Saturday, 9 May 2026

NovaDOC Initiative Targets Faster Emergency Response, 10,000 Nigerian Trainees

As Nigeria continues to expand its healthcare and emergency support systems, new innovations are emerging to improve how medical help reaches people during critical situations. From highways to communities and public spaces, faster emergency response is becoming an important part of the country’s growing healthcare conversation.

One of such efforts is the newly launched “NovaDOC Integrated Emergency Response and Digital Health Ecosystem,” unveiled in Abuja by the Doctors On Call Health Support Initiative.

Speaking during the launch, the founder of the organisation, Dr Adejobi Adeloye, announced plans to train 10,000 Nigerians in emergency response, telehealth coordination and healthcare support services.

According to him, the programme is designed to equip participants with practical lifesaving skills while also creating employment opportunities within the healthcare support sector.

“We promised to train 10,000 Nigerians, and we are fulfilling that promise through this initiative,” Adeloye said.

The programme will also produce 1,000 certified facilitators who will continue emergency response training across the country through a digital learning platform.

The NovaDOC ecosystem was developed to improve response to road accidents, trauma cases, snakebites and other medical emergencies through a combination of technology, emergency support tools and coordinated medical response.

Over the years, healthcare experts and emergency stakeholders have continued to emphasise the importance of faster intervention during emergencies, especially on busy roads and in underserved communities where quick medical attention can make a major difference.

According to Adeloye, the NovaDOC system combines telehealth services, emergency alerts, responder coordination and specialised medical kits into one integrated platform.

The initiative includes four categories of emergency healthcare kits designed for different environments. The “Car Kit” is meant for private and commercial vehicles, while the “Wall Kit” is designed for homes, schools, churches, offices and public facilities.

The “Mall Kit” was created for military personnel and first responders operating in high-risk areas, while the “Plane Kit” targets aircraft and luxury transportation systems.

Adeloye explained that the kits contain trauma care supplies, blood pressure and blood sugar monitoring tools, snakebite treatment support and emergency alert systems linked directly to the NovaDOC platform.

The digital platform will also connect emergency responders, healthcare facilities and Nigerian medical professionals in the diaspora to provide real-time consultations and medical guidance during emergencies.

According to him, emergency alerts generated through the system will immediately notify nearby responders and healthcare providers, helping to reduce response time significantly.

“Our goal is to cut emergency response time drastically and ensure that emergency support reaches victims within minutes instead of hours,” Adeloye said.

Beyond healthcare delivery, the first phase of the initiative is expected to create 10,000 direct jobs, alongside additional opportunities in logistics, manufacturing, emergency services and healthcare support operations.

Adeloye also called for stronger collaboration with the Federal Government, emergency agencies, transport operators and private organisations to support nationwide deployment of the initiative.

“Through this system, Nigerian doctors in the diaspora can contribute directly to saving lives back home through real-time emergency support and telemedicine,” he added.

The initiative does reflect a growing wave of Nigerian-led healthcare innovation focused on improving emergency response systems, expanding access to support services and building stronger community-based healthcare solutions across the country.

Friday, 8 May 2026

Fountain University Secures Full NUC Accreditation for All Academic Programmes

Fountain University, Osogbo, has recorded a major academic milestone after securing full accreditation for all its academic programmes from the National Universities Commission (NUC), further strengthening its reputation as one of Nigeria’s rapidly advancing private universities.

The institution’s Vice-Chancellor, Professor Olayinka Ramota Karim, disclosed in an official statement that the University recently obtained full accreditation for 18 additional programmes for the 2025/2026 academic session. The achievement brings the total number of fully accredited programmes at the University to more than 39, with several also receiving relevant professional recognitions.

Professor Karim described the accomplishment as the result of strategic planning, consistency, and a strong institutional drive toward excellence. She expressed gratitude to Almighty Allah while acknowledging the commitment and contributions of the University’s governing council, academic staff, students, alumni, and other stakeholders.

“This remarkable achievement reflects our unwavering commitment to academic excellence, quality assurance, and global best practices in teaching, research, and community service,” she stated.

According to the Vice-Chancellor, the accreditation success further reinforces Fountain University’s mission of delivering globally competitive, industry-relevant education built on strong moral and spiritual values.

“At Fountain University, we are committed not only to academic success but also to character development and leadership formation,” she added, assuring parents and guardians of the institution’s dedication to maintaining high educational standards.

The University noted that the milestone aligns with its broader vision of exceeding academic benchmarks, expanding professional collaborations, and advancing innovation-driven learning across its faculties.

Fountain University also invited prospective students, development partners, and members of the global academic community to become part of its continuing growth and transformation.

Fountain University, Osogbo, is a leading private Islamic faith-based institution located in Osun State, Nigeria. Established to combine academic excellence with strong moral and ethical values, the University continues to provide a learning environment that promotes discipline, innovation, leadership, and character development. 

With this latest achievement, the institution further strengthens its standing as a centre for quality education, producing graduates equipped for professional success and meaningful societal impact.

Ekiti Pushes Poultry Economy Drive to Create 5,000 Youth Jobs

In many parts of Nigeria today, poultry farming is steadily evolving from a backyard survival business into one of the country’s most promising economic sectors. Across homes, restaurants, hotels and fast-food chains, demand for chicken and eggs continues to rise, driven by Nigeria’s growing population of more than 220 million people.

Yet despite the massive market and Nigeria’s enormous agricultural potential, local production still struggles to fully meet demand. For years, conversations around the country’s economy have remained heavily tilted toward oil, while sectors capable of creating widespread grassroots prosperity received far less attention than they deserved. Poultry farmers continue to battle rising feed costs, infrastructure gaps and limited access to finance, but the industry remains one of the fastest-growing agricultural sectors in the country, a reminder that some of Nigeria’s biggest economic opportunities may still be sitting far away from the oil fields.

That reality is now shaping a major economic push in Ekiti State.

In Ado Ekiti this week, hundreds of youths gathered for a five-day poultry production training programme organised under the Livestock Productivity and Resilience Support Project, popularly known as L-Pres. The programme, themed “Capacity Strengthening on Good Animal Husbandry Practices for Youths in Ekiti Broiler Production Scheme,” focused on modern broiler production techniques and animal husbandry practices.

Beyond the training itself, the state government unveiled a bigger ambition, empowering and engaging more than 5,000 youths in poultry production within the next two years.

Commissioner for Agriculture, Ebenezer Boluwade, said the initiative forms part of the state’s broader strategy to create jobs and strengthen food production through agriculture.

“Here, we are training 500 youths, but the objective in the next two years is that we want to employ more than 5,000 Ekiti youths across the value chain,” Boluwade said.

According to him, the government is not only focusing on poultry farming but on building an entire value chain covering production, processing and distribution.

He explained that one of the first major challenges being addressed is infrastructure, particularly poultry pens.

“The starting point for us is to address the issue of pens, which L-Pres is helping us to solve,” he said.

Boluwade disclosed that the state plans to establish capacity for about 300,000 pens across roughly 10 centres before the end of the year, with projections to produce up to one million birds annually.

The commissioner also revealed plans to establish two processing centres to strengthen market access and reduce waste.

“We are also setting up two processing centres in Ekiti State to complement the production. So, as we are producing from the upstream, the midstream is taking it to the processing centre, and as the processing centre is processing it, it is also being taken to the market. The market can be local or international,” he said.

He added that the state’s cargo airport could support movement of poultry products to cities such as Lagos and Abuja, while also opening export opportunities.

Industry experts have long described poultry as one of Nigeria’s most commercially viable agricultural sectors. Beyond farming itself, the industry supports livelihoods through feed production, transportation, veterinary services, hatcheries and retail supply.

The relatively short production cycle of broiler farming also makes it attractive to many young entrepreneurs, especially at a time when unemployment remains a major national challenge.

Lead Consultant, Olayemi Salako, said participants in the programme were being trained on modern broiler production methods designed to improve productivity and profitability.

“The expectation from this training is that participants will be able to have their own farms,” Salako said.

