drive but a youth empowerment strategy.

    “The Zamfara Youth Empowerment Programme is designed to empower our vibrant and energetic youth by engaging them in meaningful activities to improve sanitation across the state.

    “This initiative provides employment, cultivates entrepreneurial skills, and instills a sense of responsibility among our youth. Through ZAYOSAP, we are investing in the future of Zamfara—equipping our young people with the tools and knowledge they need to become tomorrow’s leaders and champions of change in their communities.”

    He said ZAYOSAP reflects the administration’s holistic approach to governance—tackling environmental challenges while simultaneously addressing unemployment and youth development.

  • Governor Lawal inspects projects in Shinkafi, says Zamfara rescue on course

    Governor Lawal inspects projects in Shinkafi, says Zamfara rescue on course

    Governor Dauda Lawal said that his administration’s rescue mission is on track and yielding the desired results.

    The governor, on Wednesday, was on an official visit to inspect the state government’s ongoing projects in the Shinkafi Local Government Area.

    A statement by the spokesperson of the governor, Sulaiman Bala Idris, disclosed that in Shinkafi, Governor Lawal launched an empowerment program by Bello Hassan Shinkafi, member representing Shinkafi/Zurmi Federal Constituency.

    The empowerment targets 2,000 people who benefited from luxury cars, tricycles, motocycles, and sewing machines, among others.

    During the visit, Governor Lawal inspected the WCWC Primary Healthcare Center in Shinkafi Town, which was awarded for renovation.

    The governor also visited the renovated General Hospital in Shinkafi and the ongoing new Referral Hospital project in the same town.

    At the Emirs’ Place, Governor Lawal reiterated his administration’s commitment to capital projects across local government areas.

    He said: “We are in Shinkafi today to inspect numerous key projects of my administration and to launch the empowerment program of Honorable Bello Hasan, member representing Shinkafi/Zurmi constituency.

    “We have fully renovated and equipped the General Hospital in Shinkafi.

    “The abandoned hospital now features state-of-the-art equipment capable of addressing the emergency needs of the people.

    “The Referral Hospital will be a game changer not only in Shinkafi LGA but also for the Zamfara North Senatorial Zone. It will ease a significant burden for people battling illnesses who are seeking serious medical attention.

    “The state government acquired the former Bafarawa Institute and will house the Faculty of Medical Sciences of the Zamfara State University. The school is undergoing serious work to complete it for effective utilization.”

    Governor Lawal commended Bello Hassan for the empowerment and urged other stakeholders to prioritise human development.

  • Police issue advisory over rise in drowning incidents in Oyo

    Police issue advisory over rise in drowning incidents in Oyo

    The Oyo State Police Command has alerted the public to recent increase in incidents of drowning across the State. 

    The Police urged residents to exercise extreme caution around rivers, streams, dams, swimming pools and other water-related facilities to avoid such incidents.

    A statement by the spokesman of the Command, Ayanlade Olayinka, called on Church owners and religious organisations, particularly those whose worship centres are close to rivers, streams, or other natural water bodies to take proactive safety measures during religious activities and ensure adequate supervision to prevent accidental drowning. 

    According to him, unsupervised access to nearby water bodies, particularly by children, should be strictly discouraged.

    He said: “Hotel owners, resort operators, and managers of recreational facilities are reminded of their responsibility to ensure that all swimming pools within their premises are properly supervised and clearly marked with safety notices. 

    Read Also: Police greets retired DIG Nwobodo on coronation

    “They are further advised to employ trained instructors, lifeguards, and swimming tutors to guide users and prevent accidents and drowning. Essential safety and rescue equipment must also be readily available and functional at all times.

    “Parents and guardians are strongly advised to be vigilant and intentional about the safety of their wards. Children should not be allowed to visit rivers, wells, or engage in swimming activities without responsible adults who will properly guide, guard, and supervise them at all times.

    “Owners and occupants of houses with wells are advised to ensure that all wells are properly covered and securely lidded at all times. Where corrosion, damage, or structural defects are noticed on well covers or protective structures, such defects must be addressed immediately to prevent accidents. 

