Category: Featured

  • US court jails Osun monarch for $4.2m COVID-19 relief fraud

    US court jails Osun monarch for $4.2m COVID-19 relief fraud

    A United States District Court has sentenced the Apetu of Ipetumodu in Osun State, Oba Joseph Oloyede, to 56 months in prison over his involvement in a multimillion-dollar COVID-19 relief fund fraud.

    According to a statement by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio, the sentence was delivered on Tuesday, August 26, by U.S. District Judge Christopher A. Boyko.

    Oba Oloyede, 62, who holds dual Nigerian and U.S. citizenship and resides in Medina, Ohio, was also ordered to pay $4,408,543.38 in restitution, forfeit his Medina residence purchased with fraud proceeds, and surrender an additional $96,006.89 seized by investigators.

    He will also serve three years of supervised release after completing his prison term.

    Prosecutors revealed that between April 2020 and February 2022, Oloyede and his associate, Edward Oluwasanmi, conspired to exploit emergency loan programs created under the U.S. CARES Act to support businesses affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Read Also: Lagos court jails businessman over visa fraud

    Using five businesses and one nonprofit under Oloyede’s control, and three business entities owned by Oluwasanmi, the duo submitted fraudulent applications for the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL).

    Investigators said Oloyede was responsible for 38 fraudulent applications, resulting in $4,213,378 in disbursed loans. He also filed false applications for clients, taking 15–20% kickbacks from their loans, which he failed to declare to the IRS.

    The funds were allegedly diverted for personal use, including land purchases, home construction, and a luxury vehicle acquisition.

    Oluwasanmi, 62, of Willoughby, Ohio, was earlier sentenced in July to 27 months in prison and ordered to repay over $1.2 million.

    The case was jointly investigated by the Department of Transportation Office of Inspector General, the FBI Cleveland Division, and IRS-Criminal Investigations, and prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Edward D. Brydle and James L. Morford.

  • BREAKING: Niger Delta youths barricade NNPCL Towers

    BREAKING: Niger Delta youths barricade NNPCL Towers

    A coalition of Niger Delta Youth leaders on Wednesday staged a protest at the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) Towers in Abuja with a call on the Group Chief Executive Officer of the oil giant, Engr. Bashir Bayo Ojulari to quit over alleged corruption and mismanagement.

    They also called for the appointment of an indigene of the Niger Delta region as the GCEO of the NNPCL.

    The youths who arrived the towers in their numbers from around 6am successfully blocked the entrance and exit gates of the NNPCL Towers.

    They carried banners with different inscriptions and continuously chanted solidarity songs amid music supplied by a local orchestra and modern music blaring from loud speakers positioned in an opened truck stationed near towers.

    The protest disrupted vehicular traffic on the ever busy Herbert Macualay Way in the Central Business District.

    Security agents including men of the Nigeria Police Force who were drafted to the scene in their numbers appealed to the protesters to maintain decorum and ensure that the protest was peaceful.

    The security operatives also ensured that traffic was diverted to one lane of the dual carriage way leading to the NNPCL towers.

    Workers were forced to park their cars far away from the gates of the Towers due to the protest.

    However, the protesters later cleared off the highway and massed at the exit gate of the Towers following an appeal by a representative of the Minister of State for Petroleum (Oil)), Senator Heineken Lokpobiri.

    This development led to the opening of the second lane of the dual carriage way to vehicular traffic. 

    The protest though disruptive was peaceful.

    Details shortly…

  • Abuja–Kaduna train derailment: Tinubu promises support

    Abuja–Kaduna train derailment: Tinubu promises support

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has assured that swift action and support will follow yesterday’s derailment of the Abuja–Kaduna- bound train.  The President spoke after receiving continuous updates on the incident while on a state visit to Brazil.

    In a message posted on his verified X handle, @officialABAT, the President said he was deeply saddened by the development and expressed his sympathy to passengers affected.

    “Even while in Brazil, I have received reports of today’s Abuja–Kaduna train derailment. I am deeply saddened by this incident. My heartfelt prayers are with the injured, their families, and all passengers who went through this distressing experience,” he stated.