He added that trainees were also being educated on safer alternatives to excessive antibiotic use in poultry farming due to concerns around public health.

Permanent Secretary of the Ekiti State Ministry of Agriculture, Mr Ebenezer Ojo, described the programme as part of efforts to modernise agricultural practices and strengthen food security.

“Your role remains critical in driving value chain development and ensuring the long-term resilience of the livestock sector in Ekiti State,” Ojo told participants.

The initiative is being implemented under L-Pres, a World Bank-supported programme focused on improving livestock productivity, resilience and commercialisation in Nigeria.

For many of the youths gathered in Ado Ekiti, the programme reflected a growing belief that agriculture, when supported with infrastructure, training and market access, can become a serious engine of economic opportunity.

If Ekiti succeeds in creating the proposed 5,000 jobs while scaling poultry production toward one million birds annually, the state could emerge as a strong example of how agriculture can drive youth empowerment and economic growth in Nigeria.

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Dangote’s 20,000MW Power Ambition Could Mark a Turning Point for Nigeria’s Industrial Rise

For decades, one of the greatest obstacles to Nigeria’s economic potential has not been talent, ambition or market size but It has been power.

Factories slowed by outages, businesses forced to depend on generators, entire industries operating below capacity because the energy required to compete consistently failed to arrive. Yet amid those familiar national frustrations, a new possibility is beginning to emerge , one driven not by rhetoric, but by industrial-scale ambition.

Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, has unveiled plans for a 20,000-megawatt power project, a proposal that could become one of the most consequential private-sector energy investments in Nigeria’s history.

Speaking during an interview with Makhtar Diop of the International Finance Corporation, Dangote revealed that his group is preparing to expand aggressively into power generation as part of a broader strategy focused on solving Africa’s infrastructure deficits.

“We are now going into power… 20,000 megawatts,” he said.

The scale of that figure is difficult to ignore. Nigeria’s installed electricity capacity is estimated at roughly 13,000MW, though actual generation remains significantly lower because of longstanding infrastructure constraints, transmission limitations and operational inefficiencies. A private-sector project targeting 20,000MW would represent more than another investment headline; it would signal a major shift in how large-scale infrastructure could be developed on the continent.

It is also another reminder that some of the most ambitious bets on Nigeria’s future are increasingly being made from within.

Dangote’s power plans are arriving alongside a broader expansion across sectors considered essential to Africa’s long-term industrial growth. According to the billionaire businessman, the group is intensifying investments in fertiliser production, LNG, mining and maritime infrastructure.

“And the needs of Africa are petroleum products, fertilisers,” Dangote said.

He disclosed that within the next two and a half years, the company expects to become the largest fertiliser producer in the world. Part of that strategy includes plans for 12 million tons of urea production, alongside the development of potash and phosphate mines in Congo Brazzaville.

The group is also constructing what Dangote described as the biggest deep-sea port with an 18-metre draft while simultaneously advancing LNG projects expected to strengthen industrial supply chains across Africa.

Taken together, the projects point to a growing confidence that Africa’s industrial future does not have to remain dependent on imported solutions or fragmented infrastructure systems.

Dangote said the company’s stronger financial position is helping unlock this next phase of growth.

“Our cash flow now is very, very strong,” he noted.

He added that the group has gained greater financial flexibility and is now in a stronger position to raise capital for major projects.

“We are now actually free of assets, and we can actually raise more money,” he said.

The latest announcement comes as the Dangote Petroleum Refinery continues its operational expansion. The refinery currently has a capacity of 650,000 barrels per day and is being scaled toward 1.4 million barrels per day, reinforcing its position as one of Africa’s most significant industrial projects.

Perhaps the bigger story is what this moment represents for Nigeria itself. At a time when global narratives around Africa often focus on deficits, instability or dependency, projects of this magnitude are reshaping perceptions of what is possible. Nigeria’s infrastructure challenges remain substantial, but so too is the scale of local ambition emerging to confront them.

A 20,000MW power project will not solve every problem overnight but it reflects a widening belief that the country’s industrial future can be built through bold, long-term investments capable of transforming not just businesses, but national capacity itself and in a nation long defined by untapped potential, that shift matters.

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Osun Rewards 31 Outstanding WASSCE Students as Academic Excellence Takes Centre Stage


Across Nigeria, remarkable young minds continue to emerge from classrooms with brilliance, discipline, and ambition, often with far less recognition than they deserve. In Osun State, however, a different message was sent on Wednesday: excellence will not go unnoticed.

At the maiden Imole SSCE Scholarship Award Ceremony held inside the Olagunsoye Oyinlola Hall of Osun State University, Osogbo, 31 exceptional students who excelled in the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) were honoured with scholarships and cash prizes in a celebration that placed education, merit, and youthful potential firmly in the spotlight.

The initiative was organised through a collaboration between the Osun State Government and consulting firm Electronic Collections Group (ECG), with teachers and schools also receiving recognition for their role in shaping the students’ success.

Each top-performing student representing Osun’s 30 local government areas received N100,000, while the overall best student was rewarded with a N1 million prize. Teachers who prepared the students across the nine WAEC subjects received N50,000 each, while participating schools were supported with educational materials.

At a time when young Nigerians continue to prove their academic strength on local and global stages, the ceremony reinforced the importance of recognising excellence early and investing in future leaders. Behind every outstanding result are students pushing beyond limitations, teachers working with commitment despite some difficult conditions, and communities determined to keep hope alive through learning.

According to Governor Adeleke, the programme was created to raise young people “that will not walk in darkness.”

“To our awardees, you are that light but your light must shine beyond this stage, into your future,” the governor said.

He also commended educators and administrators for their contribution to building not just academic success, but character and leadership, stressing that his administration remains committed to recognising excellence at every level.

“Our administration honours excellence from the grassroots to the peak,” Adeleke stated.

The governor further pointed to improvements in Osun’s educational performance since his administration came into office, noting that the state rose from poor rankings to become the seventh-best performing state in Nigeria within his first year.

“The education policy of the governor is working despite the challenges,” he said.

For many observers, the significance of the event extended beyond the financial rewards. It reflected a growing understanding that investing in education is ultimately an investment in Nigeria’s long-term strength. Every scholarship awarded, every student encouraged, and every teacher recognised contributes to a larger national story that is too often overlooked, one where Nigerian excellence continues to thrive despite obstacles.

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

BoA’s 1.2 Million-Hectare Plan Signals a New Era for Nigerian Agriculture

Nigeria’s agricultural story has long been defined by potential waiting on the sidelines. Vast stretches of arable land, estimated at over 30 million hectares, coexist with a farming system still dominated by manual labour and constrained yields. Now, a new proposal is attempting to redraw that narrative placing mechanisation, scale, and grassroots access at the centre of the country’s food future.

At the National Assembly on Tuesday, the Bank of Agriculture (BoA) introduced an ambitious plan that reaches into every corner of the federation. Presented during plenary by the bank’s Managing Director, Ayo Sotinriade, the initiative seeks a direct partnership with the House of Representatives to mechanise farming across 1.2 million hectares, spanning all 360 federal constituencies.

The scale is deliberate. The intention is not incremental change, but a coordinated shift from fragmented subsistence practices to a more structured, commercially viable agricultural system capable of feeding the nation and positioning Nigeria as a net exporter of food.

At the heart of the proposal is a cost-sharing framework designed to bring lawmakers into the engine room of execution. Each member of the House is expected to fund 60 per cent of a tractor to be deployed within their constituency, ensuring that modern equipment reaches farmers who have historically operated without it.

The numbers behind the plan underscore its ambition. A single tractor, according to Sotinriade, can cover at least five hectares per hour and as much as 600 hectares annually. Multiplied across a projected fleet of 2,000 tractors, the result is a nationwide capacity to cultivate up to 1.2 million hectares every year.

The proposal however, goes beyond machinery. It introduces a new layer of agricultural infrastructure at the community level, farming hubs anchored on secure land provided within constituencies. These hubs are envisioned as full-service centres where farmers can access inputs, irrigation systems, aggregation facilities, financial services, and extension support. A tractor booking system is also built into the model to maximise efficiency and ensure that access is structured rather than arbitrary.

