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No judge in FCT High court will be staying in rented apartment, Wike assured

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By Wumi Tewogbade, Abuja

The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, (FCT), Nyesom Wike has reiterated the commitment of President Bola Tinubu, in ensuring that no judge in the FCT lives in a rented apartment by the end of 2027.

The minister made the promise during the flag-off of the Design and Construction of Residences for the Heads of Courts of the FCT, in Abuja.

He assured that the era where judges stayed in rented quarters “will come to an end.”

According to FCT minister, “Let me also say what Mr President has done for the FCT. Before the first tenure of Mr President ends, no judge of the FCT will be living in a rented quarter. I said before the first tenure ends, no judge of the FCT High Court; I didn’t say Federal High Court, I didn’t say National Industrial Court, but of the FCT High Court, will be staying in a rented quarter,”.

He lamented, “When we were appointed by Mr. President to be ministers of FCT; the Minister Of State, FCT, and my humble self, one of the things that Mr. President said concerning about improving the welfare, enhancing the performance of judicial officers And with my experience as a former governor of a state, I said to Mr. President, one thing your government must show different is that we can’t afford to continue to see judges living in rented houses.

“Sometimes you don’t know the landlords of these houses. Sometimes you don’t know their neighbors. These judges preside over criminal matters or other serious matters indeed. And of course, you never can tell what will happen”.

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He commended President Tinubu for his support and for changing the narratives for the judicial officers in the country.

He added that “I want to make it clear that what we are doing today, is not just for the heads of courts that when they retire, they go, No. As they retire, the property becomes their own. This is the approval of Mr. President, and that is why we issued the C-of-Os in their names. So all of you who are here now, don’t think that when they are leaving tomorrow, the buildings will be taken away from them. You will see the pages on newspaper; ‘Retired Chief Judge of FCT has taken our house. Retired Chief of Federal High Court has converted our house’. ‘The President of National Industrial Court has converted the house of National Industrial Court,’ ‘The President of the Court of Appeal has done the same’. Please, the policy of Mr. President in this sense of court is that, as they are retiring, they must go home with their houses. That is the true position.

“The representative of the President of the Court of Appeal has said and I can imagine how a presiding judge who is posted to Abuja, that would think that things are affordable for him to do his job, was squatting with his own brother for two years. Tell me how comfortable he would be in that house to do his work? Friends who come and visit his brother, will he say they shouldn’t come? It’s not his house, he’s a squatter . That is what you find our judges passing through.

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“That’s also why when I was Governor of River State, I made it clear, no judge on retirement will not have a home. If you don’t want it physically, if you want it in cash, we did it”.

The FCT Minister also revealed that his administration is building for the Court of Appeal, 10 duplexes, and will be handed over by Mr. President by the end of the year, 10 for the Federal High Court, 20 for the FCT High Court.

He also assured that his administration don’t have history of starting projects and abandoning the projects, so there the projects would be completed before 2027.

“Let me also say what Mr. President has done for FCT. Before the first tenure of Mr. President ends, no judge of the FCT will be living in a rented quarter”, he said.

Earlier, the FCT Minister of State, Dr Mariya Mahmoud, described the project as a collective commitment to strengthening the pillars of justice and governance in the nation’s capital.

“This project is about honour, dignity, and institutional pride, providing befitting residences for our esteemed Heads of Courts whose wisdom and integrity uphold the rule of law in the Federal Republic of Nigeria,” she affirmed.

She, therefore, commended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, whose visionary leadership continues to redefine infrastructure delivery across the nation and particularly within the FCT, just as she applauded the FCT Minister, Barrister Nyesom Wike for his dynamic leadership, relentless drive, and practical commitment to transforming Abuja’s infrastructure landscape.

The Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, in his goodwill message commended the FCT Minister, for his leadership and selflessness, to judicial reform and to widening access to justice for all Nigerians.

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Fagbemi said, “The current administration’s clear prioritisation of institutional strengthening, judicial independence, and infrastructural investment has created the enabling environment for initiatives such as the construction of dignified residences for heads of our courts in the FCT. This of course includes the Federal High Court, the National Industrial Court, and the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory. This project is a tangible expression of the President’s vision that a robust judiciary is essential to national development and the consolidation of democratic governance”.