    The President noted that he was awaiting a full briefing on the derailment to ensure prompt measures are taken both to support victims and to strengthen the nation’s railway operations.

    READ ALSO: FULL STEPS: How to be a LAGRIDE driver, earn N250,000, above

    “I am staying updated on the latest developments and await a full briefing to ensure swift action and support for all affected. The NRC is already addressing the situation, and necessary steps are expected to be taken to prevent similar occurrences in the future,” he added.

    The derailment, which disrupted one of Nigeria’s busiest passenger rail routes, has again put the spotlight on railway safety and infrastructure.

    The Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) has begun remedial steps while investigations into the cause of the incident continue.

  • Oil giant Petrobras return is key gain of Tinubu’s Brazil visit

    Oil giant Petrobras return is key gain of Tinubu’s Brazil visit

    • Air Peace clearance for Lagos-Sao Paulo direct flights excites President

    The return of Brazil’s oil giant, Petrobras, to Nigeria’s upstream is a major breakthrough recorded by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s two-day state visit to the largest economy in South America, Minister of Information and National Orientation Mohammed Idris said yesterday.

    Besides, Nigeria’s largest airline, Air Peace, was given the right to commence Lagos-Sao Paulo flights to underscore the renewed economic and cultural ties between the two countries.

    Sao Paulo is Brazil’s economic powerhouse and largest city.

    Air Peace Chief Executive Officer, Allen Onyema, said the airline would deploy a Boeing 777 from its fleet to service the route.

    A symbolic flight was planned for last night.

    READ ALSO; What does Remi Tinubu want?

     These agreements are part of the Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) signed by the two countries during the President’s third visit to Brazil in less than one year.

     His two earlier visits were on invitations extended to Nigeria by G-20 and BRICS.

     “Air Peace is now cleared to run flights between Lagos and Sao Paulo”, Brazilian President, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, declared to the excitement of President Tinubu at a joint news conference at the Palácio do Planalto in Brasília to round off the visit.

     According to Presidential spokesman, Bayo Onanuga, President Tinubu said the resumption of Petrobras’ operations five years after it halted joint ventures in Nigeria, would reignite economic cooperation in the energy sector.

     “We have the largest gas repository. So, I don’t see why Petrobras doesn’t join as a partner in Nigeria as soon as possible. I appreciate President Lula’s promise that this will be done as soon as possible,” Tinubu said.

    The President praised his Brazilian counterpart for committing to revitalising the partnership between the two nations.

    “Nigeria’s economic space remains a virgin land, full of opportunities for Brazilian companies,” Tinubu said, while acknowledging Embraer’s role in boosting local airline operations through plans for a service centre in Nigeria to support maintenance and repairs.

    Reflecting on his past engagements in Brazil, Tinubu urged a shift from symbolic gestures to tangible cooperation.

    “Honourable Ministers of both countries, members of the Brazil Business Group, I have listened carefully to my friend, President Lula. We had a lengthy discussion. We talked about history and about African and Brazilian heritage.

    “We tried to see why we are not at the level we wanted. We have allowed some problems and activities in the past to deter us from making progress and fulfilling our promises. But today, we say that is the end of that,” he said.

    Tinubu stressed Nigeria’s readiness to partner Brazil in technology transfer, food security, renewable energy, and manufacturing.

    “Today, we are fighting and working hard to bring our sovereignty to the level of expectation that we, as a nation, the most populous, the most dynamic country, share with Brazil. We need to share—technology transfer, energy, economy — so Brazil can continue to widen opportunities for us to embrace Africa. Africa is the new frontier,” he said.

    The President also called for knowledge sharing in pharmaceuticals, saying “we have elevated this promise to the path of reality, as you have seen in various MOUs. I don’t know why the manufacturing of generic drugs, which Brazil has done deeply and far, cannot be in Nigeria.

    “I don’t see why the technological superiority of Brazil is not shared with Africa. We assured each other that only we can develop our economies to help our sovereignty”, President Tinubu said.

    Highlighting the reforms at home, Tinubu assured Brazilian investors of a new era in Nigeria’s economy.

    “The reforms I’ve embarked upon since I took over in Nigeria have been very impactful. It was initially painful, but today the result is blossoming. It’s getting clearer to the people. We have more money for the economy, and there will be no more corruption.