If executed as designed, productivity gains could be significant. The programme is targeting yields exceeding two tonnes per hectare, supported by irrigation systems that would enable year-round cultivation and allow for at least three farming cycles annually.

Sotinriade framed the initiative not just as an agricultural intervention, but as a tool for social stability, one capable of creating jobs, improving incomes, and reducing the pressures that often feed unrest.

There is also a human dimension embedded within the proposal. Internally displaced persons, particularly in states such as Borno and Benue, are expected to benefit from structured access to land, tools, and support systems, offering a pathway back into productive livelihoods.

By leveraging the constituency network of lawmakers, the BoA is positioning itself to bypass some of the bottlenecks that have historically slowed implementation. It is a model that ties national ambition to local accountability, placing tools and decision-making closer to the farmers themselves.

As Nigeria continues its push to diversify beyond oil, agriculture remains one of its most credible pathways to inclusive growth. Yet the difference between promise and performance has always come down to execution.

The 1.2 million-hectare vision now on the table is bold, measurable, and grounded in clear mechanics. If it moves from proposal to reality, it could mark a defining step in reshaping how Nigeria feeds itself and how it empowers those who make that possible.

Lagos Breaks New Ground in Cancer Care with 100 Robotic Prostate Surgeries in One Year

For decades, a serious diagnosis came with an unspoken directive: look beyond Nigeria’s borders for solutions. That reflex, however, is beginning to fade.

In Lagos, a new standard in prostate cancer care is taking shape, driven by advanced robotics, grounded in local expertise, and backed by a growing confidence that world-class treatment can be delivered within Nigeria.

This shift is not rhetorical but measurable. At The Prostate Clinic (TPC) in Lagos, more than 100 robotic-assisted prostate cancer surgeries have been performed within a single year, an outcome that signals both technical capability and institutional intent. It places Nigeria within a global conversation it has too often been excluded from, not by potential, but by infrastructure.

The significance becomes clearer when set against a familiar pattern. For years, patients with complex conditions have looked outward, often at great cost. The African Export-Import Bank estimates that Nigeria loses about $1.1 billion annually to medical tourism. That figure is not just economic leakage; it reflects a system that has struggled to retain both trust and capacity.

Yet here, there is evidence of recalibration.

Patients are no longer only leaving, they are arriving. Beyond Nigerians, individuals from Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States, Brazil, Ghana, Togo, and other African countries have sought treatment at the Lagos-based facility. This is not a symbolic reversal; it is a practical one, grounded in outcomes.

Still, the broader reality remains urgent. Prostate cancer continues to rise in Nigeria, with mortality rates heavily shaped by late presentation. Among men of Black heritage, particularly those aged 40 and above, the risk is significantly higher, with studies indicating that one in four will develop the disease in their lifetime.

The contrast with more developed health systems is stark. In London, about 12.5 per cent of prostate cancer cases are diagnosed at an incurable stage. In Nigeria, that figure exceeds 80 per cent. By then, treatment options narrow sharply, and survival prospects diminish.

For Prof. Kingsley Ekwueme, a UK-trained consultant urologist and robotic surgeon, these are not abstract comparisons. They are the basis of a deliberate return.

“I have been planning to return to my country for over 10 years to do what I do in the UK,” he said. “Only a few can afford to travel for treatment, and that gap needed to be closed.”

His response was to build. Establishing TPC meant replicating a level of care he had long delivered abroad, this time within Nigeria, and accessible to a broader population.

At the centre of that effort is the Da Vinci robotic system, widely regarded as the gold standard in robotic surgery and currently available only at TPC within the country. But technology alone does not shift outcomes as the deeper challenge lies in awareness and timing.

Prostate cancer often advances silently. Early stages present no clear symptoms, which is why many cases are detected late. When symptoms do appear, frequent nighttime urination, weak urine flow, urgency, or erectile dysfunction, the disease may already be advanced.

The implication is straightforward: early detection determines survival.

Routine screening, particularly through Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) testing, remains critical, especially for men over 45 or those with a family history. When identified early, prostate cancer is not only treatable but curable.

“At that stage, it can be cured,” Ekwueme said, pointing to patients who have undergone successful procedures and are expected to live full life spans. Over the past year alone, the clinic has treated patients from Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Brazil, the United States, the UK, and Canada.

Expansion is already part of the equation. Plans are in place to establish a robotic oncology centre in Imo State, in partnership with the state government, extending access beyond Lagos.

For TPC’s Chairman, Francis Ogboro, the clinic’s trajectory reflects deliberate standards rather than isolated success. Delivering care at a global level, he noted, is not aspirational, it is expected. Increasingly, patient outcomes are validating that position.

Among those outcomes is the experience of Major General John Enenche (retd.), former Director of Media Operations at the Defence Headquarters, who reported a full recovery following treatment. After assessing the clinic’s approach and engaging directly with its leadership, he proceeded with confidence and regained his health.

Veteran journalist Ben Alozie offers further evidence. After undergoing surgery in 2022, a PET scan in 2024 showed no residual cancer cells. His conclusion is clear and grounded in experience: prostate cancer is not a death sentence.

Taken together, these developments point to something more than progress within a single facility but suggest a shift in trajectory, one where Nigeria is not defined solely by its healthcare gaps, but increasingly by its capacity to close them.

The work is not complete. Late diagnosis remains a national challenge, and access must continue to expand but the direction is becoming harder to ignore.

In this moment, Lagos is doing more than treating patients. It is reshaping expectations of what is possible, and where it can happen.

Monday, 4 May 2026

Rinsola Babajide and Shukurat Oladipo Etch Nigerian Presence into Roma’s Serie A Title Triumph

As Roma’s march to the 2025/26 Serie A Femminile title carried a clear Nigerian signature, with Rinsola Babajide and Shukurat Oladipo playing their part in a campaign defined by control, depth, and consistency.

The title was sealed at the Stadio Tre Fontane with a composed 2-0 win over Ternana. It is Roma’s third league crown in four seasons, further establishing their authority in Italian women’s football. Within that success, Babajide and Oladipo delivered contributions that reflected both adaptation and influence in their first full season at the club.

Babajide, who arrived from UDCA Tenerife in July 2025, made an immediate impression by scoring on her league debut against Parma. Her involvement across the season was measured but purposeful. In nine league appearances, she registered two goals and an assist, often deployed as a wide forward or introduced to alter attacking rhythm.

Her pace and direct approach provided Roma with a different dimension in the final third. A decisive assist in a narrow win over AC Milan stood out, while her involvement in fixtures against Inter Milan added to her value in defining moments of the title race.

At the back, Oladipo established herself with greater regularity. The 21-year-old defender, who joined from FC Robo Queens in early 2025, featured in 16 league matches and logged over 1,200 minutes. Her integration into the side was swift, and her consistency became a reliable feature of Roma’s defensive structure.

Strong in challenges and composed in positioning, Oladipo contributed to one of the league’s most effective backlines. Her availability and discipline ensured continuity in defence throughout the campaign.

Both players were also involved in Roma’s progress on the European stage, featuring in key qualification matches for the UEFA Women’s Champions League, including the playoff success against Sporting Lisbon.

For Nigerian football, this is more than a shared medal moment, it is a statement of presence and progression. Two Super Falcons, in their first full season at Roma, rising within a title-winning side and leaving their imprint across decisive moments of the campaign. 

In a league defined by structure and precision, Babajide and Oladipo did not just fit in, they counted and from Lagos to Rome, their triumph travels as a reminder that Nigerian excellence continues to find its place at the highest levels of the game, shaping outcomes and redefining expectations.

Ogbomoso Princess Toluni Ghandi-Olaoye Earns Computer Engineering Distinction at Michigan State University

In Ogbomoso, a familiar story is unfolding, one that continues to define Nigeria’s finest exports: excellence shaped at home, proven on the global stage.