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Aondoakaa Taps 38-Year-OLD Ogbenjuwa as Running Mate, Vows to Prioritize Security and Youth Inclusion

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By Felix Umande, Makurdi

The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, governorship candidate for Benue State in the 2027 election, Michael Kaase Aondoakaa, SAN, has picked a 38-year-old Dr. Oyije Ochaekiti Ogbenjuwa as his running mate.

Aondoakaa announced the selection on Sunday during the party’s congress in Makurdi, the state capital, presenting the ticket as a blend of experience and generational renewal.

Addressing party delegates and supporters, the PDP flag bearer said his administration would prioritize ending persistent attacks and killings in rural communities and guaranteeing the safety of lives and property across the state. He described security as the foundation for any meaningful development agenda.

If elected, Aondoakaa pledged to revive agriculture and accelerate rural development, reaffirming Benue’s role as the “Food Basket of the Nation.”

He said his government would invest in modern farming systems, improve market access, and support smallholder farmers to boost productivity and rural incomes.

Youth and women empowerment also featured prominently in his outline. The senior lawyer said his administration would focus on job creation and enterprise support to expand opportunities for young people and women, positioning them at the center of the state’s economic revival.

Beyond agriculture, Aondoakaa listed improved infrastructure, quality healthcare, and better education as core priorities. He added that his government would work to create an enabling environment for industrial growth and broader economic expansion.

“Our administration will be anchored on justice, transparency, and accountability in governance,” he said, stressing that public trust would guide decision-making and resource management.

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The candidate also pledged to pursue unity and reconciliation across political, ethnic, and sectional lines, noting that sustainable progress would require a united Benue.

The choice of Ogbenjuwa, a 38-year-old professional, has drawn widespread reaction across the state, with many party faithful and observers describing it as a strategic move toward youth inclusion.

Supporters say the nomination signals a deliberate effort to bring younger voices into the corridors of power and address long-standing demands for generational representation in government.

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Dangote Refinery Ends Africa’s “Economic Slavery” says Billionaire Otedola

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Africa, including Nigeria, imported most of its shell fuel like a country without crude oil. Now, Nigerian billionaire, Aliko Dangote, has changed that reality with his 650,000-barrels-per-day refinery, Africa’s largest.

This development, according to Femi Otedola, Africa’s “Economic slavery is over: changing Africa’s energy future

Otedola described Aliko Dangote’s refinery as one of the most important industrial projects in Africa’s history.

His comments come as the Dangote refinery transforms regional fuel trade, cuts imports and deepens a fierce battle over market dominance.
The remarks also reopen debate over Nigeria’s failed state refineries and years of policy reversals that scared away industrial investment.

“What you’ve done is you’ve delivered us from economic slavery in Africa,” Otedola told Dangote.

The remark goes beyond praise between two billionaires.

It reflects a deeper shift underway in Nigeria’s economy as Africa’s largest refinery begins altering fuel trade patterns, foreign exchange demand and industrial power dynamics across the continent.

For years, Nigeria’s fuel dependence symbolised one of the biggest contradictions in global energy markets: a major crude exporter spending billions of dollars importing petrol because its state-owned refineries barely functioned.

Successive governments spent enormous sums attempting to revive refineries in Port Harcourt, Warri and Kaduna, yet the facilities remained largely dormant.

Lawmakers have repeatedly launched probes into billions of dollars spent on refinery rehabilitation with little visible output.

That failure created a massive import market controlled by traders, middlemen and fuel importers for decades.

Dangote’s refinery is now disrupting that structure, changing Africa’s fuel market

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The refinery, estimated to have cost around $20 billion, began large-scale operations in 2024 after years of delays and financing pressure.

Since its inception, Nigeria’s petrol imports have dropped sharply, while exports of refined products to African countries have increased.

Dangote has also expanded exports to countries across West, Central and East Africa amid global supply disruptions linked to Middle East tensions.