    “We have the governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria here. You don’t have to know him before getting the foreign exchange you need. The speculators are out. In our currency market, the door is open for businesses,” he said.

    President Lula described the renewed Brazil–Nigeria engagement as timely in an era of rising protectionism.

    “At a time when protectionism and unilateralism have returned, Nigeria and Brazil reaffirm their bet on free trade and productive integration. We continue to be dedicated to building a world of peace, free from hegemonic impositions.

    “There are many possibilities for synergy between the world’s two largest countries with black populations. Agriculture and livestock, oil and gas, fertilisers, aircraft, and machinery, among others, represent wide avenues for cooperation.

    “Increasing direct connections between Nigeria and Brazil is another essential step to strengthen the ties between our societies. We have approved the launch of a direct flight, to be operated by Nigeria’s largest airline company, Air Peace, between Lagos and São Paulo,” he said.

    The following MoUs were signed between the two countries:

     *Bilateral Air Services Agreement by Nigeria’s Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, and Brazil’s Minister of Ports and Airports, Silvio Costa Filhos.

    *Diplomatic Training Cooperation and MoU on political consultations were signed by Minister of State for Foreign Affairs of Nigeria, Ambassador Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, and her Brazilian counterpart, Ambassador Mauro Vieira.

    *Science, technology, and innovation cooperation was signed by Nigeria’s Minister of Innovation, Science, and Technology, Uche Nnaji, and Brazil’s Luciana Santos.

    *The Managing Director of Nigeria’s Bank of Agriculture, Ayo Sotinrin, and Brazil’s Minister for National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES), Aluísio Mercadante, signed an MOU for cooperation on trade and investment promotion, harmonising efforts to expand agricultural financing, investment, and joint projects.

    Nigeria is currently Brazil’s 49th largest export destination, with trade between both countries reaching $2.1 billion in 2024.

    Following the agreements, President Tinubu attended a state luncheon, hosted at the Itamaraty Palace.

    Mohammed Idris: BASA to deepen ties

    Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, described the Bilateral Air Services Agreement (BASA) signed between Nigeria and Brazil as a significant breakthrough that will reconnect the two countries economically, socially, and culturally.

    He described BASA as representing more than aviation.

    “The 350 years of slavery between Africa and Brazil is being looked at again by the two leaders. And one way of looking at it is to ensure there is now a reconnection – economic, financial, social, cultural, whichever sphere. I think this is the best way to really go past what has happened during the period of slavery,” the minister said.

    He noted that President Tinubu’s fourth meeting with President Lula in just over a year underscored the growing partnership between the two nations, which he said would also benefit Africa.

    The minister said immediate “quick wins” from the agreement were already being realised, with a symbolic flight planned from Brazil to Abuja at midnight on Tuesday.

    He noted that the direct link would reduce travel time between the two countries from more than 24 hours through European routes to about seven hours.

    “Once this becomes commercially viable, it will not just enhance trade between the two countries, it will also improve the cultural and social cooperation that already exists,” he added.

    Onyema, who described the BASA agreement as “a milestone,” said: “We cannot start daily flights for now, but we want to start with three weekly flights. As we go on, we develop the route and we’re going to increase the frequency. We told the Brazilians that we want to do Lagos, Rio, São Paulo and back to Lagos”.

    The Air Peace chief emphasised that aviation would serve as a catalyst for unlocking the economic potential of both nations.

    “The Brazilian economy is the largest in Latin America. The Nigerian economy is one of the largest in Africa. They need to tap into this. But without aviation, it’s very, very difficult for some of these things to be actualised,” Onyema said.

    Boeing 777 for route

    Speaking in an interview, Onyema said: “Nigerian aviation is grateful to President Tinubu for all he has been doing for the industry.

    Air Peace has had long relation with Brazil as the biggest customer to Brazillian airplane maker, Embraer.

    Air Peace signed a firm order for 13 Embraer E195-E2 jets in 2019, with the delivery of the first aircraft in early 2021. This was part of a larger agreement that included purchase rights for 17 additional aircraft of the same type, bringing the total potential order to 30 jets. The airline is the first African carrier to operate this new generation of Embraer aircraft.

