Tag: Nigeria

  • AFCON: Osimhen, Lookman benched as Nigeria face Egypt in third-place playoff

    AFCON: Osimhen, Lookman benched as Nigeria face Egypt in third-place playoff

    Nigerian stars Victor Osimhen and Ademola Lookman will not start for the Super Eagles in Saturday’s Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) 2025 third-place playoff against Egypt.

    Super Eagles head coach Éric Chelle opted to rotate his squad for Nigeria’s final game of the tournament in Morocco, making five changes to the team that lost on penalties to Morocco in the semi-finals. Alex Iwobi has also been named among the substitutes.

    Paul Onuachu will lead the line for Nigeria while Moses Simon takes over the captain’s armband and starts on the wing. Samuel Chukwueze, who missed his penalty in the semi-final shootout defeat, is handed a starting role as Chelle looks to freshen up his attacking options.

    Read Also: Goldberg reinforces support for Super Eagles for Bronze medal match

    In defence, Igoh Ogbu is the only change, coming in for the suspended Calvin Bassey. Fisayo Dele-Bashiru also starts as Nigeria aim to end the tournament on a positive note.

    The Super Eagles are chasing a ninth bronze medal in AFCON history and boast an impressive record in third-place matches, having never lost one.

    Super Eagles Starting XI

    Stanley Nwabali; Semi Ajayi, Igoh Ogbu, Bruno Onyemaechi, Bright Osayi-Samuel; Fisayo Dele-Bashiru, Raphael Onyedika, Samuel Chukwueze, Moses Simon (C); Akor Adams, Paul Onuachu.

  • ‘Don’t embarrass Nigeria in Israel’

    ‘Don’t embarrass Nigeria in Israel’

    Concerned by the need to boost Nigeria’s image globally, Lagos State Government has warned hundreds of intending Christian pilgrims to refrain from acts that could jeopardise the nation’s interest and corporate image.

    It said going on pilgrimage was not a jamboree, but rather a spiritual birth for the citizens, adding: ‘’Your stay in the country is strategic to the development of any nation.’’

    Lagos State Pilgrims Welfare Board (LSPWB) Secretary, Gbolabo Okuderu, cautioned the intending pilgrims ahead of their airlifting yesterday during medical and administrative screening in Ikeja.

    He said they were ambassadors of the country, particularly Lagos State, whose conduct would be measured not by their personality, but by the nation.

    “Going on pilgrimage is not a jamboree. Pilgrims must be good ambassadors of the country because you do not represent yourself, but Nigeria,” he added.

    Okuderu said after returning from the pilgrimage to Nigeria, they should sustain the attitudinal change and character rebranding.

    Read Also: FULL LIST: Six worst Manchester United managers in history

    He urged the pilgrims to engage in pocket-friendly shopping, to avoid extravagant spending while in the holy land.

    He said: “I implore you to travel light and do not get to the holy land and start buying items that will later become burdens to you, because when the luggage is too heavy, you may end up dropping them at the airport while leaving for Nigeria.

    “Also, ensure that they remain with the group they left from the country to Israel.”

    On the screening exercise, the board secretary said the process assisted the government in preparing the intending pilgrims for the journey.

    “The administrative and medical screening is one of the key requirements needed for every pilgrim to participate in ahead of their travel to Israel.

    “It will definitely help the government to ascertain the administrative and medical status of the intending pilgrims from the state. Without this screening, one can be assured that there will be hitches that can prevent the pilgrimage.

    “This is because we need to know the health status of the intending pilgrims, to know which area we need to address with respect to their health, while the administrative screening will help us to address the documentation aspect of the journey. We know that without this screening, the Nigerian Christian Pilgrim Commission (NCPC) will not approve the journey.”

  • Nigeria eyes Quatar meet with Ibadan golf tourney

    Nigeria eyes Quatar meet with Ibadan golf tourney

    All is set for the second 2026 Sun Open Amateur Golf Tournament in Ibadan Golf Club, Ibadan.

    The tournament, sponsored by High Performance Centre and Sports Leadership Hub, is expected to attract amateur golfers in Nigeria.

    The competition will serve as a qualifier for 2026 Qatar Open Golf Championship.

    Speaking in Ibadan, Convener, Dr Bob Olukoya, said over 100 golfers have registered for the event.

    Present at the briefing include Chair of Oyo State Golf Association, Moses Ojo, IGC Treasurer, Mike Babalola, former General Manager of Oyo State Sports Council, Gboyega Makinde and Dolapo Junior from Abeokuta Golf Club.

    Olukoya said the tournament is part of a national qualifier to produce Nigeria’s representative at the Qatar Open.

    “HPCSLH is the organiser of 2026 Sun Open Golf Competition, which is a qualifier for the Qatar Open in 2026. The last one was held at Port Harcourt Golf Club, and this year it is coming to Ibadan,” he said.

    He said the winner of the Ibadan tournament will represent Nigeria at the Qatar Open Golf Championship, on April 2–4 in Qatar where they will be competing in different handicaps.