Princess Toluni Ghandi-Olaoye, daughter of the Soun of Ogbomoso, Oba Ghandi Afolabi Olaoye, has earned a distinction in Computer Engineering from Michigan State University in the United States. It is an achievement that carries both academic weight and cultural significance, reflecting a blend of heritage, discipline, and intellectual depth.

Her accomplishment was celebrated by her father in a message shared on his verified Facebook page on Monday. The monarch spoke with measured pride, pointing to the qualities that have come to define her journey, resilience, focus, and an unwavering commitment to excellence.

In a field as exacting as Computer Engineering, distinction is not a ceremonial label as it is reserved for those who demonstrate consistency at the highest level, mastering both theory and application in an increasingly complex digital age. Princess Toluni’s performance places her firmly within that category.

Her time at Michigan State University also offered more than academic training as It provided global exposure, an immersion into diverse ideas, advanced systems, and the fast-moving demands of technology and innovation. For a young Nigerian scholar, this combination is both strategic and consequential.

Yet, beyond the degree lies something deeper, a part of a wider pattern, young Nigerians stepping into global institutions and leaving with more than certificates. They return, or move forward, equipped to shape industries, influence systems, and redefine expectations.

Oba Olaoye acknowledged this future-facing potential, expressing confidence that his daughter will continue to break new ground and make meaningful contributions to society. His words carried both a father’s pride and a belief in what disciplined minds can achieve.

Princess Toluni Ghandi-Olaoye’s story is not an isolated one. It is another clear signal of Nigeria’s enduring strength, its ability to raise individuals who compete, excel, and stand out anywhere in the world.

Fiona Ahimie and the Making of a Market Insider at the Helm of CIS


On June 25, Fiona Ahimie will take the oath as the 14th president and chairman of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers (CIS), stepping into a role no woman had occupied in the Institute’s 34-year history. The milestone is notable, but it is only a small part of a much longer story, one written over years inside Nigeria’s capital market, not outside it.

Ahimie belongs to a generation of professionals shaped by the trading floor, where the market is not studied from a distance but felt in real time. Her early days at Standard Bank Nigeria as a sales trader placed her in that environment: fast-moving, unforgiving, and precise. It was there she learned to read the pulse of the market, balancing client expectations with the constant shifts in price and sentiment.

She carried that grounding with her across several institutions, building experience that cut across the breadth of Nigeria’s financial system. At Lead Capital, African Alliance Securities Nigeria, and Stanbic IBTC Stockbrokers, she refined her understanding of how capital moves and how investors respond to opportunity and risk. By the time she took on the role of head of sales trading at FBNQuest Capital, she had moved beyond execution into a space where local insight met international flows.

Her transition to FBNQuest Securities in 2016 marked a shift from participation to leadership. As head of equities brokerage, she was tasked with more than keeping pace with the market, she had to reposition the business within it. Client relationships deepened, transactions increased, and within a relatively short time, the firm moved into the top tier of Nigeria’s securities league table. The momentum carried her into the role of managing director and chief executive, where she oversaw strategy during a period when the market itself was adjusting to new realities.

She now leads First Securities Brokers Limited, a subsidiary of First Holdco Plc, maintaining a close connection to the daily workings of the market even as her responsibilities expand.

Her journey within the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers followed a similarly deliberate path. She served first as second vice president, then as first vice president, working within the structure before rising to lead it. By the time the council vote brought her to the presidency, she had already spent years observing and shaping the Institute’s direction from within.

Her reach extends beyond CIS as she serves on the audit committee of the National Association of Securities Dealers and sits on corporate boards, including Purple Money Microfinance Bank. At Lagos Business School, she contributes to developing the next generation of business leaders.

Her academic record reflects the same steady progression: an MBA from Lagos Business School, executive education at IESE Business School in Spain, and professional qualifications as both a chartered stockbroker and a chartered accountant.

For Ahimie, the conversation around her emergence is often framed in terms she does not entirely accept. She has long argued that performance in the market is not defined by gender. Results, she insists, come down to judgment, discipline, and the ability to stay grounded under pressure.

She describes her approach as “gender-blind,” a way of working that focuses on competence rather than category. It has meant adapting to environments where men dominate, building professional relationships without drawing unnecessary lines, and staying focused on outcomes.

That focus, she acknowledges, has been supported by stability outside the workplace. A strong support system at home has allowed her to meet the demands of her career fully, an advantage she is careful not to take for granted.

When she speaks to younger professionals, her tone shifts from reflective to direct. There is little room for abstraction in her advice. Build capacity. Stay authentic. Keep improving and importantly, bring others along.

She is equally clear about ambition. It does not thrive on wishful thinking but requires preparation, the right qualifications, and a willingness to step forward when opportunities appear. Waiting, in her view, is a costly habit.

She also challenges a tendency among professionals,the reluctance to speak about their own contributions. In a field where visibility shapes advancement, she believes impact should not be hidden. When work delivers results, it should be acknowledged.

Her predecessor, Oluropo Dada, has pointed to her record as the basis for confidence in her leadership, describing her as equipped with the experience and clarity needed to guide the Institute through its next phase.

That phase comes at a time when Nigeria’s equities market is drawing renewed interest. Valuations are strengthening, participation is increasing, and expectations are rising alongside them. The role of the Chartered Institute of Stockbrokers which includes setting standards, reinforcing professionalism, and sustaining investor confidence, has become even more critical.

Ahimie steps into that responsibility with the advantage of familiarity. She has worked the market from multiple angles, from execution to strategy to governance and there is little about its workings that is theoretical to her.

Her rise does not read like a sudden leap but better understood as a steady climb, one shaped by experience, tested in practice, and confirmed over time.

In that sense, her story mirrors the market she now helps to guide: evolving, resilient, and driven by those who understand it from the inside.

Sunday, 3 May 2026

Nigeria Extends Wrestling Dominance with Historic 15th African Title in Alexandria

Nigeria’s supremacy in African wrestling has been reaffirmed with authority in Alexandria, Egypt, where the national team delivered a commanding performance at the 2026 African Wrestling Championships.

The women’s team secured a record-extending 15th continental title, underlining a standard that has become synonymous with Nigeria’s presence on the African stage. Across 10 events in the women’s division, the team returned 8 gold and 2 silver medals, an emphatic showing that anchored an overall tally of 9 gold, 4 silver, and 3 bronze medals for the country.

National recognition followed the achievement, with commendation for what was described as a product of discipline, consistency, and collective purpose. The outcome in Alexandria was not framed as an isolated success, but as evidence of a system beginning to deliver measurable results across categories.

Individual excellence played its part as Mercy Genesis, Adijat Idris, Esther Asaolu, and Mercy Adekuoroye produced performances defined by control, technical precision, and composure. In the men’s freestyle division, Harrison Onovwiomogbhwo secured a decisive victory, reinforcing the team’s balance across both divisions.

Equally significant were the contributions beyond the podium’s spotlight as Ebierelayefa Andrew, Stephen Akintewe, Dideikemei Erefagha, Solomon Ulabo, and Saviour Egoli formed part of the wider competitive structure that sustained Nigeria’s overall dominance. Their efforts reflect the depth required to maintain continental leadership.

Attention has also turned to the evolving framework supporting Nigerian sports. The National Sports Commission under Mallam Shehu Dikko, Bukola Olopade, and their team, working alongside federations and coaching crews has continued to prioritise structured preparation and long-term athlete development. The approach centres on early talent identification, disciplined training systems, and performance-driven benchmarks.

“This is how a sporting nation grows, not by accident, not by chance, but by design,” the country’s leader stated, pointing to a deliberate investment in systems capable of producing consistent results.

There is also growing confidence in the pipeline emerging from this structure. The showing in Alexandria is being viewed as part of a broader trajectory, one that positions Nigerian athletes not only for continental success, but for stronger competitiveness on the global stage in the coming years.

The Nigeria Wrestling Federation, led by Bashir Adewale Adeniyi, MFR, has been credited with sustaining momentum within the sport, reinforcing standards, and preserving Nigeria’s leading position in African wrestling.

