Year: 2026

  • FTAN tasks govt,  stakeholders on recovery, growth, strategic partnership in 2026

    FTAN tasks govt, stakeholders on recovery, growth, strategic partnership in 2026

    The President, Federation of Tourism Associations of Nigeria (FTAN), Dr Aliyu Badaki has charged both the government and private sector to focus on recovery, growth and strategic partnership in order to grow Nigerian tourism in 2026.
    Badaki, who gave this charge in his 2026 message, said the new year holds a lot of promises for the people and the sector.

    While welcoming everyone to the New Year, Badaki extended his warm greetings to all stakeholders, practitioners, investors, and advocates within Nigeria’s tourism ecosystem.

    He said: “This new year greets us not merely as a continuation of our journey, but as a decisive moment; one that calls for alignment, execution, and collective responsibility.’’

    He expressed his appreciation to the Nigerian tourism family for holding strong and firm in the outgone year in the face of challenges faced by them, the sector and the nation.

    ‘‘I express my profound appreciation to members of the Nigerian tourism family. Your resilience, commitment, and belief in the sector despite economic headwinds, regulatory pressures, and structural constraints remain the backbone of our industry,’’ he said.

    He continued further: “I particularly acknowledge our tourism ambassadors at home and in the diaspora who continue to project Nigeria’s story, culture, and hospitality with pride on the global stage.

    ‘‘There is no denying that 2025 was a challenging year commercially for many operators. However, history will record it as a year of groundwork and recalibration. It was a period of rebuilding trust, strengthening engagement, and reopening critical lines of collaboration between Government Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), international development partners, and the organised private sector.”

    FTAN President stated that the bridges rebuilt in the latter half of 2025 have laid the foundation for a more coordinated and purpose-driven tourism economy.

    Badaki noted that it is within this context that the Tourism Transformation Mandate (TTM) becomes both relevant and urgent.

    He noted: ‘‘TTM is not a slogan; but a call to action anchored on policy alignment, private sector repositioning, investment readiness, human capacity development, destination competitiveness, and measurable outcomes.’’

    He added that TTM reflects a collective resolve to move Nigerian tourism from potential to performance.

    According to him: ‘‘2026, therefore, must be a year of recovery, consolidation, and growth.

    ‘‘A year where: Policy frameworks translate into operational clarity; Partnerships evolve into co-investment and co-delivery; Standards replace informality; Data, skills, and professionalism drive decision-making; and Tourism asserts itself as a serious contributor to GDP diversification, job creation, and national branding.”

    Badaki said FTAN remains unwavering in its commitment to this transformation, stressing that the Federation will continue to serve as a unifying platform for advocacy, engagement, capacity building, and strategic collaboration, ensuring that the private sector is not only heard but positioned as a true co-driver of national tourism development.

    He explained: ‘‘As we navigate 2026, we must also be honest about the realities before us: rising operating costs, regulatory overlaps, security perceptions, infrastructure gaps, skills shortages, and the need for improved ease of doing business. Yet, these challenges also present an opportunity to reset systems, strengthen governance, embrace innovation, and rebuild confidence across the value chain.’’

    While assuring of the opportunities ahead, Badaki urged everyone to move forward and let mutual respect define its engagements.

    He said every stakeholder, large or small, has a role to play, a value to add, and a responsibility to uphold standards.

    Badaki tasked the tourism stakeholders to commit, collectively in making Nigeria a destination of choice; ‘‘leveraging on its diversity as strength, its culture as capital, and the people as its greatest asset.’’

    He also charged both the government and operators on entrenching regulation and standardisation noting; ‘‘the role of standardisation is the foundation of tourism development in our sector. Therefore, both the standard body and the Federation will ensure a good working relationship to actualise this vision.’’

  • Cocoa Produce Buyers Meet, Moves to Curb Theft and trading in Substandard Cocoa

    Cocoa Produce Buyers Meet, Moves to Curb Theft and trading in Substandard Cocoa

     

    By Lawal Abdullahi-Jubril

    Araromi Okeodo, Osun State, (FLOWERBUDNEWS ):  The Cocoa Produce Buyers Association of Nigeria, Ife South Local Government Chapter has resolved to tackle theft of cocoa beans and trading in substandard cocoa in the area.

