Year: 2026

  • CVR Phase II: 2.6m Nigerians complete registration in week 10 — INEC

    CVR Phase II: 2.6m Nigerians complete registration in week 10 — INEC

    Registration

    By Emmanuel Oloniruha

    Abuja, March 18, 2026.

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) says 2,657,784 Nigerians have successfully completed their registration in the ongoing second phase of the Continuous Voter Registration (CVR).

    The commission disclosed this in its week 10 update released on Tuesday, titled “Completed Online and Physical Registration as at March 13”.

    The update showed that 1,563,169 registrants completed their pre-registration online, while 1,094,615 Nigerians opted for physical registration.

    A breakdown of the states showed that Jigawa recorded the highest number of completed registrations with 171,471, followed by Lagos with 154,565 and Kano with 136,073, while Anambra recorded the lowest number of completed registrations with 21,836.

    Female registrants led with 1,508,858 (57 per cent), while males accounted for 1,148,926 (43 per cent).

    In terms of age distribution, youths between ages 18 and 34 dominated the exercise with 1,813,082, accounting for 68.22 per cent of the total registrants.

    Students represented the largest occupational group at 640,826 that is 24.11 per cent, followed by those in business at 540,376 representing 20.33 per cent.

    The update also showed that a total of 37,687 Persons with Disabilities (PWDs) had also registered so far.

    INEC however clarified that the current figure of 2.6 million was a preliminary total.

    “This is a preliminary figure pending data clean-up during the period for claims and objections by citizens, followed by the deployment of the Automated Biometric Identification System (ABIS),” INEC said.

    The independent electoral body also clarified that registration in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) remained suspended following the Area Council Election held on Feb. 21, in compliance with Section 9 (6) of the Electoral Act 2022.

    The electoral body urged eligible Nigerians who were yet to register to visit its official portals at https://cvr.inec.gov.ng or https://cvr.inecnigeria.org to begin the process.

  • Present Crop of Politicians Cannot Fix Nigeria

    Present Crop of Politicians Cannot Fix Nigeria

     

     

    By Richard Ikiebe

    Nigerian politicians, as presently selected and incentivised, are structurally oriented toward extraction and survival, not toward the long-term state-building the country urgently needs.

    What does Nigeria lack in politics that can reform and rebuild our ship of state?

    Since 1999, Nigerians have voted repeatedly, witnessed largely “peaceful” transfers of power, and watched new parties and coalitions rise under hopeful banners. Each round arrives wrapped in the language of rescue: “restoration,” “change,” “next level,” “renewed hope.” Despite the abundance of slogans, life for most Nigerians is a perpetually unravelling. Insecurity stubbornly persists across the country, the unemployment rate rises monthly, and infrastructure continues to decay. And in many sectors, conditions have worsened.

    It may be easy to conclude that we merely chose the wrong leaders and should try again. However, after a quarter-century of cycling through similar outcomes, we must ask whether the deeper problem lies with how politics itself is organised and incentivised in Nigeria. The time has come to rethink leadership and statecraft beyond who occupies an office.

    We must begin with the uncomfortable question of whether politicians produced by our current system can realistically fix Nigeria. If politics is structurally misaligned with the work of state-building, then even well-intentioned politicians are like builders trying to repair a collapsing structure with the wrong tools: their efforts, however sincere, are unlikely to produce lasting transformation.

    On the surface, Nigeria appears to be a competitive democracy: parties contest elections, courts hear petitions, and incumbents sometimes lose. Yet electoral competition is thin, as the same political class circulates across parties, defections are frequent, and yesterday’s opponents become today’s allies, leaving voters unable to distinguish parties beyond slogans and personalities.

    Under a winner-takes-all setting, politics is less about policy visions than about rival networks fighting for access to state-controlled resources – oil rents, licences, contracts, regulatory power and the security apparatus. Whoever wins office gains wide discretion over allocating these benefits, so elections become battles over rents rather than strategies for solving national problems.