    Besides buying aeroplanes, Air Peace is fine-tuning strategies for the setting up of an aircraft maintenance facility in Nigeria.

    Embraer, a few years ago, unveiled plans to establish an MRO (Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul) facility in Nigeria, in partnership with Air Peace. This initiative is part of a broader maintenance deal with the Nigerian airline to provide local maintenance support for its growing fleet of Embraer aircraft, aiming to conserve foreign exchange for airlines and create jobs in Nigeria.

    As one of Nigeria’s biggest flag carriers , Air Peace is designated on Lagos/ London, Dubai, Johannesburg, Tel Aviv, China, Mumbai,  Antigua and Barbuda,

    Air Peace serves 20 major cities in Nigeria and many regional destinations throughout West Africa (Accra, Dakar, Douala Freetown, Banjul, and Monrovia.

    About Petrobras

    Petróleo Brasileiro S.A., better known by and trading as the portmanteau Petrobras, is a Brazilian majority state-owned multinational corporation in the petroleum industry headquartered in Rio de Janeiro. The company’s name translates to Brazilian Petroleum Corporation — Petrobras.

    Petrobras began operations in Nigeria in 1998 in the deep waters off the Niger Delta. It sold its stakes more than 10 years ago to raise cash for domestic projects. Since then, Nigeria has been working to address some of the problems that have limited oil and gas output.

    Petrobras stopped business in Nigeria five years ago.

    The company was ranked #71 in the 2023 Fortune Global 500 list. In the 2023 Forbes Global 2000, Petrobras was ranked as the 58th-largest public company in the world.

    Petrobras was created in 1953 under the government of Brazilian president Getúlio Vargas with the slogan “The Oil is Ours”. It was given a legal monopoly in Brazil.

    In 2000, Petrobras set a world record for oil exploration in deep waters, reaching a depth of 1,877 metres (6,158 ft) below sea level. In 2002, Petrobras acquired the Argentine company Perez Companc Energía (PECOM Energía S.A.) from the Perez Companc Family Group and its family foundation for $1.18 billion.

  • NSA reunites 128 rescued victims with families

    NSA reunites 128 rescued victims with families

    Over 128 persons rescued from bandit captivity in Kaura Namoda, Zamfara State were yesterday reunited with their families by the Federal Government.

    The victims, comprising men, women and children, were freed in two waves of military and intelligence operations earlier this month, according to  National Security Adviser (NSA), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.

    Ribadu assured Nigerians  that the Federal Government would intensify the onslaught against terrorists. He vowed that there will be no safe haven for criminals.

    He gave the assurance in Abuja yesterday.

    Ribadu said: “Let me be unequivocally clear: this work will continue. There will be no respite in our operations. There will be no safe haven for those who terrorize our citizens. We will hunt them, we will find them, and we will bring them to justice – or they will meet the same fate as the many kingpins already neutralized by our forces.”

    READ ALSO: FULL STEPS: How to be a LAGRIDE driver, earn N250,000, above

    He hailed the military, security and intelligence agencies for their role in the rescue. He described their efforts as a “crushing blow to the networks of terror that seek to undermine our peace.”

    The NSA  assured Nigerians that the government of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu would sustain both kinetic and non-kinetic measures in the fight against insecurity.

    He  noted that the government had, in recent months, reunited mothers with their children, husbands with their wives, and communities with their loved ones.

    “Each rescue is a victory for the Nigerian people,” he said.

    Beyond the rescue, the NSA emphasized that victims would receive trauma care and psychosocial support before reuniting with their families, insisting that ‘healing is as important as the rescue itself.’

    Ribadu also urged citizens to remain vigilant and support security forces with timely information. He said their resilience and cooperation were key to defeating criminal networks

    The rescue, he added, was not an isolated event but part of a broader security strategy designed to dismantle bandit groups and restore peace across Nigeria.

    The National coordinator, National Counter-Terrorism Centre , Maj.-Gen. Adamu Laka explained that the victims were freed during coordinated security operations carried out in two phases earlier this month.