    The Association expressed the resolve at its  local meeting on Tuesday at Area 5, Araromi Okeodo, Osun State. The meeting took place at the residence of the chairman of Araromi Okeodo’s Produce Buyers, Mr. Mukaila Olawuyi, who also serves as the vice chairman of the association in the local government.

    During the meeting, the Association’s Secretary, Mr Sikiru Abioye, presented a report on the previous meeting held at Fadaka Village, Area 5, before forwarding two key agenda items the association aims to achieve.

    Major issues discussed included the growing insecurity and rising cases of cocoa theft across villages and towns within the local government area.

    In response, the association announced several countermeasures designed to curb theft and promote transparency in the cocoa trade. These include:

    A ban on the purchase of wet cocoa beans, prohibition of cocoa buying during late hours of the day,  stoppage of the use of congos for measurement instead of standard kilograms and Restriction on night-time transportation of dried or wet cocoa beans.

    The association also addressed the problem of substandard cocoa beans being traded in the market.

    A report from the local task force revealed the seizure of cocoa shaft purchased around several villages, allegedly to be mixed with raw cocoa beans — a practice that lowers quality and damages the reputation of local produce. Similar seizures have reportedly been made by the Osun State Task Force in various locations.

    Speaking during the meeting, Mr. Mukaila emphasized that only Grade 1 and Grade 2 cocoa beans meet the standard required by exporters and urged all members to maintain these quality levels.

    “This development will benefit the local government, the state, and the nation as a whole,” he said.

    Nigeria remains one of the largest cocoa-producing countries in the world, ranking behind Ivory Coast and Ghana in West Africa, and Indonesia globally.

    The association called on the local, state, and federal governments to support efforts in tackling insecurity and the trade of substandard cocoa. It also appealed for empowerment initiatives for youth, elderly citizens, produce buyers, and farmers to strengthen the agricultural sector. (flowerbudnews.ng)

  • 2025: An Anti-climax for Governance, Democracy in Africa

    2025: An Anti-climax for Governance, Democracy in Africa

     

    *By Paul Ejime

    As Africa continues to experiment with electoral democracy, 2025 was among the busiest election years on the continent. But apart from Malawi, where an incumbent lost to a former and older opponent, political power remained largely in the same hands, with a resurgence of military incursions.

    The danger signals have always been there, coupled with warnings from concerned experts that liberal democracy is in decline worldwide, particularly in Africa. However, incurable optimists remain in denial, while the beneficiaries of the anti-democratic gravy train pay no heed.

    In a May 2024 lecture organised by the Dakar-based School of Politics, Policy and Governance Senegal (SPPG), Dr Larry Diamond, America’s renowned political sociologist and leading scholar on democracy studies, observed that “democracy globally has been in a prolonged recession since about 2007.”

    There might be “many new (third wave) and old democracies (that) have been resilient, …many others (are) deteriorating,” he warned.

    For Africa, and particularly West Africa, which once blazed the trail in preventive diplomacy, conflict management and resolution, the governance prognosis has been grim for the past decades.

    By 2019, all 15 Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) members were practising one form of democratic system or another, no matter how imperfect; even so, the region is now disappointingly living up to its dubious moniker as a “coup belt.”

    The 2020 military coup in Mali changed the dynamics. More ECOWAS member states – Guinea, Burkina Faso, Niger, and lately, Guinea-Bissau became a bastion of military juntas after the toppling of elected civilians. The junta leaders in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger have since withdrawn their countries from ECOWAS to form the Alliance of Sahel States, AES.

    As expected, the junta chief in Guinea Conakry, Mamady Doumbouya, was on 30th December 2025, declared the winner of a controversial presidential election, devoid of any serious opposition, despite having earlier pledged not to run for office after seizing power in September 2021. He changed the constitution to enable him to run, in violation of the 2007 African Union’s Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance, and the 2001 ECOWAS Supplementary Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance.