    In this situation, most politicians adopt an “extractive mindset”. The elective or appointed office is primarily a route to personal and group gain because that is what the system demands; it is what it rewards. Imagine an “extractive spectrum” from 1 (inclusive, service-driven leadership) to 10 (office as loot). Nigeria’s dominant actors cluster in the upper half, especially those controlling party structures, candidate selection and campaign finance.

    Even well-intentioned entrants quickly meet clientelist demands of appeasing godfathers, funding costly political “structures,” and rewarding vote-mobilisers. Once in office, intense pressure to “recoup” from financiers, supporters and personal insecurity makes non-extractive behaviour not just difficult but politically suicidal.

    There are sincere people in Nigerian politics who genuinely want to improve education, infrastructure, health and security. Their good intentions are routinely blunted, diverted or punished by the very structures in which they operate.

    A reform-minded governor who tries to clean up procurement, rationalise payroll or shift funds from patronage to long-term investment soon collides with entrenched interests. Party leaders who feel undermined and public servants who supplement their salaries through loot-sabotage implementation. The governor quickly faces bleak choices: to become part of the system, or confront and risk isolation, become weakened or even removed.

    The same logic applies to a legislator who demands transparency, resists padded budgets or insists on open competition. The lesson to others is unmistakable: idealism is costly in practice in systems where virtue is a liability. Reform-minded politicians are often absorbed, and they pull back towards “normal” behaviour, or marginalised and expelled. Is it a wonder that repeated appeals to “good people” to enter politics have not yielded the transformative results?

    Politics, at its best, is an instrument of statecraft: the long-term work of building a capable state that secures justice, security and prosperity. Statecraft is the work of statesmen or women, leaders who steadily invest in enduring institutions; they accept personal cost to serve a higher national purpose and the common good. Nigeria desperately needs statesmen; our current political orientation remains overwhelmingly short-term and self-serving.

    Elected officials are preoccupied with day-to-day survival and the next election, so they prioritise quick, highly visible projects laden with contracts and photo opportunities. The system is saturated with loyalty-driven appointments and incessant reshuffles that weaken institutional capacity. Efforts to strengthen the judiciary, professionalise the civil service or depoliticise security agencies are routinely sidelined. The consequences are evident: opaque security expenditures, erratic policy shifts and short-term revenue raids steadily undermine investor confidence.

    We keep searching for the incorruptible president, visionary governor, or “bridge-building” party leader as if the right person alone could rescue the system. Character matters, but placed inside a deeply extractive, short-term political order, it cannot bear the burden we assign to it.

    A leader of real integrity needs a coalition that shares their reform goals and extends beyond the party machine: institutional partners in the civil service, business, civil society and the professions who can sustain reforms when political winds shift.

    Without such backing, even remarkable individuals are constrained, compromised or removed. As presently organised, Nigerian partisan politics is structurally ill-suited to deliver the deep, patient state-building that the nation needs. The task ahead is to cultivate and elevate a different kind of leadership, a more deliberate elevation of genuine nation-builders in the practice of statecraft; men and women who think as state-builders first and politicians, if at all, a distant second.

    *Dr Richard Ikiebe is a Media and Management Consultant, Teacher and Chairman, Board of Businessday Newspaper*

  • Police exonerate company, directors of false allegations

    Police exonerate company, directors of false allegations

     

     

    The Nigerian Police Force has exonerated a company, Cabota Energy Services Limited, and its directors of criminal allegations.

    The directors cleared by the police include Dr Raymond Akintayo, Dr Babafemi Fagite and Mr Charles Obisike.

    The company and its directors were alleged to have engaged in acts of terrorism, kidnapping, conspiracy and stealing.

    The petition was filed by Fortunatus Osuagwu of Viagem Energy Services Limited.

    However, after a thorough and diligent investigation, the police findings revealed that the dispute between the parties stemmed from a contractual relationship and did not disclose any criminal conduct.

    In the interim report by the Police Monitoring Unit, dated Feb. 25, and made available to newsmen on Tuesday, it said the allegations lacked merit.