    Read Also: Atiku’s son defects to APC, vows to mobilise for Tinubu’s re-election

    “We are here today to sensitize members of this prestigious club and the wider golfing community in Oyo State and Nigeria about this unique event. We have also engaged key stakeholders at the state secretariat, and we are fortunate that the Governor of Oyo State and some cabinet members are golfers. The state government is fully behind this tournament, and we are grateful for that support,” Olukoya added.

    He further commended the Ibadan Golf Club for its hospitality and preparedness, expressing confidence that the club would deliver a world-class hosting experience.

    Also speaking, the Captain of Ibadan Golf Club, Mr Seyi Alaba, thanked the organizers for choosing Ibadan as the host venue, describing it as a significant milestone for the club and the state.

    “I want to sincerely appreciate the convener, Dr Bob Olukoya, for bringing this tournament to Ibadan Golf Club. We do not take this gesture for granted. It is a big deal for us, and it further affirms the standard of our facility, which can compete with any golf course anywhere,” Alaba said.

    He noted that the club is excited to host the tournament, stressing that it aligns with ongoing efforts to promote golf, increase awareness of the sport, and develop young talents within Oyo State.

    “We have been working over the past few weeks to ensure that our course is in top shape for this qualifying tournament. As of today, we are about 95 percent ready, with just a few finishing touches left. Our executive committee has met and deliberated extensively to ensure the course and all supporting services are fully prepared,” he added.

    Mr Alaba assured participants and spectators that the club is ready in all aspects, including course conditions, hospitality, and logistics.

    “Golf is not just about the fairways; it is also about hosting, accommodation, and creating a great experience for everyone involved. We are fully ready to support the Sun Open and make it a successful event,” he concluded.

    The 2026 Sun Open Amateur Golf Tournament is expected to further boost the profile of amateur golf in Nigeria while providing a pathway for local talents to compete on the international stage.

  • 2026: Why Nigeria must go beyond gardening to rethink urban spaces

    2026: Why Nigeria must go beyond gardening to rethink urban spaces

    By Dr. Fadera Williams

    Usually, every January 1 comes with excitement around the globe. However, as our nation steps into 2026, we must debunk the misconception that has cost us a lot in the transformation of our cities. It is the idea that landscape architecture is simply about planting flowers.

    This misunderstanding may sound harmless, but its consequences are visible everywhere, and the results are felt by all and sundry. From the flooding that plagues the streets of Lagos and its heat-trapped neighbourhoods, to the poorly planned estates and peri-urban sprawl occurring in the adjoining cities of Ogun and Oyo, to the lifeless public spaces, the problems are glaring and evident.

    When landscape architecture is reduced to gardening, urban development loses a critical layer of intelligence. Landscape architecture is not decoration. It is urban green infrastructure.

    A profession hidden in plain sight

    Landscape architects are professionals whose deliberate inclusion into the framework of the built environment dates back centuries in the West. However, in Nigeria, it is still in its toddler stage in terms of recognition. As the first landscape architect produced by a Nigerian University, I can testify (considering that this happened about 15 years ago in 2011) that not much has changed concerning the profession in all these years. One of our greatest challenges as landscape architects is that there is a poor understanding of our role. I will attempt to enlighten the readers in this regard.

    Its concept

    Landscape architecture is the discipline responsible for the planning, design, and management of outdoor spaces—streets, parks, campuses, estates, waterfronts, and entire urban districts. It integrates environmental science, engineering, urban planning, and human behavior to ensure that land works efficiently for people, nature, and the economy. Traditional (building) architecture is easy to comprehend because building Architects create indoor spaces that are places. In other words, they transform a parcel of land into a building structure that has different indoor spaces that are places. A place is beyond a space. It holds identity and meaning and lacks ambiguity of function because, usually, form follows function. Landscape architecture is not different in this regard.

    What we do as landscape architects, however, is that we design outdoor spaces that become places, and these hold meaning and identity for the users, and also, the form follows the function. In addition, we solve socio-environmental problems by engineering the land and involving the populace. Gardening and horticulture focus on plant care and aesthetics, and are a small part of how we ensure the proper functioning of outdoor spaces on a residential scale, city scale, regional scale, or national scale.

    Landscape architecture focuses on how the environment is synchronised with the human and built environment, regardless of its scale of operation. Yet in Nigeria, this distinction is often blurred, leading to a systemic under-valuation of the profession.

    The Policy gap holding our cities back

    One of the biggest challenges facing Nigeria’s urban development is the lack of a clear government policy recognizing landscape architecture as a core planning profession. In many public and private projects, landscape professionals are engaged too late or not at all. Outdoor spaces are treated as afterthoughts. Urban green infrastructure is excluded from budgets. There is poor or no information at all about the importance of green practices. There are no government incentives to encourage green building practices, flood control, walkability, and thermal comfort are poorly addressed, and the approach is largely reactionary rather than precautionary. This policy blindness is compounded by the persistent confusion between landscape architecture and horticulture, resulting in misaligned project briefs and underperforming urban environments. The cost of this confusion is not theoretical; it is measurable.