    According to him, the first group of victims — 42 individuals comprising 14 males, 27 females, and a toddler — were rescued on August 14. The second group- 88 individuals made up of 34 males and 54 females, got freedom on August 19.

    “Unfortunately, among the second group, we lost one of the children due to illness, likely from the fatigue they suffered while in captivity.

    “In addition, one of the women gave birth prematurely after the rescue, and the baby is currently receiving medical attention, “ Maj. Gen Laka added.

    He noted that since their rescue, the victims have been under the care of the ONSA where they received psychological support, medical treatment, and rehabilitation.

    “With their recovery process ongoing, we are now handing them over to the Zamfara State Government for reintegration with their families and communities,” Maj. Gen. Laka added.

    The Minister of State for Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Tanko Sununu, hailed the efforts of the government and security agencies in rescuing the victims.

    Sununu, however, advised the  victims to see their freedom as an opportunity to strive for their future, urging them to embrace education.

  • UPDATED: 618 passengers on board as Kaduna-bound train derails

    UPDATED: 618 passengers on board as Kaduna-bound train derails

    No fewer than 618 passengers were on board on Tuesday when a Kaduna-bound train derailed near Asham train station.

    Following the incident, the Managing Director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC), Kayode Opeifa, announced the suspension of train operation on Abuja-Kaduna train corridor indefinitely.

    He also stated that measures were in place to refund passengers on board the train.

    Opeifa also debunked insinuations that the trains were in poor condition. 

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), led by the Director General, Zubaida Umar also led the Agency’s rescue team to the site of a train derailment.

    The Nigerian Safety Investigation Bureau (NSIB) has also commenced a probe to ascertain the cause of the accident.

    READ ALSO: FULL STEPS: How to be a LAGRIDE driver, earn N250,000, above

    An official in NRC confirmed to The Nation that the accident may have been caused by vandalism or improper fixing of the point on the tracks.

    On the likely cause of the accident, a source in NRC said: “According to official on ground at Asham station, the problem occurred at the point in the track. There’s a place that the tracks meet each other. It’s actually at the station. You have line one, line two, line three. So, they interchange the lines for the train with those points. So, if those points are not properly set and the train goes into it, it will fall. So, either it was vandalized or the point was not properly fixed.

    “They are still doing investigations to know whether it was vandalized. One train used it earlier in the morning, so we don’t know whether it was when that train passed that it was vandalized or maybe anything, we don’t really know.

    “It could also be caused by the enemy of state. We don’t know whether it’s enemy of state or negligence of duty by the officials that is supposed to change the points because the points are changed manually”.

  • JUST IN: NSA hands over 128 rescued kidnap victims to families 

    JUST IN: NSA hands over 128 rescued kidnap victims to families 

    The National Security Adviser (NSA), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, on Tuesday reunited 128 rescued kidnap victims with their families in Abuja.

    The victims, females and children were rescued by security forces in two different operations in Kaura Namoda in Zamfara State, according to Ribadu.

    He said the victims will be treated for trauma and helped to settle down in their communities.

    Read Also: JUST IN: US commends Nigerian Govt over arrest of top globally-wanted Ansaru terrorists

    Ribadu, while commending security forces, assured that the perpetrators will be hunted and brought to justice.

    He warned, “Let us take politics out of security challenges.”

    Earlier,the National Coordinator, National Counter Terrorism Centre Major General Adamu Laka said one of the rescued children died due to illness while a premature baby delivered during the rescue operation was being incubated in a medical facility.

    Details shortly…

  • JUST IN: Passengers stranded as Abuja-Kaduna train derails

    JUST IN: Passengers stranded as Abuja-Kaduna train derails

    Passengers on the Abuja-Kaduna train were stranded on Tuesday morning after the train en route to Kaduna derailed.

    The incident occurred along the corridor shortly after the train departed Abuja around 11 a.m.

    The cause of the derailment is, however, unclear as there has been no official confirmation of the incident by the management of the Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC). 

    Read Also: NRC blames Abuja-Kaduna train derailment on track vandalism

    A source at the Kubwa train station, however, confirmed to The Nation that military personnel have been deployed to the site to assist in evacuating stranded passengers.

    The source could not confirm the number of passengers on board and if there were any casualties.