The refinery’s growing influence is now so significant that it is increasingly shaping pricing conversations, import policies and competition across Nigeria’s downstream oil sector.

Otedola suggested the project represented the type of industrial ambition Nigeria repeatedly failed to protect.

“In Nigeria today, we should be watching CNN and saying the largest refinery in the world is in Nigeria,” he said.

He also described the refinery, the Dangote fertiliser plant and Eko Atlantic as projects capable of redefining Nigeria’s global image.

“Visionless people destroyed it”

Otedola also revisited one of Nigeria’s most controversial privatisation reversals disclosing that he partnered with Dangote in 2007 to acquire government-owned refinery assets before the deal was later cancelled.

“In 2007, I teamed up with Aliko and we acquired the refineries. I had a 20 per cent stake.

“Unfortunately, a team of visionless people destroyed it.”

The deal, initially approved under former President Olusegun Obasanjo, was later reversed during the administration of late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua after resistance from labour unions and political groups.

Nearly 20 years later, the same refineries remain among Nigeria’s most expensive industrial failures.

The contrast between those collapsed state assets and Dangote’s privately financed refinery has become central to Nigeria’s broader economic debate: whether Africa’s largest economy should aggressively protect local industrial champions or prioritise open competition regardless of scale.

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That debate has intensified in recent months.

Monopoly fears grow as refinery gains power

As Dangote refinery expands, so have concerns about market concentration.

The refinery has repeatedly pushed regulators to restrict fuel imports and prioritise locally refined petroleum products. Dangote argues that continued import licences undermine domestic refining and discourage investment.

But the position has triggered backlash from fuel marketers, importers and even the state-owned oil company, NNPC.

In court filings this week, NNPC accused the refinery of attempting to dominate Nigeria’s fuel market through legal action aimed at challenging import licences issued to rival marketers.

Fuel marketers have also warned that limiting imports could weaken competition and create supply risks if the market becomes too dependent on a single supplier.

Still, supporters of the refinery argue that Nigeria cannot industrialise while relying heavily on imported refined products despite its vast crude oil reserves.

That argument increasingly resonates beyond Nigeria.

Dangote recently revealed that investor demand for the refinery’s planned public listing has already crossed billions of dollars, underscoring growing confidence in the project’s long-term influence on African energy markets.

For many investors and policymakers, the refinery is no longer just a business story.

It has become a test case for whether Africa can finally build, and sustain, industrial projects powerful enough to reshape global trade flows instead of merely exporting raw materials.

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Africa’s Largest University Becomes First on the Continent to Own an Airport

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The University of South Africa has become the first African university to own an airport.

The 20-hectare facility will support practical training in aviation and advanced technologies.
Vice-Chancellor Puleng LenkaBula says the move strengthens innovation and job-ready skills.

The milestone aligns with UNISA’s global growth in research and technical education.
Vice-Chancellor Puleng LenkaBula confirmed the acquisition of the 20-hectare facility, describing it as a strategic investment to strengthen real-world training for students.

The announcement was made during a press briefing highlighting the university’s recent academic progress and rising global rankings.
LenkaBula said the airport would serve as a “launchpad for future innovators”, enabling the institution to move beyond its traditional distance-learning model and expand into hands-on technical training.

The facility is expected to support specialised programmes in aviation, drone technology, and advanced digital systems, areas seen as critical to Africa’s industrial growth.

The move reflects a broader trend among global universities seeking to align education more closely with labour market demands, particularly in high-skill sectors where practical experience is essential.

Boitumelo Senokoane, an associate professor in the College of Human Sciences, said the airport would provide students with a rare opportunity to translate theory into practice.

“This 20-hectare airport will give our students a unique opportunity to apply their studies in practice and gain skills that are in high demand in the aviation and engineering industries,” she said.

Founded in 1873, UNISA serves more than 400,000 students worldwide and is widely regarded as one of the largest universities globally.

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The airport acquisition aligns with its expanding research focus in digitalisation, biotechnology, renewable energy, and space science, positioning the institution at the forefront of innovation on the continent.

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