    Urban chaos is a design failure

    Cities like Lagos and Abuja face increasing urban stress. In Lagos, for instance, there is recurrent flooding due to poor land and stormwater planning and a lack of Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems (SUDS). There is a rising urban heat island effect caused by the loss of tree canopies. For the regular person, it simply refers to the effect felt when the indoor thermal comfort is poor despite the introduction of electric fans and many cooling gadgets, and the higher consumption of power for cooling because the urban areas have greater heat levels compared to their counterpart neighbouring rural areas. Abuja also experiences congestion worsened by poorly designed streetscapes as well as unsafe, unused, or inaccessible public spaces.

    These challenges are often framed as inevitable consequences of population growth. But, they are not. Without mincing words, these are design failures. Countries that take landscape architecture seriously use it to manage density, climate risk, and liveability simultaneously. Nigeria has yet to fully unlock this potential.

    The economic case for landscape planning

    What is often missing from the conversation is the economic value of professional landscape planning. Globally, studies show that well-designed landscapes increase property values and the liveability index of those residential areas. Green streets and public spaces attract investment as well as a higher life expectancy for the residents. Quality public realms boost retail performance and tourism potential, and climate-responsive landscapes reduce infrastructure costs and can attract international funding because of the climate justice ideology that the West would support developing countries where these practices are implemented and safeguarded. In Nigeria, the same principles apply.

    Proper landscape planning can increase real estate value, improve tourism environments, reduce flooding damage, and enhance public health outcomes. Green spaces are not luxuries; they are economic assets!

    A green resolution for 2026

    As the year begins, Nigeria needs a Green Resolution for urban planning. This resolution should prioritize the formal recognition of landscape architecture in planning policy. As an association, we have clamoured for years to be recognized as a fully-fledged profession by the Architects Registration Council of Nigeria (ARCON), but this has not seen great traction. Unfortunately, rather than being encouraged by traditional architecture bodies, we have been misunderstood. When we tried to get our own council passed into law by an act of parliament, our efforts were shot down at the second reading.

    The loss of the inclusion of landscape architects in our nation’s environmental team think-tank is a great loss indeed. There should be mandatory inclusion of landscape professionals in public projects. As landscape architects, we understand the lay of the land. Situating any built environment project should happen with a compulsory multidisciplinary approach. For instance, the direction of the sun, the wind speed and flow, and all those landscape elements would aid the proper layout of any building structure to take advantage of the environmental conditions and not build at cross-purposes with nature.

    There should also be an integration of green infrastructure into urban master plans. Landscape architecture integrates elements of heritage, tourism, climate resilience, landscape engineering, and so on, and this would be invaluable as an input into our urban master plans.

    Lastly, the clear differentiation between landscape architecture and horticulture should be recognised and respected. A landscape architect can function in a horticultural capacity, but a horticulturist cannot replace a landscape architect. This distinction must be recognised and respected.

    The need to make an investment in public realm design as a development strategy would help our nation as a whole. This is not a call for more flowers; it is a call for better cities.

    Redefining Nigeria’s urban future

    Nigeria’s future will not be shaped by buildings alone. It will be shaped by how land is organized, how people move through space, how cities respond to climate stress, and how public environments support daily life. Landscape architecture provides the tools to address these realities.

    In 2026, the question is no longer whether Nigeria can afford to take landscape planning seriously. The real question is whether we can afford not to. Beyond “gardening” lies a profession capable of transforming our cities, if we choose to see it.

    I hope we see it. Happy New Year!

    Williams, the national vice president, Society of Landscape Architects of Nigeria, is an Associate Lecturer, University of Lagos.

  • Nigeria’s economy to grow by 4.68% in 2026 – Edun

    Nigeria’s economy to grow by 4.68% in 2026 – Edun

    Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Mr Wale Edun, says the economy is projected to grow 4.68 per cent in 2026 as the government drives investment-led, inclusive growth aimed at creating jobs and boosting citizens’ welfare.

    Edun made the remarks on Thursday in Lagos while delivering the keynote address at the launch of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) Macroeconomic Outlook Report for 2026.

    He said the growth projection aligns with the government’s medium-term goal of achieving seven per cent annual growth and building a one-trillion-dollar economy by the end of the decade.

    According to Edun, the economy in 2026 is projected to grow at 4.68 per cent, consistent with our path to seven per cent growth per annum and a one-trillion dollar economy by 2030.

    He projected average inflation at 16.5 per cent and the exchange rate at about N1,400 per dollar.

    “For inflation, as we have said, we need to get into simple figures. It is expected to average 16.5 per cent and the exchange rate, N1,400 per dollar,” he said.

    Edun noted that the 2026 budget, titled “Budget of Consolidation, Renewed Resilience and Shared Prosperity,” reflects President Bola Tinubu’s commitment to ensuring that macroeconomic improvements translate into real gains in Nigerians’ daily lives.