Beyond competition, the significance of the result extends into national development priorities. Sport continues to serve as a vehicle for unity, youth engagement, and international representation. The athletes, competing individually, have once again delivered a collective national outcome.

As preparations shift toward future competitions, the expectation remains clear: maintain discipline, build on current standards, and carry forward a performance culture that continues to set Nigeria apart.

In Alexandria, the result was not merely another title, it was confirmation of a programme gaining clarity, depth, and direction.

Ayinde Joins Europe’s Winners Circle as BK Häcken Claim Historic UEFA Women’s Europa Cup

A new chapter in European women’s football has been written and Nigeria’s Halimatu Ayinde now stands among the players who helped shape it.

The Nigerian midfielder has added another major honour to her career after Swedish club BK Häcken defeated Hammarby IF 4–2 on aggregate to win the inaugural UEFA Women’s Europa Cup. The title was secured on Friday with a 3–2 victory in the second leg at Hisingen Arena in Gothenburg, confirming Häcken as the first champions of the newly created competition.

Ayinde was not included in the matchday squad for either leg of the final, but her club produced a disciplined performance across both fixtures. Häcken carried a narrow advantage from the first leg in Stockholm into the return encounter and showed composure in Gothenburg to close out the tie and secure the historic triumph.

The UEFA Women’s Europa Cup represents a new continental competition introduced by UEFA, featuring clubs from across Europe in a two-legged knockout format. With the victory, BK Häcken have also secured a place in the third qualifying round of next season’s UEFA Women’s Champions League.

For Ayinde, the achievement places her among the select group of Nigerian footballers who have lifted major European women’s club trophies.

Ayinde’s journey in club football has taken her across multiple leagues and continents. Over the years, she has featured for Delta Queens in Nigeria, Western New York Flash in the United States, and Eskilstuna United in Sweden, building a reputation as a dependable midfielder.

One of the most successful periods of her club career came during her time with FC Rosengård, where she helped the Swedish side secure the Damallsvenskan league title in 2021, 2022, and 2024. During that same spell, the club also lifted the Svenska Cupen in the 2021–22 season.

On the international stage, Ayinde has been a consistent figure for Nigeria’s Super Falcons. She has celebrated three Women’s Africa Cup of Nations titles, winning the continental championship in 2014, 2016, and 2024.

Earlier in her career, she was part of the Nigerian team that finished runners-up at the 2014 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup. She later represented Nigeria at the 2015 FIFA Women’s World Cup and again at the 2023 edition, reinforcing her place among the country’s experienced international players.

Now, with a historic European title added to her achievements, Halimatu Ayinde’s career continues to reflect the expanding reach of Nigerian excellence in global women’s football. 

Nigeria Moves to Expand Rail Network with $2.99 Billion Lagos and Northern Rail Projects

Nigeria is taking another important step toward strengthening its transport infrastructure, as the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approved $2.99 billion on May 1, 2026 for two strategic rail developments, the Lagos Green Line and the Kano–Kaduna standard gauge railway. The investment reflects a continued national effort to modernise the rail network and reduce the long-standing dependence on road transport for moving passengers and cargo.

In Lagos, the Green Line is expected to play a key role in improving mobility within Nigeria’s commercial capital. As one of Africa’s fastest-growing cities, Lagos faces intense pressure on its road infrastructure. By linking key districts across the metropolis, the urban rail line is designed to shorten travel times, lower transportation costs, and ease congestion affecting millions of commuters. Modern rail systems are increasingly essential for cities experiencing rapid population growth, and the Green Line represents an important step toward a more efficient urban transport system.

Further north, the Kano–Kaduna railway will strengthen connectivity between two of northern Nigeria’s most significant commercial centres. The standard gauge line is expected to improve the movement of goods and passengers while supporting trade and industrial activity across the region. Rail transport also offers a cost-effective solution for bulk cargo in a country where road networks often face capacity constraints.

The $2.99 billion approval highlights the scale of investment required to address Nigeria’s infrastructure gap. Estimates from the African Development Bank indicate that substantial annual spending is needed to meet the country’s infrastructure demands, making government-led financing crucial for projects of this scale.

When implemented successfully, the Lagos Green Line and Kano–Kaduna railway would significantly improve mobility, reduce logistics costs, and strengthen economic activity across both urban and regional corridors in Nigeria.

Saturday, 2 May 2026

Nigeria Moves to Establish National Aircraft Leasing Company

Nigeria’s aviation sector is preparing for a significant structural shift following federal approval for the creation of a national aircraft leasing company , a move designed to make modern aircraft more accessible to domestic airlines and strengthen the country’s position within Africa’s aviation economy.

The decision emerged from a meeting of the Federal Executive Council, after which the Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, Festus Keyamo, announced the plan as part of a broader effort to reshape how Nigerian carriers acquire and finance aircraft.

For decades, many Nigerian airlines have faced steep challenges when attempting to expand or modernise their fleets. Negotiating aircraft leases individually with international lessors has often placed local carriers at a disadvantage, limiting their ability to secure competitive terms. The newly approved leasing company is intended to change that dynamic.

Under the arrangement, the company will operate as a Special Purpose Vehicle driven primarily by private-sector investment, while benefiting from strategic backing from the Federal Government. The structure is designed to allow investors to lead the business while government participation provides the confidence and credibility needed to attract global financing partners.

Keyamo described the initiative as a transformative step for the aviation industry.

According to him, the platform will simplify aircraft acquisition by enabling Nigerian airlines to access fleets through a centralised leasing framework rather than navigating complex negotiations with foreign lessors on their own.

“This initiative is a game-changer for our aviation industry. It eliminates the long-standing challenges Nigerian airlines face in accessing aircraft on competitive terms and positions the country as a hub for aviation financing in Africa,” Keyamo said.

The government’s role in the venture will be strategic rather than operational. Through the Ministry of Finance Incorporated, the state will maintain an equity stake in the leasing company. Notably, this participation will not require direct financial investment from the government.

Instead, federal support will come primarily in the form of sovereign guarantees, a mechanism designed to reassure investors and ensure the security of aviation assets involved in the leasing arrangements.

“Our primary obligation is to provide the confidence investors need, especially in ensuring asset security,” the minister explained.

Interest in the project is already emerging from both local and international investors, according to the aviation ministry.

Beyond supporting domestic carriers, the leasing platform is expected to extend its services across West Africa and other parts of the continent, opening opportunities for airlines outside Nigeria to access aircraft through the facility.

If successfully implemented, the initiative could significantly strengthen Nigeria’s aviation ecosystem, improving airline capacity, easing fleet expansion, and positioning the country as a regional centre for aircraft leasing and aviation financing.

For a country that serves as one of Africa’s largest air travel markets, the development signals a new phase in building the financial infrastructure needed to support long-term growth in the aviation sector and further reinforces Nigeria’s role as a leading force in shaping the future of aviation on the continent. 

LASU Engineering Student Wins ₦50 Million National Venture Grant With Housing Innovation

Innovation often begins with a simple observation of everyday challenges and  for Taiwo Goodness Ukwedje, a 300-level student in the Department of Electronic and Computer Engineering at Lagos State University, that observation has now translated into national recognition and a ₦50 million Student Venture Capital Grant.

His award-winning project, D-Rentals, introduces a verified digital platform designed to protect students from accommodation fraud by connecting them directly with trusted housing options. The innovation positions Ukwedje among a select group of young Nigerian entrepreneurs developing technology-driven solutions to real problems affecting student communities.

A Solution Inspired by Student Experience

Accommodation fraud remains one of the most persistent challenges students face when searching for housing around university communities. Fake agents, misleading listings, and unverifiable landlords often leave students vulnerable to financial losses.

D-Rentals was conceived as a technological response to this problem. The platform is designed to provide a secure digital environment where students can access verified housing listings and connect directly with legitimate property owners. By introducing a system built around verification and transparency, the platform aims to reduce the risks associated with student accommodation searches.