    Details shortly…

  • Nigeria–Brazil BASA to deepen ties, says Idris

    Nigeria–Brazil BASA to deepen ties, says Idris

    Nigeria’s Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, has described the Bilateral Air Services Agreement (BASA) signed between Nigeria and Brazil as a significant breakthrough that will reconnect the two countries economically, socially, and culturally.

    Speaking to journalists in Brasília on Monday after the signing ceremony witnessed by President Bola Tinubu and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Idris said the agreement was one of five memoranda of understanding reached during the state visit, stressing that it represented more than aviation.

    “The 350 years of slavery between Africa and Brazil are being looked at again by the two leaders. And one way of looking at it is to ensure there is now a reconnection, economic, financial, social, cultural, whichever sphere. I think this is the best way to really go past what has happened during the period of slavery,” the minister explained.

    He noted that President Tinubu’s fourth meeting with President Lula in just over a year underscored the growing partnership between the two nations, which he said would also benefit Africa as a whole.

    “Once President Bola Tinubu travels out of this country, he’s not just speaking for Nigeria, he’s also speaking for the whole of Africa. Nigeria is indeed a leader; it is also a global leader. And so when the president of Nigeria speaks, he’s also speaking on behalf of the African continent,” Idris stated.

    The minister disclosed that immediate “quick wins” from the agreement were already being realised, with a symbolic flight planned from Brazil to Abuja at midnight on Tuesday.

    He pointed out that the direct link would reduce travel time between the two countries from more than 24 hours through European routes to about seven hours.

    “Once this becomes commercially viable, it will not just enhance trade between the two countries, it will also improve the cultural and social cooperation that already exists,” he added.

    Chief Executive Officer of Air Peace, Allen Onyema, confirmed that his airline had been designated to operate the route under the BASA, describing it as “a milestone” facilitated by President Tinubu’s administration.

    “The Bilateral Air Services Agreement has been signed between both countries, Brazil and Nigeria. And I’m sure you heard when President Lula of Brazil said that Nigeria’s largest carrier, Air Peace, has been designated to implement this BASA,” he said.

    Onyema announced that commercial operations would commence by late November into December 2025, starting with three flights a week.

    “We cannot start daily flights for now, but we want to start with three weekly flights. As we go on, we develop the route, and we’re going to increase the frequency. We told the Brazilians that we want to go to Lagos, Rio, São Paulo and back to Lagos,” he explained.

    Read Also: CAS strengthens Nigeria–Brazil defence partnership

    The Air Peace boss emphasised that aviation would catalyse unlocking the economic potential of both nations.

    “The Brazilian economy is the largest in Latin America. The Nigerian economy is the largest in Africa. They need to tap into this. But without aviation, it’s very, very difficult for some of these things to be actualised,” Onyema said.

    Idris concluded that the bilateral deals signed during the state visit—including those covering aviation, energy, and economic cooperation—would advance reforms in both nations and cement a renewed partnership.

    “We feel this is significant. At a period that Nigeria is going through far-reaching reforms, the Brazilian authorities are also carrying out theirs. All this is aimed at repositioning the two countries financially, culturally, and socially for the benefit of both nations,” he said.

  • Nigeria, Brazil sign five MoUs as Tinubu welcomes Petrobras’ imminent return

    Nigeria, Brazil sign five MoUs as Tinubu welcomes Petrobras’ imminent return

    Nigeria and Brazil on Monday signed five Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) covering trade, diplomacy, science, aviation and finance, in a move both countries described as a turning point in their long-standing bilateral relations. 

    The agreements, witnessed at the Palácio do Planalto in Brasília, were announced at a joint press conference where President Bola Ahmed Tinubu hailed the imminent return of Brazil’s state-owned oil giant, Petrobras, to Nigeria.

    According to a statement by his Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, President Tinubu said the resumption of Petrobras’ operations, five years after it halted joint ventures in Nigeria, would reignite economic cooperation in the energy sector. 

    “We have the largest gas repository. So I don’t see why Petrobras doesn’t join as a partner in Nigeria as soon as possible. I appreciate President Lula’s promise that this will be done as soon as possible,” he declared.