    “It is not about the metrics or the percentages; it is about the lived experience of Nigerians in terms of electricity supply, food availability and improved welfare,” he said.

    He said the budget deficit, estimated at about four per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), reflected the scale of Nigeria’s development needs and the ambition to accelerate growth.

    Edun emphasised that following the removal of distortions and recent stabilisation measures, the focus of economic policy had shifted to driving growth through increased investment.

    “Ongoing investments in digital infrastructure, including the rollout of over 90,000 kilometres of fibre optic cables in collaboration with the World Bank and the Ministry of Communications are part of efforts to empower young Nigerians and support technology-driven growth,” he said.

    The minister said the reform programme was anchored on four objectives.

    “These include: consolidating macroeconomic stability, improving the business and investment climate, strengthening human capital while protecting the vulnerable through social protection, and stimulating broad-based economic growth,” he noted.

    On fiscal performance, Edun said that even with shortfalls in oil and gas revenues compared to budgeted levels, the Federal Government prioritised fiscal federalism, transparency, and accountability in managing the federation account.

    “This ensured that funds due to states and sub-national governments were fully disbursed, significantly strengthening their financial positions,” he said.

    He added that many states recorded budget surpluses of about three per cent, enabling increased spending on health, education, public services, and other social and economic priorities.

    Edun also highlighted that the Federal Government demonstrated fiscal discipline by extending the 2024 budget to ensure the completion of priority capital projects.

    “Aggregate capital expenditure in 2024 stood at about N11.1 trillion, representing an 85 per cent performance, reflecting the administration’s emphasis on completing ongoing projects,” the minister explained.

    He said all statutory obligations, including foreign and domestic debt servicing as well as salary payments, were fully met.

    “These outcomes underscore a strong commitment to transparency, structural reform and fiscal discipline, as well as laying the foundation for rapid, sustained and inclusive growth,” Edun added.

    He noted the government’s long-term growth target of seven per cent was aimed at outpacing population growth and lifting millions of Nigerians out of poverty.

    The minister e xplained that reducing reliance on debt was a key fiscal priority, with renewed emphasis on boosting government revenue through digitalisation, central billing systems, and improved reconciliation processes to block leakages.

    Read Also: Edun, Olopade sympathize  with  Joshua after road accident

    “The introduction of a central billing and receipt system would enhance transparency by tracking assessments and payments in real time across government agencies,” he said.

    Edun also highlighted the implementation of a new tax law designed to be pro-poor, broaden the tax base, simplify compliance, and exempt essential goods, food items, and small businesses.

    He said President Tinubu’s strategic vision was to build a resilient, diversified, and globally competitive economy, leveraging exchange rate stability and expanded trade opportunities under ECOWAS and the African Continental Free Trade Area.

    Edun identified key priorities for 2026 to include improving competitiveness through sound governance, boosting agricultural productivity and food security, accelerating infrastructure and energy development, and investing in human capital.

    He acknowledged constraints in global concessional financing and said Nigeria must increasingly rely on domestic resource mobilisation and private sector investment to fund development.

    Edun urged Nigerians at home and in the diaspora to take advantage of improved macroeconomic conditions to invest in the economy.

    “The private sector is indispensable to sustaining growth,” he said.

    Edun said although the task ahead was challenging, the Federal Government remained resolute in translating economic stability into inclusive, job-rich growth.

    “We remain committed to delivering tangible benefits to the average Nigerian,” he stressed.

    (NAN)

  • Nigeria’s Year of Dabush Kabash

    Nigeria’s Year of Dabush Kabash

    By Charles Dickson

    The phrase Dabush Kabash — popularised by the maverick Nigerian preacher Chukwuemeka Cyril Ohanaemere (Odumeje) — was never meant to be a political theory. It was theatre, prophecy-as-performance, the language of shock and spectacle.

    Yet, as Nigeria inches toward 2027, Dabush Kabash will not just be in the pulpit, it will find a comfortable home in our politics. It will describe the collision of ambition, uncertainty, bravado, confusion, alliances, betrayals, and loud declarations that mean everything and nothing at the same time.

    This is a season where everyone is speaking, few are listening, and the ground beneath the republic feels unsettled. A year where political actors are already campaigning without calling it campaigns, negotiating without admitting it, and defecting without shame.

    Nigeria, once again, is rehearsing power before the curtain officially rises.

    As 2027 approaches, the scramble is neither subtle nor dignified. Atiku Abubakar has made it clear—again—that he will not step down for anyone. His persistence is framed by supporters as resilience and by critics as entitlement. Either way, Atiku represents continuity in Nigerian politics: a belief that the centre must always hold him, regardless of shifting public mood.

    Then there is Peter Obi, still buoyed by the aftershocks of 2023, where belief momentarily disrupted cynicism. Whether that energy can be sustained, institutionalised, or translated into broader coalitions remains an open question. Charisma without structure has limits; structure without imagination does too.