    “The allegations of obtaining under false pretence, attempted assassination, kidnapping and stealing lack merit as there was no evidence to establish the alleged offences against the suspects.

    “In view of the above facts, the case is entirely civil in nature as it emanated from a contractual agreement that never went through arbitration to determine any breach as contained in the lease agreement and parties have been advised to seek remedy in a civil court.”

    It said the police had, therefore, taken appropriate corrective steps, including communicating with the Nigeria Immigration Service regarding the conclusion of investigation

    It said the law enforcement agency also communicated with INTERPOL, through the National Central Bureau (NCB), and directed the removal of the names of the affected directors from relevant watchlists.

    Responding to the development, Cabota Energy Services Limited, in a statement, commended the professionalism, diligence and commitment to justice displayed by the Nigerian Police Force, particularly the office of the I-G Monitoring Unit.

    The company, in the statement issued by its Executive Director, General Services; Dr Fagite, described the investigation as “careful and impartial.”

  • Customs FOU Zone ‘A’ strengthens interagency synergy in Ogun

    The Controller of the Federal Operations Unit (FOU) of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) Zone A, Ikeja-Lagos, Comptroller Gambo Aliyu, and
    Ogun State NDLEA Commander of Narcotics, Tijjani Rabe, when his team visited NDLEA on the Nigeria Police Force in Ogun on Monday

     

    Customs FOU Zone ‘A’ strengthens interagency synergy in Ogun
    March 17, 2026, The Controller of the Federal Operations Unit (FOU) of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) Zone A, Ikeja-Lagos, Comptroller Gambo Aliyu, said it  embarked on a strategic working visit to the Ogun State Commands of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and the Nigeria Police Force.
    Aliyu made the disclosure when his team visited NDLEA on the Nigeria Police Force in Ogun on Monday.
    The FOU Zone’A’ head said the visit was to reinforcing interagency collaboration in the fight against smuggling, illicit drug trafficking, and other criminal activities along the Ogun corridor.
    Comptroller Aliyu disclosed that over 60 per cent of the two tons of Cannabis Indica intercepted by FOU Zone A in just three months of his administration was seized within Ogun State.
     He lamented that the intensified crackdown had come at a heavy cost, following the death of a gallant customs officer during one of the operations.
    “The Nigeria Customs Service will continue leveraging robust interagency cooperation to cripple the supply chains of saboteurs and rid the nation of substance abuse that threatens our peace and development,” Aliyu said.
    Aliyu mentioned that the fight against economic sabotage and narcotics could not be won by any single agency, but through collective resolve and coordinated action.
    “We seek the cooperation of our strategic partners, recognizing we cannot achieve this onerous task alone. Together, we will cripple the networks of saboteurs and safeguard the future of our nation,”he said.
    He re-assured the zero-tolerance policy of the Comptroller General of Customs, Bashir Adewale Adeniyi, MFR, PhD, against illicit imports and substances harmful to national security.
    Aliyu said intelligence sharing, joint patrols, and coordinated enforcement with NDLEA would remain central to a well guided and better coordinated operations.
    Responding, Ogun State NDLEA Commander of Narcotics, Tijjani Rabe, commended Customs for its sustained enforcement drive and pledged deeper cooperation.
    “We are ready to strengthen intelligence sharing and joint operations aimed at dismantling drug trafficking networks across the state.
    ” Beyond enforcement, we are engaging young adults and teenagers to reduce the appeal of hard drug usage, because prevention is as critical as interdiction,” Rabe said.
    During a separate courtesy call on the outgoing Ogun State Commissioner of Police, CP Lanre Ogunlowo, now Assistant Inspector General of Police, Comptroller Aliyu emphasized the historic partnership between the Customs Service and the Nigeria Police Force.
    Aliyu  recalled the past collaborations that underscored the importance of institutional synergy.
    “Timely intelligence sharing and heightened situational awareness are essential in modern crime detection and prevention. Our unity stands as our greatest strength against evolving threats,” Aliyu remarked.
    He also expressed appreciation to the police leadership for their swift response and professionalism in ongoing efforts to apprehend those responsible for the killing of a Customs officer during an anti-smuggling operation.
    In his response, AIG Ogunlowo reaffirmed the Police Command’s commitment to deepening collaboration with Customs.
    “The Nigeria Police Force in Ogun State remains resolute in supporting Customs and other sister agencies in the fight against smuggling and criminality.
    “We will continue to provide timely intelligence, joint patrols, and coordinated strategies to ensure our borders and communities remain secure,” Ogunlowo assured.
    Comptroller Aliyu said that the visits were aimed at consolidating existing partnerships and reinforcing the shared commitment of security agencies to rid the Ogun border corridor of illicit drugs, smuggling activities, and other crimes threatening national development