    “In households with wells, elders and responsible adults must ensure that access to the well area is restricted and securely locked when not in use by an adult.”

  • A rejoinder to ‘Bola’s Tax’: When ‘simple logic’ becomes simple misdirection

    A rejoinder to ‘Bola’s Tax’: When ‘simple logic’ becomes simple misdirection

    By Tanimu Yakubu

    The Emmanuel Orjih’s essay being circulated is rhetorically powerful, but its “simplicity” is achieved by subtracting the very provisions that determine the outcome. That is not clarity; it is selective accounting.

    Let’s dismantle the argument on its own terms—calmly, sequentially, and with arithmetic that actually follows the law.

    1) The core confusion: pension and health insurance are not taxes—they are deductible contributions

    A tax is a compulsory payment to government for general public purposes with no direct ownership claim by the payer.

    A pension contribution is a deferred wage placed in a worker’s Retirement Savings Account—owned by the worker, regulated by law, and paid out to the worker later. Under Nigeria’s contributory pension framework, the employee contribution is commonly 8% (with an employer minimum contribution alongside it).

    Likewise, national health insurance contributions/premiums are risk-pooling payments for defined health coverage, not a general revenue levy; and (crucially) they are among the items treated as deductions in personal income tax computations.

    So when someone frames pension/health insurance as “proof the poor are being taxed,” they are committing a category error:

    • A deduction is not a tax.

    • A contribution you own (pension) is not a levy you lose.

    • A premium that buys coverage is not a payment for “government enjoyment.”

    If anything, the presence of these deductions is evidence of an attempt—however imperfect—to avoid taxing the portion of income being set aside for welfare/insurance.

    2) The decisive arithmetic the essay avoids: the ₦800,000 tax-free threshold

    Under the new regime described in multiple reputable summaries, the first ₦800,000 of annual income is taxed at 0%.

    That is not a footnote. That is the hinge.

    Now apply it to “Joseph”:

    Monthly income: ₦75,000

    • Annual income: ₦75,000 × 12 = ₦900,000

    Under a system where the first ₦800,000 is taxed at 0%, Joseph is not “squarely inside” some punitive bracket. He is ₦100,000 above the zero band.

    Even before deductions, the portion potentially exposed to tax is ₦100,000 per year.

    If the next band is taxed at 15% (as these summaries indicate), then Joseph’s gross annual PIT exposure is:

    • ₦100,000 × 15% = ₦15,000 per year

    • ₦1,250 per month

    Now add pension:

    If Joseph contributes pension at 8% (even using the essay’s own assumption), that is:

    • 8% × ₦900,000 = ₦72,000 in pension contributions annually (simplified)

    That reduces the portion above ₦800,000 from ₦100,000 to ₦28,000. Tax becomes:

    • ₦28,000 × 15% = ₦4,200 per year

    • ₦350 per month

    And if Joseph also has any deductible health insurance contribution (which many formal arrangements do), he can easily fall below ₦800,000 taxable income, making his PIT zero.

    What this means

    The essay’s “public U-turn” story is not proof that “the poor will pay tax.”

    It is proof that the narrator’s demonstration did not apply the actual threshold structure that defines liability.

    That is not logic. That is stage-managed arithmetic.

    3) The poverty-line move: a PPP concept misused as a nominal naira salary cut-off

    The essay claims a World Bank “poverty line” of $4.20/day and then converts it into a naira monthly salary figure using a simple exchange conversion to get “₦190,000 per month.”

    But the World Bank’s $4.20 line is reported in PPP terms (international dollars), not a naira-at-market-exchange salary threshold you can convert with casual FX math.

    So the statement “everyone earning below ₦190,000/month is poor” is not an “irrefutable fact.” It is a conversion shortcut that swaps a technical welfare metric for a political talking point.

    Even more: the World Bank updated global poverty lines in 2025 (with new PPP bases), which reinforces that these lines are statistical constructs, not the kind of direct nominal wage threshold the essay pretends they are.

    4) “Widen the tax base” does not logically mean “tax the poor”

    The essay’s claim is:

    “The rich are already taxed, so widening must reach downward.”

    That is a false syllogism.