    Rotimi Amaechi, restless and calculating, watches the chessboard from the side-lines, never fully out of the game. Nasir El-Rufai continues to speak as though he is both inside and outside power, simultaneously insider, critic, and ideologue. Rabiu Kwankwaso, with his disciplined base and regional gravitas, remains a reminder that Nigeria is not won on social media alone.

    There are new brides—fresh aspirants, technocrats flirting with politics, and business elites suddenly discovering patriotism. There are old grooms—veterans who have contested so often that ambition has become muscle memory. Everyone is at the gate. No one wants to wait their turn.

    If Nigerian politics needed a parable, Rivers State has provided one. The public rift between Nyesom Wike and Siminalayi Fubara is less about governance and more about control—who anoints, who obeys, who inherits political machinery.

    Like exiles by the rivers of Babylon, both camps sing songs of loyalty and betrayal, each claiming legitimacy, each invoking the people while fighting over structures. It is a reminder that Nigerian politics is rarely ideological; it is intensely personal. Power is not just about winning elections; it is about owning outcomes, narratives, and successors.

    The ruling All Progressives Congress is swelling. Defections are marketed as endorsements, and numerical strength is mistaken for moral authority. But Nigeria has seen this movie before. The People’s Democratic Party once enjoyed similar expansion during the Obasanjo years, only to implode under the weight of internal contradictions, ambition overload, and unmanaged succession.

    Big tents collapse when they are not anchored by shared values. Congresses meant to unify often become theatres of exclusion. Candidate selection becomes war by other means. The question is not whether APC is growing, but whether it can survive the internal earthquakes that primaries inevitably unleash.

    Meanwhile, the Labour Party stands at a crossroads. The reported ambition of Datti Baba-Ahmed to run as a principal candidate raises deeper questions about succession, internal democracy, and the danger of mistaking momentum for permanence. Movements are fragile when institutions are weak.

    Coalitions are forming quietly across regions, religions, and old rivalries. Old enemies share tea; former allies exchange barbs. In Nigeria, there are no permanent friends, only temporary arithmetic. North meets South. Centre negotiates with margins. Everyone is counting delegates, governors, influencers, and platforms.

    But alliances without memory are dangerous. Nigeria has a habit of forgetting why previous coalitions failed: unresolved grievances, unequal power-sharing and elite consensus that excludes the citizens. When deals are made above the heads of the people, legitimacy becomes borrowed—and debt always comes due.

    While politicians posture, Nigerians are trying to understand a new tax regime, rising costs, shrinking incomes, and policy explanations that sound more academic than humane. Economic anxiety rarely announces itself with protests at first; it shows up as withdrawal, distrust, and apathy.

    Every political drama in 2026 will touch the economy. Every economic policy will shape the political mood. You cannot separate the two. The tragedy is that economic suffering is often treated as background noise while political ambition takes centre stage.

    Read Also: World Bank projects Nigeria’s economy to grow 4.4% in 2026

    So yes; this is the year of Dabush Kabash. Not because it is funny, but because it is revealing. It captures a politics of spectacle without substance, noise without consensus, movement without direction. Everyone is declaring, few are delivering.

    Yet within the chaos lies opportunity. Dabush Kabash also means collision, and collisions force choices. Nigeria will have to decide whether it wants politics as performance or politics as responsibility. Whether power remains a private prize or becomes a public trust.

    History will not be kind to this season if it produces only loud men and empty alliances. But it may yet redeem itself if citizens begin to ask harder questions; not just who wants power, but for what, with whom, and at what cost.

    Because beyond the theatrics, Nigeria is watching. And this time, the applause is no longer guaranteed.

    • Prince Dickson PhD, is Team Lead, The Tattaaunawa Roundtable Initiative.

  • How e-pharmacy policy aims to fix medicine access gaps

    How e-pharmacy policy aims to fix medicine access gaps

    Nigeria’s health system continues to grapple with persistent challenges, including high out-of-pocket healthcare spending, uneven access to essential medicines, shortages in the health workforce, and limited availability of family planning services. These gaps affect millions of Nigerians across both urban and rural communities, often forcing households to rely on informal or unregulated sources for basic healthcare needs.

    At the same time, rapid growth in mobile connectivity, digital payments, and e-commerce has transformed service delivery across multiple sectors, opening new pathways for healthcare access. These digital advances have begun to bridge long-standing gaps in distribution, efficiency, and convenience—particularly within pharmaceutical services—creating opportunities to reach populations previously excluded from formal systems.

    Against this backdrop, the launch of Nigeria’s National Electronic Pharmacy Policy (NEPP) represents a significant turning point in pharmaceutical service delivery. The policy introduces, for the first time, a comprehensive regulatory framework governing e-pharmacy and hybrid digital pharmacy platforms nationwide. NEPP establishes unified standards for licensing, dispensing, data protection, advertising, and professional accountability in digital pharmacy services. By setting clear rules for operators and consumers alike, the policy formally integrates e-pharmacy into Nigeria’s broader health system, positioning digital platforms as regulated complements to physical pharmacies rather than informal or unlicensed alternatives.