     

  • Corporate lawyers key drivers of Nigeria’s economic growth – Expert

    All Bloomfield staff – Michael Abiiba, Partner,, Amanda Umobi Senior Associate,,Peace Lotechukwu, Senior Associate, Dr Ayodele Oni Partner,, Oreoluwa Onafowokan, Associate, and Adedoyin Afun, Partner during the 2026 edition of the Legal 500 General Counsel (GC) Powerlist Nigeria, hosted by his firm on Thursday night in Lagos

     

    Corporate lawyers key drivers of Nigeria’s economic growth – Exper

    Lagos, Feb. 27, 2026 , A legal practitioner, Mr Adedoyin Afun, has praised corporate legal leaders as the driving force behind Nigeria’s economic stability and institutional progress.

     

    Afun, partner at Bloomfield LP, made the remarks at the 2026 edition of the Legal 500 General Counsel (GC) Powerlist Nigeria, hosted by his firm on Thursday night in Lagos.

     

    The Bloomfield LP, a Nigerian law firm, hosted the event to spotlight outstanding in-house lawyers across the country.

     

    Welcoming the guests on behalf of his partners, Afun described the gathering as more than a celebration, saying it recognised the strategic role of in-house lawyers in nation-building.

     

    “On behalf of my partners, I welcome you to this special meeting. You are the progress drivers and the legal centre of the Nigerian economy,” he said.

     

    He described them as the “quiet force” behind key sectors, saying they ensured stability across energy, connectivity and finance.

     

    Afun stated that legal practitioners were not merely transactional advisers but custodians of professional honour and corporate integrity.

     

    He said lawyers were defined not only by the deals they closed but by the values they upheld.

     

    Afun said integrity remained the foundation of the profession, noting that weak professionalism undermined justice.

     

    He added that the call to honour and discipline applied across boardrooms and courtrooms alike.

     

    Reflecting on Bloomfield LP’s growth since 2017, Afun said the firm had expanded by supporting major clients and building trusted partnerships with in-house teams.

     

    He expressed appreciation to the corporate legal departments for managing legal risk and compliance, reaffirming the firm’s commitment to collaboration and ethical excellence.

     

    Also speaking at the event, Mr David Freeman, Global Business Development Manager at Legal 500, described it as a milestone for the organisation and Nigeria’s legal market.

     

    He added that the Nigeria GC Powerlist recognised outstanding in-house counsel and highlighted that Legal 500 had researched the global legal market for over 35 years.

     

    Freeman said the GC Powerlist highlighted individuals driving change and innovation, noting that in-house counsel had become increasingly influential globally.

     

    He said the editorial team interviewed selected general counsel in Nigeria, adding that the publication reached millions of users globally.

     

    Freeman described Nigeria as a “superpower” in Africa’s legal market and stressed the importance of deeper engagement in the jurisdiction.

     

    He, however, congratulated the honourees and thanked Bloomfield LP for hosting the event.

  • A Food for Thought:  Life, Meaningless Irony

    A Food for Thought: Life, Meaningless Irony

     

    Can you relate?👇🏿

    *LIFE IS FUNNY:*
    *YOU COME WITH NOTHING, FIGHT FOR EVERYTHING, THEN GO WITH NOTHING*YOUR TOMORROW IS WAITING*

    *Life has a strange sense of humor.*

    * It welcomes us empty-handed, throws us into a battlefield called survival, and eventually escorts us out the same way we came — with nothing. Between those two points lies the drama of human existence: ambition, greed, love, loss, pride, fear, hope, and regret.