The solution is expected to be launched during the next academic session, with plans to expand its reach across major student communities.

Standing Out in a Highly Competitive Selection

Securing the ₦50 million grant required competing against tens of thousands of applicants from across Nigeria. The national programme recognises student-led ventures with strong potential to address real societal challenges through innovation and entrepreneurship.

Ukwedje’s concept distinguished itself for its practical relevance and its potential to create a safer housing ecosystem for students. The selection reflects both the strength of the idea and the technical competence behind its development.

Recognition From the University Community

Following the announcement of the grant, Ukwedje was received by the leadership of Lagos State University at the Babatunde Raji Fashola Senate Building on the institution’s main campus in Ojo.

During the visit, he presented the grant certificate and shared insights into the development of the D-Rentals platform and its planned rollout. Members of the university community commended the innovation for addressing a challenge widely experienced by students across many campuses.

Innovation Growing Within LASU

Achievements like Ukwedje’s highlight the expanding culture of innovation within Lagos State University, particularly within its Faculty of Engineering. Students are increasingly translating academic knowledge into practical solutions capable of attracting national attention and investment.

For Ukwedje, the ₦50 million grant provides the resources needed to transform an idea into a functioning platform that could reshape how students secure accommodation.

As development of D-Rentals progresses toward launch, the project stands as an example of how student ingenuity can evolve into impactful solutions with the potential to improve everyday life within university communities.

Kano–Maradi Railway: Reconnecting a Historic Trade Corridor

For centuries, Kano has served as one of West Africa’s most important commercial crossroads, linking markets across the Sahel and facilitating trade across vast regional networks. Today, that legacy is being reinforced through the development of the Kano–Maradi railway, a major cross-border transport corridor designed to connect northern Nigeria with neighbouring Niger Republic.

The railway project was initiated in September 2020 during the administration of the late President Muhammadu Buhari, with construction officially commencing in February 2021. Planned as a modern rail system, the line is intended to strengthen economic cooperation between Nigeria and Niger while improving mobility, logistics and trade throughout northern Nigeria.

At the heart of the project is a 284-kilometre standard gauge railway running from Kano toward Maradi. The route will include 12 stations across several northern states. Beginning in Kano State, the line connects Kano city and Dambata before entering Jigawa State through Kazaure. It then continues through Katsina State, linking Daura, Mashi, Katsina and Jibiya before reaching the border area on its way toward Maradi in Niger Republic.

The project also includes a 94-kilometre branch line to Dutse, the capital of Jigawa State, expanding the railway’s reach and strengthening access to additional economic centres within the region.

Once operational, the railway is projected to transport around 9,300 passengers each day alongside approximately 3,000 tonnes of freight daily. This capacity is expected to significantly improve regional logistics, support trade flows and ease pressure on heavily used road networks across the northern corridor.

The scale of the project reflects its strategic importance, with the investment currently estimated at around ₦1.5 trillion in the 2025 national budget.

Within Nigeria’s legislature, the initiative has attracted strong backing. Abubakar Kabir Bichi, the member representing Bichi Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives and Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriation, has described the railway as a vital investment in the economic future of Kano and the broader northern region.

He emphasised that efficient transport infrastructure plays a critical role in the growth of major commercial centres worldwide. Strengthening rail connectivity, he noted, will reinforce Kano’s position as a leading economic hub by improving movement within the metropolis, enhancing supply chains and opening new opportunities for business activity.

Bichi also highlighted other key infrastructure efforts underway in the region, including the Abuja–Kaduna highway, the Kaduna–Zaria–Kano road project and improvements at the Mallam Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, describing them as part of broader initiatives aimed at strengthening infrastructure and public services across northern Nigeria.

Beyond its transport function, the Kano–Maradi railway carries wider economic and historical significance. By linking one of Nigeria’s most influential trading cities with neighbouring markets, the corridor has the potential to revitalise historic commercial routes that have connected communities across the Sahel for generations.

On completion , the Kano–Maradi railway will represent one of the most ambitious transport initiatives in northern Nigeria, a project positioned to transform regional mobility, expand trade opportunities and deepen economic integration across borders.

Friday, 1 May 2026

Leading One of Africa’s Top Universities: The Journey of Professor Timothy Ashibel Anake


At Covenant University, one of Africa’s leading centres of higher learning and the highest-ranked university in Nigeria and West Africa in the Times Higher Education rankings, Professor Timothy Ashibel Anake serves as the institution’s 6th substantive Vice-Chancellor. His rise to the helm of the university reflects decades of dedication to scholarship, research, and academic leadership.

Across Nigeria, many of the country’s most remarkable academic journeys begin far from the national spotlight and Professor Anake’s story is one of such. From a small community in Cross River State, he built a career shaped by rigorous research, mentorship, and years of service within the university system, an intellectual path that eventually led to the leadership of one of the continent’s most respected institutions.

Early Roots in Cross River State

Professor Anake hails from Ketting-Bendi in Obanliku Local Government Area of Cross River State. His early education began at Ketting Primary School before he proceeded to Community Comprehensive Secondary School, Four Towns, Uyo.

It was during these formative years that his interest in mathematics began to take shape. The discipline’s precision and logical depth would soon become the foundation of a lifelong academic pursuit.

He later gained admission to the University of Uyo, where he earned a Bachelor’s degree in Mathematics. Determined to deepen his expertise, he continued his academic journey at the University of Ibadan, obtaining a Master’s degree before eventually completing his doctoral studies at Covenant University.

A Career Built on Mathematical Inquiry

For more than two decades, Professor Anake has been actively engaged in research within the mathematical sciences, contributing to areas that connect theoretical mathematics with real-world scientific applications.

His research interests include numerical methods, stochastic processes, fractional-order differential equations, stability analysis, and mathematical modelling for ecological restoration. These fields allow mathematical frameworks to be applied to complex scientific and environmental challenges.

Over the years, he has authored more than sixty peer-reviewed research articles published in internationally recognized journals indexed by Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar. His work has been cited more than 872 times and carries an h-index of 15 and an i10-index of 20.

Among his notable scholarly contributions are studies exploring hybrid multistep numerical methods for solving ordinary differential equations, as well as research examining mathematical modelling approaches for green belt development and environmental sustainability.

Recognition Within the Global Academic Community

Professor Anake’s research contributions have also earned international recognition.

In 2015, he was nominated to participate in the 3rd Heidelberg Laureate Forum in Germany, an elite gathering that brings together emerging researchers with some of the world’s most distinguished mathematicians and computer scientists, including recipients of the Fields Medal and the Turing Award.

He has also presented research at numerous international conferences, sharing insights from his work with scholars and experts across the global academic community.

Leadership Within Covenant University

Professor Anake’s rise to the leadership of Covenant University was shaped through years of service across several strategic roles within the institution.

Between 2022 and 2024, he served as Dean of the College of Science and Technology, where he helped strengthen research engagement within the college and oversaw the organization of its first international conference on science, technology, and innovation.

Earlier, from 2019 to 2022, he served as Director of the Academic Planning Unit. In that role, he worked to align Covenant University’s academic programmes with global standards, reinforcing the university’s commitment to excellence in teaching and research.

His administrative experience also includes serving as Dean of Student Affairs between 2017 and 2018, where he contributed to initiatives aimed at supporting student development and campus engagement.

Before these appointments, he served as Head of the Department of Mathematics and Postgraduate Coordinator between 2015 and 2016, guiding curriculum development and supervising advanced research within the department.

Mentorship and Academic Development

Mentorship has remained a defining element of Professor Anake’s academic work. Throughout his career, he has supervised numerous undergraduate and postgraduate research projects, including doctoral candidates who have contributed to the advancement of mathematical sciences.

His role as an external examiner and assessor for doctoral theses and master’s dissertations across universities in Nigeria further highlights his contribution to strengthening academic standards within the country’s higher education system.

Active Voice in the Mathematical Community

Professor Anake maintains active involvement in several professional organisations that support the advancement of mathematical sciences.