    However, Doumbouya, 41, and whose wife is a French legionnaire, is only one among army officers reminding Africa, especially West Africa, of its dark past when many of the immediate post-independent countries were under one-party state systems or military dictatorships.

    Sudan is currently struggling under a deadly military interregnum, after the 2019 ousting of long-time ruler Omar Bashir and the breakaway of South Sudan in 2011. Chad is ruled by a young army General, Mahamat “Kaka” Derby, after a controversial vote in 2024 following the assassination of his father, President Idriss Derby, by rebels in April 2021. Faure Gnassingbe of Togo used a similar template to succeed his father, Gnassingbe Eyadema, who died in 2005, and retained power through disputed elections.

    In April 2025, another young army officer, Brice Oligui Nguema, claimed victory in a controversial vote after staging what many called a “power-realignment coup” in 2023 against President Ali Bongo to disrupt his father Omar Bongo’s dynastic reign in Gabon.

    On 12th October this year, an elite unit of Madagascar’s Armed Forces overthrew the government of President Andry Rajoelina, and on 26th November, Guinea-Bissau President Umaro Sissoco Embaló chose to outdo other coup makers with his self-coup, to avoid an electoral defeat.

    The military struck again, this time in Benin on 7th December 2025, in an attempt to topple President Patrice Talon’s almost 10-year-old government. The plot attracted international attention, with Nigeria, the regional powerhouse, foiling the attempted coup through a rare military collaboration with France.

    The resurgence of military rule in Africa is such that concerned observers are beginning to ask, in which country will the army strike next?

    While democratic decline may be a global phenomenon, Africa has been worst hit due largely to its weak democratic institutions/structures, lack of democratic culture, and negative stakeholder mindset/attitude.

    Some critics even argue that democracy cannot work or has failed in Africa, but my thesis is that the fault lies with the practitioners – politicians, security agencies, civil society groups, the media, electoral umpires, the executive, legislative, and judicial arms of government, and the electorate, who elect and support undemocratic leaders and fail to hold them to account.

    Voters who demand/receive incentives, sell their votes, or vote along religious and tribal/ethnic lines should blame themselves, not democracy, when the tide turns against them. The same can be said for politicians who rig elections, buy votes, or manipulate the electoral process for personal gain. They are the same as lawyers and judges, who commercialise court judgments; lawmakers, who fail in their oversight/legislative duties; media professionals, who abandon their watchdog role; corrupt civil servants; compromised civil society activists; security/armed forces personnel used by the government against citizens; and opportunistic soldiers, who grab power.
    Former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill said in 1947: “Many forms of Government have been tried and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time…”

    Military coups/dictatorships remain an aberration. The armed forces are not wired for political governance, and military interventions are a consequence of the anti-democratic conduct/dispositions of civilian leadership.

    Their method is similar, if not the same. From the sit-tight geriatric leaders – Paul Biya, 92, of Cameroon and Teodoro Obiang Mbasogo, 83, of Equatorial Guinea, to Cote d’Ivoire’s Alassane Ouattara, 84, and younger elements, such as Faure Gnassingbe of Togo and Adama Barrow of The Gambia, to say nothing about Tanzania, with a woman President, Samia Hassan, who recently justified the mowing down of unarmed protesters by security forces.

    The pattern is to alter national constitutions for tenure elongation and assume more executive powers; capture state institutions, especially the parliament, judiciary and civil society, institutionalise corruption and cronyism, create primordial divisions, weaponise poverty, clamp down on the opposition, the media, and stifle free speech and the civic space; hold must-win elections; otherwise, use the courts to win or sustain political power.

    In a presentation on Elections, Governance and Democracy in October 2024, Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan, an authority on elections globally, and Chair of Ghana’s Electoral Commission for more than 20 years, said “…multiparty democracy means that one political party does not dominate elections so much that all the other parties combined do not make a difference. If one party dominates to such an extent, the country is a one-party state, irrespective of the number of parties.”

    “To pass the test of being a democratic election, the results of elections must be credible. That means the results are worthy of acceptance as a basis for forming a legitimate government, a government respected at home and abroad,” he said, adding: “To determine that the results of an election are credible, we… talk about the essential features of an electoral system.”