    Within this framework, e-pharmacy offers government and patients a practical tool to improve convenience, confidentiality, and access to essential medicines, particularly for underserved populations in both remote and densely populated urban areas. At the policy’s official inauguration, health sector stakeholders emphasised that NEPP would strengthen prescription governance, improve medicine traceability, and leverage private-sector capacity to support public health objectives, while expanding access to safe and affordable pharmaceutical products. The policy also extends licensed pharmaceutical services beyond physical premises, introducing regulatory guardrails designed to protect consumers, enhance service reliability, and enable the scalable and secure delivery of medicines across Nigeria.

    Speaking at the event, the Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof. Ali Pate, said NEPP would modernise pharmaceutical regulation while ensuring that Nigerians in all parts of the country can access safe, quality-assured medicines. Represented by the Director of Food and Drug Services, Olubumi Aribeana, Pate noted that despite rapid digital expansion, Nigeria’s pharmaceutical sector remained fragmented, with minimal oversight of online medicine sales.

    He explained that these gaps had enabled the proliferation of unlicensed vendors, counterfeit drugs, and widespread misinformation, posing serious risks to public health. “Uncontrolled access to medicines online has created dangerous vulnerabilities, exposing citizens to substandard products and unregulated sellers,” Pate said, describing NEPP as a critical safeguard for patients.

    “Today marks a bold step towards modernising healthcare delivery and guaranteeing that every Nigerian—regardless of location or social circumstance—can access safe, affordable, quality-assured medicines. The NEPP provides a clear, enforceable framework to ensure that innovation in electronic pharmacy does not compromise patient safety or professional accountability across the pharmaceutical value chain.

    “With this policy, we are building a nationally coordinated, transparent, secure, and patient-centred e-pharmacy ecosystem that integrates digital innovation with established health standards,” he added.

    NEPP sets out licensing and accreditation requirements for digital pharmacy platforms, enables real-time monitoring and traceability of medicines, and expands access to essential drugs for underserved and hard-to-reach populations nationwide. Pate said the policy strengthens accountability across the pharmaceutical value chain and reflects extensive collaboration among stakeholders, regulators, and professional bodies. He commended contributors involved in developing the policy’s digital governance, data protection, and operational frameworks, describing NEPP as the product of strategic, multi-agency cooperation.

    Ibrahim-Babashehu Ahmed, Registrar and Chief Executive Officer of the Pharmacy Council of Nigeria (PCN), said NEPP provides clear regulatory direction, with PCN designated as the primary implementing and supervisory agency. According to Ahmed, the policy—approved by the Coordinating Minister of Health and endorsed by the Minister of Justice—defines enforceable standards while cautioning operators against non-compliance. He expressed confidence that implementation challenges would be minimal, citing strong institutional backing, clear guidelines, and alignment with national health priorities.

    Munir Elelu, Director and team lead at the Pharmaceutical Society of Nigeria Foundation, described NEPP as an innovative policy that strengthens primary healthcare delivery, family planning access, and community-level pharmaceutical services. Elelu said evidence gathered before the policy’s adoption showed Nigeria’s e-pharmacy market was already emerging, making regulation essential to ensure safe, equitable, and coordinated growth. “A significant number of women of reproductive age are willing to use digital channels for essential health products once access barriers are removed,” he noted, underscoring growing demand for regulated e-pharmacy services.

    Dr Usman Abdulrahman, a consultant physician and member of the Nigerian Infectious Diseases Society, described NEPP as a hopeful development that directly addresses everyday barriers to accessing licensed pharmaceutical care. He explained that for many families outside major cities, reaching a licensed pharmacy can be costly or impossible, leaving them vulnerable to counterfeit or unsafe medicines.

    Read Also: ‘Why Nigerians will re-elect Tinubu in 2027’

    According to him, NEPP provides pharmacists and health-tech innovators with a safer, regulated environment to operate, fostering trust, professional practice, and sector growth. However, Abdulrahman acknowledged potential concerns for small community pharmacies and informal drug sellers who may struggle with compliance costs, technology requirements, and stricter oversight. He also warned that poor internet connectivity, weak logistics, and low digital literacy in some regions could initially favour urban populations if implementation is uneven. “In human terms, NEPP tests how Nigeria balances safety with inclusion, innovation with compassion, and regulation with empathy,” he said.

    Dr Adewale-Adeleye Premiere, President of the Association of Resident Doctors at the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, praised NEPP for its potential to curb antimicrobial resistance and the circulation of fake or misused medicines. He noted that widespread antibiotic abuse has created serious health risks and said regulating sales by unlicensed vendors is critical to improving patient safety.

    David Adeyemi, founder and CEO of Pharmachain Technologies and a policy contributor, said NEPP was designed to avoid the implementation failures that undermined earlier reforms. He explained that the policy would clearly identify government-approved platforms, helping consumers distinguish licensed services from unsafe online vendors. “With visible regulatory markers, Nigerians will know which platforms are authorised, improving trust and access to quality medicines,” Adeyemi said.