    The President praised his Brazilian counterpart, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, for committing to revitalising the partnership between the two nations. 

    “Nigeria’s economic space remains a virgin land, full of opportunities for Brazilian companies,” Tinubu said, while acknowledging Embraer’s role in boosting local airline operations through plans for a service centre in Nigeria to support maintenance and repairs.

    Reflecting on his past engagements in Brazil, Tinubu urged a shift from symbolic gestures to tangible cooperation. 

    “Honourable Ministers of both countries, members of the Brazil Business Group, I have listened carefully to my friend, President Lula. We had a lengthy discussion. We talked about history and about African and Brazilian heritage. 

    “We tried to see why we are not at the level we wanted. We have allowed some problems and activities in the past to deter us from making progress and fulfilling our promises. But today we say that is the end of that,” he said.

    Tinubu stressed Nigeria’s readiness to partner with Brazil in technology transfer, food security, renewable energy, and manufacturing. 

    Read Also: Nigeria-Brazil bilateral talks hold in Brasilia

    “Today, we are fighting and working hard to bring our sovereignty to the level of expectation that we as a nation, the most populous, the most dynamic country, Nigeria, share with Brazil. We need to share—technology transfer, energy, economy—so that Brazil can continue to widen the opportunities for us to embrace Africa. Africa is the new frontier,” he said.

    The President also called for knowledge sharing in pharmaceuticals, saying “we have elevated this promise to the path of reality, as you have seen in various MOUs. I don’t know why the manufacturing of generic drugs, which Brazil has done deeply and far, cannot be in Nigeria. 

    “I don’t see why the technological superiority of Brazil is not shared with Africa. We assured each other that only we can develop our economies to help our sovereignty”, President Tinubu said.

    Highlighting reforms at home, Tinubu assured Brazilian investors of a new era in Nigeria’s economy. 

    “The reforms I’ve embarked upon since I took over in Nigeria have been very impactful. It was initially painful, but today the result is blossoming. It’s getting clearer to the people. We have more money for the economy, and there will be no more corruption. 

    “We have the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria here. You don’t have to know him before getting the foreign exchange you need. The speculators are out. In our currency market, the door is open for businesses,” he said.

    President Lula, in his remarks, described the renewed Brazil–Nigeria engagement as timely in an era of rising protectionism. 

    “At a time when protectionism and unilateralism have returned, Nigeria and Brazil reaffirm their bet on free trade and productive integration. We continue to be dedicated to building a world of peace, free from hegemonic impositions. 

    “There are many possibilities for synergy between the world’s two largest countries with Black populations. Agriculture and livestock, oil and gas, fertilisers, aircraft, and machinery, among others, represent wide avenues for cooperation,” he said.

    Lula announced the approval of a direct flight linking Lagos and São Paulo, to be operated by Air Peace. 

    “Increasing the direct connections between Nigeria and Brazil is another essential step to strengthen the ties between our societies. We have approved the launch of a direct flight, to be operated by Nigeria’s largest airline company, Air Peace, between Lagos and São Paulo,” he stated.

    The five MoUs signed include: a Bilateral Air Services Agreement by Nigeria’s Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, and Brazil’s Minister of Ports and Airports, Silvio Costa Filhos.

    Also, an agreement on Diplomatic Training Cooperation and an MoU on political consultations were signed by Minister of State for Foreign Affairs of Nigeria, Ambassador Bianca Ojukwu, and her Brazilian counterpart, Ambassador Mauro Vieira.

    An MoU on science, technology, and innovation cooperation was signed by Nigeria’s Minister of Innovation, Science, and Technology, Geoffrey Nnaji, and Brazil’s Luciana Santos.

    The Managing Director of Nigeria’s Bank of Agriculture, Ayo Sotinrin and Brazil’s Minister for the National Bank for Economic and Social Development (BNDES), Aluísio Mercadante, signed an MOU for cooperation on trade and investment promotion, harmonising efforts to expand agricultural financing, investment, and joint projects.

    Nigeria is Brazil’s 49th largest export destination with trade between both countries reaching $2.1 billion in 2024. 

    Following the agreements, President Tinubu attended a state luncheon hosted at the Itamaraty Palace.