    *We arrive naked, helpless, owing no one and owning nothing.*

    * *No certificates.*
    * *No titles*.
    * *No bank accounts. No enemies.*
    * *No followers.*

    *Yet, almost immediately, the world hands us a scorecard*.

    * *By the time we learn to walk, we are already being measured.*
    * *By the time we learn to speak, we are already being compared.*
    * *And by the time we understand life, we are already exhausted from chasing it.*

    *From that moment on, the fight begins.*

    * *We fight for food, then comfort.*
    * *We fight for education, then relevance.*
    * *We fight for jobs, then promotions.*
    * *We fight for money, power, influence, validation, and legacy.*

    * *Some fight clean. Some fight dirty. Some step on others to climb faster. Some destroy families to build empires. Some lose themselves completely in the pursuit of “something” — forgetting that they started with nothing and will end the same way*.

    *Ironically, the more we acquire, the heavier we become.*

    * *Wealth brings worry.*
    * *Power brings paranoia*.
    * *Fame brings loneliness.*
    * *Success brings enemies.*

    *The very things we kill ourselves to obtain begin to imprison us.*

    * *We hire security to protect what we can’t carry to the grave.*
    * *We build mansions we won’t live in long enough.*
    * *We accumulate cars that will outlive us.*
    * *We chase applause that fades the moment we exit the stage.*

    *And still, we fight.*

    * *We fight even when the body is tired. We fight even when the soul is empty. We fight even when the mirror no longer recognizes us.*

    *Why?*

    *Because society has convinced us that rest is failure, contentment is laziness, and simplicity is poverty. We are taught to measure life by what we own instead of who we are. We celebrate accumulation but rarely ask: At what cost?*

    *Then one day — without warning — the fight ends.*

    * *Death doesn’t negotiate.*
    * *It doesn’t care about your bank balance, your political office, your degrees, your connections, or your social media following. It strips everyone equally. The billionaire and the beggar share the same silence. The powerful and the powerless occupy the same soil. The hands that grabbed everything return empty.*

    *What remains is not what you owned, but what you did.*

    * *How many lives did you touch?*
    * *How many hearts did you break?*
    * How many people did you lift instead of crush?
    * *How much good did you do when no one was watching?*

    *In the end, life isn’t remembered by assets but by impact.*

    * Not by titles, but by testimonies.
    * Not by wealth, but by worth.

    This is the great irony: *we spend our lives chasing things that cannot follow us, while neglecting values that could outlive us.*

    * *Kindness costs nothing. Integrity weighs nothing. Love occupies no space in a grave. Yet these are the only things that echo after we are gone.*

    *Life is funny — not because it is meaningless, but because we often misunderstand its meaning.*
    *You come with nothing. You fight for everything. You go with nothing.*
    *The real question is: what will you leave behind?*

    I come in peace ✌️. Think of your END

  • Ex-Railway manager heads editorial board of CILT Nigeria

    Ex-Railway manager heads editorial board of CILT Nigeria

     

     

    The Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport (CILT) has appointed Chief Festus Okorie, a former District Public Relation’s Manager, Nigerian Railway Corporation (NRC) as its Editorial Board Chairman, to oversee editorial standards for global competitiveness.

    The institute’s National Executive Director, Mr Reynolds Shodeinde, in a letter signed on Tuesday in Lagos, stated that the appointment was part of the organisation’s commitment for publication of its periodic journals,
    strengthen professional authority, research capacity and ensure industry relevance.

    According to him, the board is also instituted to provide strategic direction, ensure high editorial standards and sustain credible knowledge dissemination within the logistics and transport sector.

    (Above is Chief Festus Okorie, Editorial Board Chairman, CILT Nigeria)

     

    He said that the editorial board was established to oversee the planning, production and quality assurance of the institute’s magazine and related publications.