    Overall, NEPP aims to modernise Nigeria’s pharmaceutical sector, protect consumers, strengthen regulatory oversight, and safely integrate digital innovation into healthcare delivery. Stakeholders expressed optimism that, with careful implementation, the policy would reduce counterfeit medicines, improve prescription adherence, enhance patient safety, and position Nigeria as a leader in regulated digital pharmacy in Africa.

  • Don’t embarrass Nigeria in Israel, Lagos warns pilgrims

    Don’t embarrass Nigeria in Israel, Lagos warns pilgrims

    Concerned by the need to boost Nigeria’s image globally, the Lagos State Government has warned hundreds of intending Christian pilgrims to refrain from acts that could jeopardise the nation’s interest and corporate image.

    The government stated that going on pilgrimage is not a jamboree but a spiritual birth for the citizens, saying your stay in the country is strategic to the development of any nation.

    The Lagos State Pilgrims Welfare Board (LSPWB) Secretary, Gbolabo Omoniyi Okuderu, cautioned the intending pilgrims ahead of their airlifting on Wednesday during medical and administrative screening in Ikeja.

    Okuderu noted they are ambassadors of the nation, particularly Lagos state, whose conduct would be measured not by their personality but by the nation.

    “Going on pilgrimage is not a jamboree. And that all pilgrims must be good ambassadors of the country because you do not represent yourself, but Nigeria,” he said.

    He added that after returning from the pilgrimage to Nigeria, they should sustain the attitudinal change and character rebranding.

    He urged the pilgrims to engage in pocket-friendly shopping to avoid extravagant spending while in the holy land.

    He said: “Please, I implore you to travel light and do not get to the holy land and start buying items that will later become burdens to you, because when the luggage is too heavy, you may end up dropping them at the airport while leaving for Nigeria.

    “Also, ensure that they remain with the group they left from the country to Israel.”

    On the screening exercise, the Board secretary explained that the process assists the government in preparing the intending pilgrims for the journey.

    Read Also: World Bank projects Nigeria’s economy to grow 4.4% in 2026

    “The administrative and medical screening is one of the key requirements needed for every pilgrim to participate in ahead of their travel to Israel.

    “It will definitely help the government to ascertain the administrative and medical status of the intending pilgrims from the state. Without this screening, one could be assured that there will be hitches that could prevent the pilgrimage.

    “This is because we need to know the health status of the intending pilgrims to know which area we need to address with respect to their health, while the administrative screening will help us to address the documentation aspect of the journey. We know that without this screening, the Nigerian Christian Pilgrim Commission (NCPC) will not approve the journey”.

  • World Bank projects Nigeria’s economy to grow 4.4% in 2026

    World Bank projects Nigeria’s economy to grow 4.4% in 2026

    The World Bank has projected that Nigeria’s economy will grow by 4.4 per cent in both 2026 and 2027, describing the outlook as the country’s fastest pace of expansion in more than a decade.

    According to the Bank’s Global Economic Prospects report released in January 2026, Nigeria’s 2026 growth forecast was revised upward to 4.4 per cent from the 3.7 per cent projection contained in the June 2025 edition of the report, while the 2027 estimate was retained at 4.4 per cent.

    The revised figures signal sustained optimism about Nigeria’s medium-term economic prospects, reflecting improving macroeconomic conditions despite persistent structural challenges.

    This outlook comes as Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expanded by 3.46 per cent year-on-year in real terms in the third quarter of 2025, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.

    The World Bank said the anticipated expansion would be driven largely by continued growth in the services sector, a rebound in agricultural production, and a modest pickup in non-oil industrial activity.

    Read Also: World Bank: inflation decline drives 5.6% growth prospect

    “Growth in Nigeria is forecast to strengthen to 4.4 per cent in both 2026 and 2027—the fastest pace in over a decade,” the Bank noted, adding that services and agriculture would remain the main pillars supporting economic performance over the forecast period.

    The report also highlighted the role of ongoing economic reforms, particularly in the tax system, alongside prudent monetary policy, in supporting growth and strengthening macroeconomic stability.

    “Economic reforms, including in the tax system, along with continued prudent monetary policy, are expected to continue supporting activity,” the Bank said.

    According to the World Bank, these measures should help improve investor confidence and further tame inflation. It added that higher oil output is expected to offset weaker international oil prices, boosting fiscal revenues and improving Nigeria’s external balance.

    The Bank’s emphasis on non-oil sector growth underscores the gradual impact of Nigeria’s diversification efforts aimed at reducing dependence on crude oil exports. A stronger services sector and improved agricultural output could support job creation, price stability, and a broader government revenue base over time.

    For policymakers and investors, the forecast offers cautious optimism that recent reforms may begin to deliver measurable gains, even as Nigeria continues to manage underlying economic vulnerabilities.

  • UK investors drive 65%of Nigeria’s foreign inflows

    UK investors drive 65%of Nigeria’s foreign inflows

    Nigeria attracted about 65 per cent of its current foreign capital inflows from United Kingdom investors over the past year, with investments including $7.5million into Babban Gona and $40.5million into Johnvent Industries, the Federal Government has said.