    According to him, “…the electoral systems of all democracies, and all the processes are based on broadly the same principles. What differentiates the systems is how they try to actualise the principles and the formulas for winning elections, such as first-past-the-post for MPs and 50%+1 for the president…”

    “The salient processes are (transparent and inclusive) voter registration, campaigning, voting, vote counting, tabulation/collation of results, transmission of results, and announcement of results…” Afari-Gyan affirmed.

    In his lecture cited above, Larry Diamond, used data from various peer-reviewed sources such as the Freedom House and the Economist Intelligence Unit, to test the practice of democracy by regions – between 2006 and 2022 with Europe topping the ranking, while Sub-Saharan Africa, some countries in the former Soviet Union, and the Middle East and North Africa bringing up the rear in that order.

    He traced the “causes of Democratic Recession from 2006… to the “Backlash Against Iraq intervention by the US and its allies – perception of failed democracy promotion, the 2008 Financial Crisis, and the Rise of Social Media.” Other factors are “Technology boom, the growing concentration of wealth and income within countries, Global Power shift, Decline of US/European power and prestige, Resurgence of Russia and the Rise of China as a major power.”

    Diamond also argued that electoral democracy or the conduct of regular elections cannot equate liberal democracy, which, he said, “should be measured not by government or individual performance, but by the aggregation of collective satisfaction of the aspirations of the majority.”

    Politicians have generally perfected the art of using democratic tools to circumvent democracy, with impunity enabled by distractions of geopolitical shifts, emerging threats such as terrorism, religious extremism, and the collapse of multilateralism in a world driven by new nationalism, xenophobia, and anti-immigrant sentiments.

    With the apparent collapse of the rule of law in international relations, characterised by the use of unbridled dictatorial power by the Superpowers, such as Russia’s invasions of Ukraine and the US capture of President Maduro in Venezuela, no African country can afford to stand alone. The strength of the continent lies in unity and pooling of abundant and largely untapped resources; strategically identifying and collaborating with Africa’s true friends, and providing home-grown, African solutions to Africa’s developmental problems.

    Continental and regional organisations, such as the AU, ECOWAS, SADC, IGAD, ECA, ECCAS, Maghreb Union, and COMESA, must wake up to their responsibilities.

    Africa’s proverbial “Big Five” – Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa, Algeria, and Ethiopia – must prioritise delivering people-centred good governance at home, and taking pan-African positions in international relations.

    *Ejime is a Global Affairs Analyst and Consultant on Peace & Security and Governance Communications*

  • Nigerian Tech Firm, ISRAB Fabricates Evaporation Condenser for Bottling Companies

    Nigerian Tech Firm, ISRAB Fabricates Evaporation Condenser for Bottling Companies

    (Fabricated soap stainless argon welding Tank and prepare for installation at Sure p factory otta by ISRAB Technicians)

     

    By Biola Lawal
    Lagos, (FLOWERBUDNEWS): An indigenous technical company, Isiaka Rabiu Technical Nigeria Ltd (ISRAB) has successfully fabricated evaporation condenser for use of multinationals and local bottling firms in Nigeria.

    (A cross over bridge built by ISRAB at the premises of the Lagos State Water Corporation)

     

    (This is indigenous fabrication of bottle carrier inside washer machine by Israb Tech)

     

    The good news wax announced by the Managing Director of the company, Haj Isiaq Robiu in Lagos on Tuesday while speaking with newsmen at the ISRAB high-tech vocational skills acquisition centre in Lagos.

     

    (ISRAB Engineers begin fabrication of  Evaporation condenser)

     

    (ISRAB TECH in action for argon pipe line welding)

    (Haj Isiaq Robiu, Managing Director, ISRAB)

     

    Haj Robiu said that the technical achievement by his company was already saving Nigeria huge sums in foreign exchange which could have been expended by the bottling companies on importation.

    (Israb Tech team prepared Argon/TiG welding of syrup room at coca cola beverage co.)

     

    FLOWERBUDNEWS recall that ISRAB Managing Director had recently offered to partner Federal and State Governments for easy acquisition of high-tech vocational skills by students across the country in line with the new education policy of the Tinubu administration.