    ”It will ensure that all content reflects the values, professionalism, and strategic objectives of CILT Nigeria.

    ”The scoop, objectives and responsibilities are not limited to the institute’s magazine and newsletters; special publications as well as reports and conference proceedings.

    ”The objectives are to produce high-quality publication that promotes knowledge, professionalism, visibility of CILT Nigeria as well as provide members and stakeholders with relevant industry insight,” he said.

    Shodeinde said that the board members would also develop and implement editorial policies and guidelines; plan and approve magazine themes; content schedule; publications timeline and features.

    In his acceptance address, Okorie congratulated the board members, noting that the appointment was a testament to their expertise and dedication to the institute’s mission.

    He called on the board members to work together with love, respect and open mind, adding,” we’ll sacrifice our time, share our talents and treasure our collective efforts to produce outstanding work to make the CILT Nigeria proud”.

    Chief Okorie holds many professional degrees including; CILT International Diploma (London) in Transport; Chartered member of the National Institute of Marketing; Post Graduate Diploma in journalism and Competency Certificates in Railway Operations.

    He has 35 years experience in operations, advertising and Public Relations department of the Nigerian Railway Corporation.

  • Sokoto community harps on interfaith dialogue to promote peace, brotherhood

    Sokoto community harps on interfaith dialogue to promote peace, brotherhood

    Sokoto community harps on interfaith dialogue to promote peace, brotherhood

    Alhaji Sani Umar Jabbi, District Head of Gagi in Sokoto South Local Government Area, has urged communities to organise more interfaith engagements to foster unity and brotherhoods among citizens.

    Jabbi made the appeal during a Ramadan fast-breaking event organised by the Community Dialogue Committee (CDC) for Durbawa, Tsaki, Mallamawa, and Gagi communities on Tuesday.

    He said interfaith activities promote religious tolerance, peace, love, forgiveness, and understanding values essential for overcoming the challenges currently facing Nigeria.

    He explained that CDC organised the event due to its importance, and urged groups and associations to emulate the initiative, considering rising community vulnerability to crime.

    As CDC Chairman, Umar-Jabbi said the initiative aimed to unite Muslims and Christians through a shared meal, strengthening bonds and promoting unity among faith-based organisations.

    He emphasised that such efforts help combat religious extremism and hatred, fostering harmony and national cohesion among citizens of different faiths.

    He noted that Muslims and Christians jointly participated in the fast-breaking, and he encouraged other group leaders to explore similar ways of enhancing interfaith engagement.

    “God created us to relate with all humans, regardless of tribe, culture, religion, colour, size, region, or continent,” Umar-Jabbi added.

    He said the initiative sought to promote religious tolerance in Nigeria and neighbouring countries.

    Jabbi noted that the event showed how NGOs unite people across religious and cultural divides, with support from individuals and the district head.

    He described the event as successful, citing positive feedback from attendees on the importance of fostering brotherhood among Nigerians.

    A Islamic Scholar, Malam Abdurahman Sanusi, described the event as a step in the right direction to strengthen ties between Muslims and non-Muslims.

    Sanusi highlighted the importance of holding similar events beyond Ramadan, given their role in promoting peaceful coexistence among diverse communities.

    He stressed that criminals and those with bad conduct do not represent any religious teachings and should not define interfaith relations.

    He called for increased understanding, tolerance, and collaboration among religious adherents to address insecurity and other societal challenges.

    A Christian leader, Evangelist Solomon T.T Don, from HEKAN Church Sokoto, praised the organisers, saying the event would enhance peaceful co-existence, tolerance, forgiveness, and interfaith ties.

    Don said the programme would spread peace and unity, urging Nigerians to reject all forms of ethnic, religious, political, and regional division.

    “We must love our Muslim neighbours. That is why we are here, to celebrate Ramadan with them and encourage devotion to Allah,” he said.

    The event was attended by community leaders, youths, women’s groups, civil societies, NGOs, and individuals.