He is a member of the Nigerian Mathematical Society, the Mathematical Association of Nigeria, the Nigerian Association of Mathematical Physics, and the Edinburgh Mathematical Society.

In addition, he has contributed to scholarly publishing as a peer reviewer and previously served on the editorial board of the Covenant Journal of Physical and Life Sciences.

Integrating Technology Into Scholarship

In both teaching and research, Professor Anake emphasizes the importance of digital tools in advancing modern scholarship.

Technologies such as MATLAB, SPSS, LaTeX, and Moodle form part of his academic approach, supporting deeper computational analysis and fostering collaborative learning and research environments.

Faith, Family, and Service

Beyond his academic responsibilities, Professor Anake is also a pastor at Faith Tabernacle under Living Faith Church Worldwide.

He is married to Dr. Winifred Uduak Anake, and together they are proud parents of fraternal twins.

A Journey That Reflects Nigeria’s Depth of Talent

Professor Timothy Ashibel Anake’s journey reflects the depth of intellectual talent that continues to emerge across Nigeria.

From the classrooms of Cross River State to the leadership of one of Africa’s most highly ranked universities, his story demonstrates the enduring power of education, perseverance, and scholarly dedication.

It is a reminder that across the country, many remarkable stories of academic excellence continue to unfold, stories that highlight Nigeria’s growing contribution to global knowledge and innovation.

From a Struggling Campus to a 15,000-Student University: The Rapid Rise of UNILESA

Across Nigeria, the demand for quality higher education continues to reshape the country’s academic landscape. In the South-West, Osun State has steadily emerged as one of the nation’s most significant education hubs, hosting a remarkable concentration of institutions including Obafemi Awolowo University (Ile-Ife), Osun State University (UNIOSUN), Bowen University, Redeemer’s University, Joseph Ayo Babalola University, Oduduwa University, Kings University, and Adeleke University, among others.

Within this ecosystem of learning, a young institution is rapidly carving out its own place.

Barely three years after opening its doors, the University of Ilesa (UNILESA) has expanded from fewer than 1,000 students to more than 15,000, marking one of the fastest growth trajectories recorded by a newly established Nigerian university.

The transformation was highlighted by the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Taiwo Olufemi Asaolu, during a media briefing marking his third year in office.


A University Born From Transition

UNILESA officially began operations in April 2023 following the upgrade of the Osun State College of Education, Ilesa into a full-fledged university.

The transition, however, was far from smooth. At take-off, the new institution inherited dilapidated structures, failing infrastructure, and a workforce weighed down by years of uncertainty and low morale and as such stabilising the institution quickly became a priority.

According to Asaolu, the university has since undergone a sweeping institutional turnaround, rebuilding confidence within the campus community while steadily strengthening its academic framework.


Expanding Academic Frontiers

Central to the university’s rapid rise has been the expansion of its academic offerings.

Today, UNILESA runs 97 academic programmes fully approved by the National Universities Commission (NUC). These programmes span diverse fields including Law, Nursing Science, Medical Laboratory Science, Physiotherapy, Optometry and Special Education.

The university is also preparing to enter Nigeria’s medical education space as approval has already been secured from the NUC for the Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) programme, while the institution awaits final clearance from the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) before admitting medical students.

To support this ambition, plans are underway to upgrade the State General Hospital in Ilesa into a teaching hospital, a move expected to enhance clinical training for students while improving healthcare delivery across Ijesaland.


Beyond the Lecture Hall

A unique feature of the campus is its 18-hole golf course, an uncommon facility within the Nigerian university environment. The course has already hosted national sporting engagements, including the Professional Golfers’ Association’s 15th Qualifying School Seminar, positioning the university as a growing destination for sports development and recreational events.

Infrastructure upgrades are also reshaping the campus environment.

Asaolu credited much of the institution’s progress to the support of Osun State Governor Ademola Adeleke, particularly in the areas of infrastructure renewal and workforce stabilisation. Government intervention helped reconstruct the university’s road network, while longstanding staff welfare issues inherited from the former college were addressed, restoring industrial harmony within the institution.


Growth Comes With New Pressures

Rapid expansion has also introduced new pressures with student enrollment now exceeding 15,000, the university faces challenges including inadequate student accommodation, and the need for additional lecture halls and laboratories to support its growing academic population.


A New Academic Force in Osun’s Education Landscape

For Osun State, already recognised as one of Nigeria’s most prominent centres of learning, the rise of UNILESA adds another important pillar to its expanding academic ecosystem.

From a campus grappling with deteriorating facilities and institutional uncertainty to a fast-growing university with 97 accredited programmes and more than 15,000 students, the institution’s journey reflects the evolving strength of Nigeria’s higher education sector.

In Ilesa, what began as the transformation of a teacher training college is steadily becoming a vibrant university community, contributing to Osun State’s reputation as a powerhouse of learning while preparing thousands of young Nigerians for the opportunities of the future. 

Katsina Lights the Future with 50,000 Solar AI Streetlights

Nigeria’s next leap in intelligent infrastructure may not begin inside vast technology campuses or energy-hungry data centres instead but may rise from thousands of solar-powered streetlights stretching across communities and highways in Katsina State, each one illuminating the night while carrying the computing power of the digital age.

That vision moved closer to reality after Katsina State signed a landmark agreement with greentech firm Conflow Power Group Limited (CPG), in partnership with Mora Energy, for the deployment of 50,000 solar-powered iLamp units. Far more than ordinary streetlights, the system is designed to embed distributed artificial intelligence computing infrastructure directly into public lighting, a concept its developers describe as the first of its kind on the African continent.

If successfully implemented, the initiative would position Katsina not just as a participant in the global smart city movement but as something more ambitious - Africa’s first AI-powered smart state, where intelligent infrastructure is spread across an entire region rather than confined to a single urban district.

At the heart of the project are the iLamp units, solar-powered smart streetlights built to function independently of the national electricity grid. Each unit carries a dual purpose: lighting streets while simultaneously acting as a revenue-generating distributed AI data centre capable of supporting advanced computing workloads.

The technology integrates a wide range of capabilities into a single installation. Every iLamp is designed to include AI-enabled cameras and monitoring systems that can assist with public safety, traffic management and the protection of infrastructure, subject to regulatory approvals and established data governance frameworks. Alongside these capabilities, the network will deliver public WiFi access, Bluetooth connectivity and high-efficiency LED lighting, all powered entirely by solar energy and designed to operate without additional operational costs to the state.

The project also enters the global conversation about the environmental impact of artificial intelligence infrastructure. Around the world, traditional data centres have come under increasing scrutiny due to their enormous electricity consumption and the vast quantities of water required for cooling. In response, several states have imposed moratoriums on new data centre developments.

The iLamp system presents a radically different model by distributing computing capacity across thousands of solar-powered nodes, the network eliminates the need for water cooling and draws zero electricity from national power grids.

For Edward Fitzpatrick, Chief Executive Officer of Conflow Power Group, the Katsina agreement represents a significant moment in the evolution of AI infrastructure worldwide. He described the deal as a turning point that challenges conventional thinking about how computing power can be delivered.

According to Fitzpatrick, Katsina became the first Nigerian state to complete the extensive engagement process required for the project. Ministries carefully reviewed issues including land use, highway regulations, security frameworks and data protection standards, ensuring that the initiative met regulatory expectations before advancing to final approval.

He contrasted the project’s approach with traditional data centre construction, which often demands around 300 megawatts of grid power, millions of litres of cooling water and several years of development. By comparison, the Katsina system introduces 13.75 PetaOPS of computing capability through solar-powered iLamp posts that can become operational from the moment they are installed.

The partnership is also expected to stimulate local industrial development. Fitzpatrick revealed that CPG plans to establish its first factory in Katsina, alongside the creation of what the company describes as Nigeria’s first Green Utility, a step intended to strengthen transparency, sustainability and long-term success for the project.

If the project unfolds as envisioned, thousands of solar-powered lights will soon begin appearing across the state and behind the glow of those lights will be something far more significant, an intelligent network performing advanced computing tasks, strengthening connectivity, supporting public safety systems and demonstrating how innovation can emerge from the most familiar pieces of everyday infrastructure.