    The Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, in the document titled ‘2025: A Defining Year for Nigeria’s Industry, Trade and Investment’, stated that investors from the United Kingdom contributed significantly to the rising investment inflows in the country.

    The document reviewed reforms and outcomes under the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu. According to the ministry, the strong UK inflows followed the activation of the UK–Nigeria Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership and broader reforms aimed at restoring investor confidence and improving market access.

     “UK investors now account for approximately 65 per cent of recent inflows, including $7.5million into Babban Gona and $40.5million into Johnvent Industries,” the Minister of Trade & Investment, Jumoke Oduwole, stated. She described the investment growth as evidence of renewed confidence in Nigeria’s reform trajectory.

    The ministry noted that 2025 marked a defining phase in Nigeria’s economic repositioning, as coordinated reforms across investment attraction, trade expansion, and institutional strengthening translated policy intent into measurable outcomes.

    Read Also: Entertainment promoter Obio Oloyejulius rewards recipients in Abuja

    It noted that Nigeria recorded a decisive turnaround in investment attraction under President Tinubu, with the government responding strategically to global economic headwinds and “clearly signalling that Nigeria is open for business.”

    It added that Nigeria significantly strengthened its investment facilitation architecture during the year, shifting from passive promotion to an active, systems-driven model that reduced information gaps, improved project visibility and enhanced the bankability of investment pipelines.

    As a result, the ministry said four priority projects valued at $13.7billion progressed, representing a conversion rate of over 25 per cent from the $50.8billion worth of signed Memoranda of Understanding.

    “Through structured deal origination, the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade & Investment (FMITI) has proactively built a de-risked pipeline exceeding $5billon across priority sectors,” the ministry stated, adding that the approach supported investors “from first engagement to firm commitment.”

    The ministry linked the growing UK inflows to sustained bilateral engagements and trade modernisation efforts, noting that Nigeria deepened investment pipelines through high-level missions to the UK and other key economies.

    It said these engagements reshaped investor perceptions and strengthened Nigeria’s relevance within global investment circles, delivering “tangible gains” in deal quality and investor confidence.

    Beyond foreign capital, the ministry highlighted progress in export-led growth, reporting that non-oil exports grew by 21 per cent to $12.8billion in the first half of 2025, nearly double the $6.5billion target.

    The growth contributed to a N12trillion trade surplus in the period, while overall trade value expanded by 14 per cent, driven by targeted trade reforms, improved export processes and increased value addition.

    Nigeria’s leading non-oil exports included cocoa and cocoa derivatives, sesame seeds, cashew nuts, shea butter, ginger, hibiscus flower, rubber, palm oil derivatives, fertilisers, cement and liquefied natural gas.

    The ministry noted that it worked with the Nigerian Export Promotion Council to train 27,352 exporters, certify 200 micro, small and medium enterprises for international trade and support 3,047 farmers through the distribution of hybrid seedlings.

    Furthermore, it stated that Special Economic Zones generated over $500milio in export revenues and created more than 20,000 direct jobs through the Nigerian Export Processing Zones Authority and the Oil and Gas Free Zones Authority.

    On macroeconomic performance, the ministry said bold reforms, including foreign exchange liberalisation, fuel subsidy removal and monetary tightening, helped restore investor confidence.

    It noted that the Nigerian Exchange ranked fifth among the world’s top-performing stock exchanges in 2025 and fourth in Africa, as combined foreign portfolio investment and foreign direct investment reached nearly $14billion between the first quarter and third quarter, surpassing total inflows in 2024.

    Foreign portfolio investment led the recovery, rising to $12.99billion, while foreign direct investment increased by 700 per cent quarter-on-quarter in Q3 2025 to reach $936million year-to-date.

    On domestic capital, the ministry said the Federal Government rolled out investment retention and expansion strategy anchored on Nigerian investors, whom it described as “the first and most enduring vote of confidence in the economy.”

    It cited the hosting of Nigeria’s first Domestic Investors Summit, where 75 per cent of investor issues were resolved on the spot and all were closed within five working days, as a shift from ad-hoc engagement to an execution-driven model.

    Nigeria’s Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Jumoke Oduwole, also led company visits across manufacturing, agro-processing, electric vehicles and industrial clusters to resolve bottlenecks and support reinvestment.

    The ministry further said Nigeria advanced its leadership under the African Continental Free Trade Area, securing appointment as Co-Champion of the AfCFTA Protocol on Digital Trade alongside Kenya and South Africa.

    Looking ahead, the ministry said it would build on the momentum in 2026 by focusing on execution and verifiable impact, with investor playbooks in priority sectors such as solid minerals, digital trade, the creative economy and climate-smart industrialisation.

    “Collectively, these results affirm that 2025 marked a decisive inflexion point for Nigeria, restoring investor confidence, strengthening competitiveness, expanding exports, and laying the foundation for sustained and inclusive growth,” the ministry stated.