    (ISRAB TECH installation of Evaporation condenser ongoing)

     

    Haj Isiaq Robiu, who is also the National Director of Operations of the Builders, Construction and Skilled Artisans Association of Nigeria (BACSAAN), the umbrella body of all artisans in Nigeria, said that his company has acquired expertise in high-tech fabrications from different countries of the world.

    (Evaporation condenser indigenously fabricated by ISRAB  for every bottling company ie 7up, Coca cola, brewery etc)

     

     

    ”I have travelled far and wide, including study and knowledge acquisition visits to China and India,” Haj. Robiu told the newsmen, adding that his company enjoyed very reputation with the bottling companies.

    (Bottle carrier taking by forklift to the washing mashine)

     

    The BACSAAN Topshot said that he was currently investing in facilities to further improve the innovation and fabrication capacity of ISRAB to ensure that more foreign and local companies operating in Nigeria would not need to import

     

    (ISRAB installs tanks at 7up premises)

     

    ”We are also gearing up to impart our expertise in high-tech fabrications to youths ,” he said, adding; ”the Tinubu Administration’s promotion of  vocational skills acquisition by students of secondary and tertiary institutions is highly commendable ”

    ‘We in ISRAB are determined to fully support President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s progressive vision for empowerment of youths through acquisition of modern vocational professional capabilities,” Haj Robiu told reporters.

     

  • Ogbomoso APC stakeholders endorse Tinubu for second term.

    Ogbomoso APC stakeholders endorse Tinubu for second term.

       

     

    Ogbomoso APC stakeholders endorse Tinubu for second term.

    ‎By Adewale Owoade.

    ‎Stakeholders of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ogbomoso, Oyo State has endorsed President Bola  Tinubu as the party’s sole candidate for the 2027 general elections.

    ‎The endorsement took place at an open-air stakeholders’ meeting held at Soun Ogunlola Hall, Oja’gbo, Ogbomoso, and was facilitated by the Renewed Hope Ambassadors led by Sen. Teslim Folarin.

    ‎Folarin urged party members to take the message of the agenda to the grassroots, noting that unity within the party remained key to electoral success.

    ‎”We would seize the opportunity to pass on the message of Mr. President that he does not want any war again, he wants harmony, peace and harmony in the party, because without peace and harmony, you can’t achieve anything, and so that’s what we are trying to do.”

    ‎Also speaking, Rep Aderemi Oseni, representing Ido/ Ibarapa east, said the mobilisation is to promote the Renewed Hope Agenda ahead of the 2027 polls.

    ‎”With this peace, peaceful atmosphere that you are seeing here in terms of leadership coming together, integrating ourselves together, I believe, 2027 presidential election, that is, national election and the state government election, for APC, is a done deal.”

    ‎Chief Sunday Dare, Special Adviser to the President on Public Communication and Orientation called on APC members to sustain peace and work together for the re-election of President Tinubu and the party’s return to Agodi Government House in 2027.

    ‎” Let us come together so that we can take over the government in Oyo State and continue with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for 2027 to 2031.”

    ‎The meeting featured the formal endorsement of Tinubu for a second term and the reception of hundreds of defectors from other political parties drawn from Ogbomoso North, Ogbomoso South, Oriire, Ogo-Oluwa and Surulere Local Government Areas.

    ‎Prominent APC leaders at the event included former First Lady of Oyo State and Ambassador-designate, Mrs Florence Ajimobi, Chief Adebayo Adelabu, Pharm. Olayide Abas, Engr. Rauf Olaniyan, Sen. Abdulfatai Buhari, Sen. Sarafadeen Alli.

    ‎ Sen. Yunus Akintunde, Sen. Hosea Agboola, and Dr. Akin Onigbinde (SAN), among others.

  • U.S. military action against Venezuela lacks of respect for int’l law: UN chief

    U.S. military action against Venezuela lacks of respect for int’l law: UN chief

     

     

    UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday voiced deep concern over the lack of respect for international law in the U.S. military action against Venezuela on Saturday.