    “Widening the tax base” can mean (among other things):

    • moving non-compliant high earners into compliance

    • closing loopholes and leakages

    • capturing parts of the digital and informal-but-affluent economy

    • improving employer withholding integrity

    • reducing avoidance via better administration

    Nigeria’s revenue problem is not “the poor escaping.” Nigeria’s problem is a historically weak tax-to-GDP ratio and heavy reliance on borrowing; tax reforms have been publicly framed as part of reversing that.

    So “widening” does not necessarily mean “drag subsistence wages into the net.” It often means: make the system catch who already should be paying.

    5) The emotional overload: corruption lists are not an argument against the structure of a tax schedule

    The essay spends pages listing possible misuses of public funds (A–Z). Some may be legitimate governance concerns, but they do not prove the specific claim being sold: “This tax takes money from the poor.”

    If your target is accountability, the rational conclusion is not “therefore don’t tax.” The rational conclusion is:

    • ring-fence, publish, and audit collections;

    • improve transparency of allocation;

    • tighten procurement;

    • prosecute leakage;

    • strengthen citizen oversight—using the legitimacy that taxation creates.

    Historically, broad-based taxation has often strengthened demands for representation and accountability (“no taxation without representation” is not a slogan of lending institutions; it is a logic of citizen-state bargaining). The essay flips that logic on its head by implying that lenders fear Nigerians paying taxes because taxes would empower citizens. That is not an argument; it is a narrative device.

    Meanwhile, Nigeria’s borrowing constraints are real, and a reform agenda that reduces debt-dependence is not “indifference”; it is sovereignty through solvency.

    Read Also: Chancellor, VC seek TETFUND grant, tax waiver for private varsities

    Proof-by-proof: what the essay is doing (and why it misleads)

    Deception 1: Re-labelling deductions as “taxes”

    • Pension/health insurance are framed as “proof of taxation.”

    • In reality, they are welfare-linked contributions and deductions that reduce taxable income.

    Deception 2: Ignoring the 0% band

    • The ₦800,000 annual tax-free threshold is the central fact.

    • Without it, the story can manufacture outrage at ₦75,000/month.

    Deception 3: PPP poverty line converted as if it were a salary threshold

    • $4.20/day is PPP-based and not meant for naïve FX-to-naira monthly wage claims.

    Deception 4: False dilemma

    • “Only three possibilities: the poor, livestock, or ghosts.”

    • Serious tax administration realities are ignored to force a punchline.

    Deception 5: Moral indictment substituted for computation

    • A–Z allegations create heat, not proof.

    • Even if every allegation were true, it still wouldn’t change the tax schedule math.

    The bottom line

    If you want to disagree “most vehemently and logically,” this is the clean core:

    1. The new structure explicitly shields low incomes via a large zero-rated band.

    2. Pension and health insurance deductions are welfare design features, not stealth taxation.

    3. The essay’s outrage depends on omitting the very thresholds and concepts (PPP) that make its conclusion collapse.

    – Yakubu is Director-General, Budget Office of the Federation

  • President celebrates Issa Aremu at 65

    President celebrates Issa Aremu at 65

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has congratulated the Director-General of the Michael Imoudu National Institute for Labour Studies (MINILS), Issa Obalowu Aremu, on his 65th birthday.

    The President described Aremu as a distinguished labour leader and a steadfast advocate of good governance, peace and justice.

    In a statement yesterday in Abuja by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, President Tinubu applauded Aremu’s four decades of activism in defence of workers’ rights, acknowledging his enduring commitment to democracy and sustainable national industrial development.

    The President recalled Aremu’s long service within the labour movement, including his tenure as General Secretary of the National Union of Textile, Garment and Tailoring Workers of Nigeria (NUTGTWN) and his role as an executive member of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) from 2008 to 2020.

    Read Also:How has Issa Aremu fared at Labour Institute?

    President Tinubu joined the Aremu family, friends, and the broader labour community in celebrating the milestone, commending the former journalist for what he called courageous and principled leadership in championing the rights of workers and other Nigerians.

    He also praised Aremu as a prolific writer and author, thanking him for his continued support, and prayed that the new chapter of his life would bring “good tidings, sound health and strength” as he continues to serve the nation.