  • Margaret Lawrence University Matriculates 262 Students, Bans Use Of Smartphones

     

    The Margaret Lawrence University (MLU), on Monday, matriculated a total of 262 fresh students into its 2025/2026 academic year.

    At the event held simultaneously in the University’s Delta State and Abuja campuses, the Vice Chancellor of the institution, Professor Ernest Izevbigie, urged the students to focus on academic excellence.

    Speaking after formally admitting the new intakes, Prof Izevbigie stated that from inception, matriculation at MLU has also served as an occasion to inaugurate major developmental projects.

    The Vice Chancellor disclosed that during the maiden matriculation, several projects were commissioned, while during the second matriculation, the phase 2 of the Margaret Lawrence University Teaching Hospital (MLUTH) in Abuja was flagged off.

    Today being “the third matriculation, we have witnessed the unveiling of the state-of-the-art ultra-modem International Conference Centre (Fountain of Joy International Conference Centre) by Bishop David Abioye; where we are all seated this morning! An edifice and a master piece of human artistry, Praise God”.

    Prof Izevbigie stated that MLU is the product of a divine vision revealed to its Founder, Mr Paul Odili, on January 27, 2011, to establish a university, “now-an Oasis of academic excellence and intelligentsia”.

    “Matriculation is a special day at MLU for traditional student-oath taking, ceremony, and signing of the Matriculation Register signifying allegiance to the University and commitment to its rules and regulations, the VC said.

    With “Exceptionalism” as its watchword, the VC noted that the Paul Odili College of Medicine is poised to become a model medical school and a major hub for medical education in Nigeria.

    Highlighting the exceptionalism of MLU, Prof Izevbigie hinted that MLU is the fastest growing university in Nigeria according to NUC as well as amongst the very few private universities to own its own teaching hospital, at least de novo.

    “It is the first university to purchase the Anatomage Table – Series 12 in West Africa (as confirmed by the manufacturer distributor, Schultz Healthcare). The Anatomage Table is a 3D, touch-screen virtual dissection tool that promotes in-depth, life-sized investigation/exploration of the human and animal anatomy, ranging from virtual human cadavers, while also providing valuable insights into the functions of biological systems.

    “Equally noteworthy is the Faculty of Law, which is fast emerging as a benchmark for excellence in the study of jurisprudence. Other faculties are also carving niches for themselves, the VC said.

    With the theme: “The Oasis of Academic Excellence and Intelligence” Prof Izevbigie stressed that private universities play an important role in strengthening academic standards in Nigeria.

    In his remarks, the Pro-Chancellor and Founder of Margaret Lawrence University, Mr Paul Odili, expressed satisfaction with the successful conduct of the institution’s third matriculation ceremony, describing the event as a moment of joy for the university community.

    While encouraging parents seeking quality education for their children to consider the university, he assured that the institution is committed to shaping students for future leadership, success and a generation of global achievers.

    “What I have to tell them is that we can remodel your children. We can deliver on the potential they already have and prepare them for today and tomorrow.

    “You can bring them here and trust us to handle them and see that they become what they believe they should achieve in life,” the founder said.

    He added that the institution aims to produce a new generation of global achievers.

    “We are ready to bring to the world a different set of tomorrow’s champions, and that’s what we are doing here,” Odili said.

    Speaking as the special guest of honour, former Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission, Abubakar Rasheed, congratulated the newly admitted students and described them as fortunate to study at the institution.

    Rasheed noted that matriculation marks the official beginning of a student’s academic life.

    “You know, there are only two very important ceremonies for any university student. One is matriculation, the other is convocation. One is birth, the other is death. One is the beginning, the other is the end,” he said.

    He explained that once students take the matriculation oath, they are formally admitted into the university community.

    The former NUC chief also encouraged the students to remain disciplined and focused on their studies.

    “There are two requirements. You have to be academically serious, and you have to also be ethically responsible,” he said.

    Rasheed warned the students against negative social influences, urging them to maintain high moral standards.

    He expressed confidence that the students would successfully complete their studies and return for their convocation in the coming years.