    “I remain deeply concerned that rules of international law have not been respected with regard to the Jan. 3 military action,” said Guterres in a statement to the Security Council, read on his behalf by Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Rosemary DiCarlo.

    The UN Charter enshrines the prohibition of the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or political independence of any state, the UN chief added.

    “The maintenance of international peace and security depends on the continued commitment of all (UN) member states to adhere to all the provisions of the charter,” said Guterres.

  • Court gives EFCC go-ahead to temporarily freeze N30.7m linked to alleged NNPC’s fraud

    Court gives EFCC go-ahead to temporarily freeze N30.7m linked to alleged NNPC’s fraud

     

    The Federal High Court in Abuja has granted an application filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to temporarily forfeit the sum of N30.7 million linked to the alleged fraud perpetrated in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to the Federal Government.

    Justice Emeka Nwite, in a ruling on the ex-parte motion moved by EFCC’s lawyer, Emenike Mgbemele, held that the application was meritorious and accordingly granted.

    Justice Nwite ordered that the interim order of forfeiture be published in a national daily for interested persons to show cause within 14 days why the funds should not be permanently forfeited to the Federal Government.

    The judge then adjourned the matter until Jan. 22 for report of compliance.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) recalls that NNPC was changed to Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) on July 19, 2022 to reflect a commercially focused energy company under late President Muhammadu Buhari as enshrined in the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.

    The EFCC had, in the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/2775/2025, sought two reliefs.

    The motion ex-parte, dated Dec. 19, 2025, was filed on Dec. 23, 2025 by Ekele Iheanacho, SAN, but moved on Jan. 2 by Mgbemele.

    One of the commission’s prayers is an interim order of the court forfeiting to the Federal Government of Nigeria the sum of N30, 700, 000.00 as raised in the manager’s cheques listed in the schedule, which it said, are reasonably suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities.

    Given three grounds, the lawyer argued that the court had the statutory powers under the provision of Section 17 of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act, 2006 to grant the reliefs being sought.

    Mgbemele said it was a non-conviction-based asset forfeiture proceeding.

    According to him, the funds sought to be attached and forfeited are reasonably suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities.

    In the schedule, the lawyer prayed that the funds lodged in four installments of N10 million each and N700, 000 in EFCC’s Recovery Account with United Bank for Africa (UBA)’s account number: 9058700029 with manager’s cheque name: M/C Draft Outstanding Account, be forfeited to the Federal Government.

    An EFCC’s investigator, Bilkisu Abubakar, in the affidavit deposed to in support of the motion ex-parte, said she was assigned to investigate fraudulent activities of some high profile officials of the NNPC as well as other criminal petitions brought to the commission.

    According to the officer, upon receipt of intelligence report, my team carried out several investigation activities which include but not limited to making inquiries and receiving financial records from commercial banks that featured in the intelligence.

    Abubakar said it also included writing and receiving response from the various agencies like Corporate Affairs Commission, inviting and interviewing individuals who featured in the investigation.

    “That I know as a fact and verily believe the findings of the investigation which are as follows:

    “That in the cause of investigation and analysing some of the documents received from the bank, the name of Mr Adamu Yakubu, a Bureau De Change (BDC) operator, featured prominently.”

    She said on Sept. 2, 2025, Mr Yakubu, whose name featured in the cause of investigation, was invited and he volunteered his statement.

    “That Mr Yakubu submitted a ledger to the commission evidencing records of his transactions wherein the details of customers and the amount of dollars sold by them are recorded.

    “That upon analysing the entering in the ledger submitted by Mr Yakubu, it was revealed that over N4, 000, 000, 000.00 (Four Billion Naira) was transferred to the accounts of different individuals and companies on the instruction of one Mr Ibrahim Sani, a staff of Federal Inland Revenue Services (FIRS).”

    The investigator said it was discovered that the balance of N30.7 million sought to be forfeited was still in possession of Yakubu from the funds which he claimed was given to him by Mr Ibrahim Sani.

    “That on the 15th day of September 2025, Mr Ibrahim Sani, a staff of FIRS, whose name appeared on the ledger and who Mr Yakubu claimed owned the N30, 700, OOO (Thirty Million, Seven Hundred Thousand Naira Only) was invited and he volunteered his statement.”