In that sense, the story unfolding in Katsina is not simply about lighting streets but about reimagining infrastructure itsel, where the poles that brighten the night also power the digital engines of tomorrow’s Nigeria.

Thursday, 30 April 2026

Lawploy: The Nigerian Platform Transforming Legal Practice with Technology

Nigeria’s legal sector is entering a new chapter of innovation with the emergence of Lawploy, a technology platform designed to reshape how legal professionals work and how individuals and businesses access legal support.

Founded by Samuel Ndubuisi Nwafor, a University of Benin trained lawyer, Lawploy echoes a growing wave of Nigerian innovators building digital solutions tailored to the realities of the country’s professional landscape. The platform introduces a modern legal ecosystem that blends research, collaboration, and regulatory guidance into one streamlined environment.

At the heart of Lawploy is a legal research engine known as the Lawploy Law Report (LLR). The system brings together more than 10,000 Nigerian case authorities, presenting them with concise legal summaries and clear identification of key judicial principles such as ratio decidendi. For lawyers preparing court submissions or studying precedents, the tool offers a faster and more structured way to navigate Nigeria’s growing body of case law.

The platform also introduces a digital case management workspace designed for Nigerian lawyers and law firms seeking better organization and coordination. Through this system, legal practitioners can track the progress of cases, structure their workflow around clear timelines, and collaborate with colleagues within chambers. Built-in reminders help ensure that court appearances and filing deadlines remain firmly on schedule.

Recognizing that legal practice in Nigeria often requires coordination across different states, Lawploy provides a professional partnership marketplace where lawyers can connect with colleagues nationwide. This environment enables practitioners to identify co-counsel for complex matters, locate jurisdiction partners for court appearances in other states, and collaborate securely through shared digital workspaces.

Lawploy also supports Nigeria’s growing entrepreneurial community through a compliance resource hub. The platform offers practical guidance on essential regulatory processes, including business registration with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), obtaining a Tax Identification Number (TIN), registering foundations and NGOs, and meeting requirements such as SCUML certification. These guides simplify procedures that many business owners often find difficult to navigate.

In addition, the platform hosts a legal job board, helping law firms connect with new talent while giving young lawyers and experienced professionals visibility into opportunities across the profession.

Together, these tools position Lawploy as more than a legal directory or research service. It represents a growing movement toward technology-enabled legal practice in Nigeria, where digital systems help lawyers work more efficiently, strengthen professional collaboration, and widen access to legal expertise.

As Nigerian innovators continue to redefine industries through technology, Lawploy stands as another example of local ingenuity building solutions for the country’s evolving professional ecosystem.

The platform is now live and open for registration at Lawploy.com, welcoming lawyers, businesses, and individuals into what is fast becoming one of Nigeria’s most ambitious legal technology platforms. 

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Akwa Ibom’s Victor Attah Airport Steps onto the International Stage

Victor Attah International Airport in Uyo is set to open a new chapter in Akwa Ibom State’s aviation story as it prepares to begin international flight operations on May 2, 2026. The milestone will be marked by the airport’s first international connection linking Uyo with Kotoka International Airport in Accra, Ghana, with the service to be operated by Ibom Air. The return flight from Accra to Uyo is scheduled for May 3, formally initiating the airport’s entry into international travel.

The launch follows the Federal Government’s decision in November 2025 to upgrade the facility from a domestic airport to one with full international operational status. Aviation Minister Festus Keyamo confirmed the designation at the time and directed key aviation agencies to begin the processes required for international passenger operations.

Agencies including the Nigeria Customs Service, the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), and the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) were tasked with carrying out infrastructure checks and operational preparations. With much of the required infrastructure already in place, officials indicated that the airport was well positioned to begin handling international traffic once final preparations were completed.

For Akwa Ibom State, the introduction of international flights is expected to strengthen its aviation capacity and improve direct connectivity to other parts of West Africa. The new route is also seen as an opportunity to stimulate tourism, expand commercial activity, and attract investment into the state while supporting the growth of Ibom Air.

The development reflects a wider trend across Nigeria as several state governments increasingly view aviation infrastructure as a strategic tool for economic expansion. In 2024, Oyo State announced plans to upgrade Samuel Ladoke Akintola Airport in Ibadan into an international airport, although the facility continues to operate as a domestic terminal. That same year, Abia State partnered with the Federal Government to pursue a new airport project, expanding earlier plans for a simple airstrip into a full airport development that is still in its early stages.

Other states such as Ebonyi, Enugu, and Ogun have also taken steps to strengthen their aviation ecosystems through airport projects, airline operations, and aircraft acquisitions. These initiatives point to growing competition among Nigerian states seeking to position aviation as a driver of regional connectivity, investment attraction, and long-term economic growth.

With the Uyo–Accra route set to begin operations in early May, Victor Attah International Airport is moving beyond its role as a domestic gateway and stepping into a broader regional aviation network.

Ibadan Set to Host Global Celebration of Egungun Heritage

Ibadan is preparing to host a major cultural gathering that will place one of Yoruba civilisation’s most enduring traditions before a global audience. The 2026 World Egungun Festival is expected to attract more than 18,000 participants and distinguished guests, drawing cultural enthusiasts, scholars and visitors to Oyo State for a celebration rooted deeply in ancestral heritage.

The festival will reach its grand climax on May 2, 2026, when the city will witness vibrant displays of Egungun masquerades known for their dramatic costumes and spiritual symbolism. Performers from local communities as well as international cultural groups are expected to participate. Alongside the masquerade performances, the event will feature cultural parades, exhibitions, traditional cuisine, Fuji music performances and appearances from Nollywood and other creative talents, presenting a broad showcase of Nigerian cultural expression.

Before the colourful festivities begin, the festival will open with an intellectual engagement designed to examine the deeper meaning of the Egungun tradition. On May 1, 2026, a symposium will take place at 10:00 a.m. at the Local Government Service Commission Building located at the Secretariat in Agodi, Ibadan. The forum will host more than ten scholarly presentations exploring different dimensions of the Egungun phenomenon.

The symposium is being organised by the Sahara Centre in collaboration with the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ibadan. Scholars and cultural experts will examine how the centuries-old tradition is evolving in the modern era while maintaining its spiritual and cultural significance.

Barrister Omobolanle Osenbanjo, representing the Sahara Centre in Lagos, explained that discussions at the symposium will focus on the creative economy surrounding the Egungun tradition, particularly as the practice interacts with digital platforms, global audiences and the expanding landscape of cultural commercialisation. She described Egungun culture as a cornerstone of Yoruba spirituality that reflects the deep ancestral relationships, communal identity and living traditions within Yoruba society.

According to her, the symposium represents an important call to recognise Egungun as a living and evolving system capable of contributing meaningfully to economic growth, social cohesion and global cultural dialogue.

The World Egungun Festival itself was initiated by the Oyo State Government in 2024 as part of effort to promote cultural tourism and strengthen the preservation of indigenous heritage. Speaking at a press conference ahead of the event, the Commissioner for Culture and Tourism, Dr Wasiu Olatunbosun, noted that the government’s commitment to tourism development is beginning to yield positive results as cultural events continue to draw increasing attention to Oyo State.

He explained that the festival serves multiple purposes. Beyond showcasing Egungun culture, it helps safeguard ancestral traditions while also creating opportunities for income generation and strengthening the international visibility of Yoruba heritage.

Professor Sola Olorunyomi of the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ibadan noted that Egungun culture increasingly connects with modern creative industries, opening new possibilities for artistic innovation, cultural tourism and economic activity.

He encouraged public participation and support for the festival, emphasising that sustained interest in such cultural initiatives will help ensure that future generations continue to experience and preserve this important part of Yoruba heritage.

As preparations continue for the two-day celebration, the 2026 World Egungun Festival is shaping up to become a significant reminder that Nigeria’s ancestral traditions remain vibrant forces in the country’s cultural life, capable of inspiring both local pride and global fascination.