    Abubakar averred that Ibrahim gave statement on how he had been using Yakubu, the BDC operator, to be sending monies to different individuals and companies.

    “That Mr Ibrahim equally confirmed how he usually deposit huge amount of money (Dollars) with Mr Yakubu who in turn sends its naira equivalent to individuals and companies accounts provided by him.

    “That Mr Ibrahim neither ascertained nor verified the source of these monies which he has been depositing with Mr Yakubu for onward transfer to other people which are reasonably suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities.”

    The investigator said Ibrahim, however, denied ownership of the N30.7 million found in Yakubu’s account as at the time of making his statement.

    In his statement, Ibrahim was said to have stated that Yakubu was not holding any of his money as at Sept. 15, 2025.

    The EFCC operative said both Yakubu and Ibrahim denied ownership of the said N30.7 million found in the account of the former (Yakubu).

    “That Mr Yakubu has raised four different managers’ cheques in the name of the EFCC Recovery Account in favour of the Federal Government of Nigeria.

    “Copies of the managers’ cheques are attached and marked as Exhibits EFCC 4A, 4B, 4C and 4D respectively.

    “That I know as a fact and verily believe that the source of the funds sought to be forfeited in the account of Mr Yakubu is proceeds of unlawful activities.”

    Abubakar said the court had the discretionary power to grant the application in the interest of justice.

    The officer, who said the order being sought was in interim and that nobody would be prejudiced by its grant, said it was in the interest of justice to grant the application.

     

  • BACSAAN Leader Offers to Partner Federal, State Governments for Students’ Acquisition of High-Tech Vocational Skills

    BACSAAN Leader Offers to Partner Federal, State Governments for Students’ Acquisition of High-Tech Vocational Skills

     

    (BACSAAN National President, Haj. Fasasi Mohammed Jamiu)

     

     

    By Biola Lawal
    FLOWERBUDNEWS: A Lagos-based High-Tech Vocational Skill firm,  Isiaka Rabiu Technical Nigeria Ltd (ISRAB) has offered to partner Federal and State Governments for easy acquisition of high-tech vocational skills by students across the country in line with the new education policy of the Tinubu administration.

    The Managing Director of the company, Haj Isiaq Robiu, who made the offer, is also the National Director of Operations of the Builders, Construction and Skilled Artisans Association of Nigeria (BACSAAN), the umbrella body of all artisans in Nigeria.

    (BACSAAN Leaders during a recent meeting with Bank of Industry (BOI) in Abuja)

     

    Haj Robiu commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for ”his bold decision to orient Nigerian education system from theory to practical knowledge and skill acquisition by youths.”

    ”This President Tinubu’s courageous decision on education, will provide students with sustainable economic empowerment within years of learning, which they can expand and develop into life-long career as entrepreneurs,” the BACSAAN Chieftain stressed.

    He said that his company, ISRAB, had acquired tremendous expertise and experience from handling specialised high-tech fabrication projects for indigenous and multinational companies in the country.

    (BACSAAN Leaders at a stakeholders meeting in Abuja)

     

    ”We will be very glad to impart this knowledge to intersted youths across the country in view of the apparent determination of President Tinubu to sincerely make a difference in the life of the nation’s youths by providing them with vocational skill stsrt-up opportunities to grow and become successful in life,” Haj Robiu said.

    The BACSAAN Leader said that his company had developed an array of competent and well-groomed technical workers who could be deployed for training of the students and youths in the high-tech fabrication skills to make them productive.

    He disclosed that as Managing Director of ISRAB, he had traveled to many countries, especially, China and India severally to enhance his knowledge of high-tech fabrication and skills.

    The BACSAAN Chieftain disclosed that, to its credit, his company, ISRAB, had been handling specialised fabrication tasks for several international and local beverages’ producers among others.

    (Haj Isiaq Robiu, Managing Director of ISRAB and the National Director of Operations, BACSAAN)

    ”So, we have capacity to train students, especially, undergraduates etc. to become specialised Skilled Artisans, will the knowledge acquisition be heavily practical with the target of making them become economically empowered.