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Tinubu Heads to Brazil for G20 Summit

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…set to Join World Leaders in Rio de Janeiro

President Bola Tinubu will soon depart Nigeria for Brazil to attend the 19th meeting of the G20 Leaders’ Summit taking place in the South American country.

Bayo Onanuga, Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, announced this in a statement on Sunday.

The trip comes five days after Tinubu returned to Abuja after attending the Joint Arab-Islamic Summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

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The summit, which was hosted by King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, on Monday, focused on current issues in the Middle East.

In his statement, Onanuga said the latest trip is at the instance of the Brazilian President and current President of the group, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

“President Bola Tinubu will leave Abuja for Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on Sunday to attend to attend the 19th meeting of the G20 Leaders’ Summit taking place in the South American country.”

“The Nigerian leader’s participation is at the instance of the Brazilian President and current President of the group, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

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“The Summit holding from Monday, November 18 to Tuesday 19, will bring together leaders from the world’s top 20 economies, including the European Union, the African Union, and multilateral financial institutions among others.

This year’s meeting, under the theme, ‘Building a Just World and a Sustainable Planet,’ will see the participants discuss the fight against hunger and poverty; reform of the Institution of global governance and; sustainable development and Energy Transition.

“Nigeria has always strongly advocated for a reform of the global governing institutions, and often presented its impressive credentials as a strong contender for a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.

“President Tinubu is also expected to hold bilateral meetings on the sidelines of the Summit in advancement of Nigeria’s socio-economic reforms.

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“He will be accompanied by top government officials including the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Tuggar, Ministers of Livestock Development, Idi Mukhtar Maiha, Art, Tourism, Culture and Creativity, Hannatu Musawa, Minister of State for Agriculture and Food Security, Dr. Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi and the Director General of the National Intelligence Agency, Ambassador Mohammed Mohammed.

“The President will return to Nigeria at the end of the visit.”

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Man Bags Life Imprisonment Over Death Of Close Friend At Birthday Party

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A Federal Capital Territory, FCT High Court has sentenced one Ekang Philip Bassey to life imprisonment over the death of his friend, Emeka Nnonifu.

Emeka was killed on January 6, 2024, at a hotel in the Kubwa area of the nation’s capital following a heated exchange between him and the convict at a birthday party.

According to a statement issued on Thursday by the Police Public Relations Officer of the FCT Command, Josephine Adeh, the judgement was handed down by Hon. Justice M. S. Idris.

According to DAILY POST, convict was initially charged by the FCT Police Command with the offence of culpable homicide after the conclusion of a thorough investigation into the incident.

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According to the police, the offence is punishable with death as captured in Section 220(a) and (b) of the Penal Code Law and punishable under Section 221 of the same Law.

Josephine Adeh said the evidence tendered before the Court revealed that the defendant and the deceased were friends.

“The defendant had organised a birthday celebration which the deceased attended, and a disagreement between both men subsequently escalated into a physical confrontation, culminating in the fatal incident.

“During the trial, the Prosecution led evidence establishing that the defendant assaulted the deceased by slapping and pushing him, causing him to fall and strike his head on a concrete surface. The deceased sustained fatal injuries and was subsequently confirmed dead.

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“In its judgment delivered in Suit No. FCT/HC/CR/330/2024, the Court held that although the unlawful act of the defendant caused the death of the deceased, the requisite intention or knowledge necessary to sustain a conviction under Section 221 of the Penal Code was not established beyond reasonable doubt.

“The Court, however, held that the evidence adduced by the Prosecution established that the defendant unlawfully caused the death of the deceased and consequently convicted him of culpable homicide under Section 224 of the Penal Code, sentencing him to life imprisonment”.

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Court Sentences Father To 30 Years’ Imprisonment For Impregnating Daughter

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The Upper Area Court I, sitting in Ganye, Adamawa State, has convicted and sentenced a man, Jediel Sylvester, to 30 years’ imprisonment for having sexual relations with his daughter and getting her pregnant.

The court, presided over by Hon. Kabiru Musa, sentenced the defendant to 15 years’ imprisonment with an option of a N500,000 fine for the offence of incest.

For the offence of criminal intimidation, the court sentenced Sylvester to 10 years’ imprisonment with an option of a N250,000 fine, whilst for the offence of assault, the court sentenced the defendant to five years’ imprisonment without the option of a fine.

The court, explaining that the sentences shall run consecutively, further pronounced that the defendant has the constitutional right of appeal against the judgment to the High Court of Adamawa State within the next 30 days.

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The judge said the most disturbing part of the case was the testimony of the victim that the defendant habitually intimidated and forced her into sexual intercourse whenever he desired.

“Having carefully considered the statement of complaint, the unequivocal plea of guilty entered by the defendant, the oral testimony of the victim in corroboration thereof, and the entire record before the court, I am satisfied that the prosecution has proved the offences charged beyond reasonable doubt as required by law,” the judge said.

“A plea of guilty, once voluntarily made and corroborated where necessary, constitutes the strongest evidence against an accused person. In the instant case, there exists not only the defendant’s confession in open court but also credible testimony from the victim herself, leaving no room for doubt as to the defendant’s criminal responsibility,” Kabiru stated.

He declared that the case represents one of the gravest forms of betrayal known to both law and humanity, saying parenthood is a sacred trust imposed by nature.

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“Accordingly, I find the defendant, Jediel Sylvester, guilty and he is hereby convicted for the offences of Incest, Criminal Intimidation and Assault contrary to Sections 367, 382 and 242 of the Penal Code Law of Adamawa State, 2018,” the judge declared.

The defendant, Jediel Sylvester, was brought before the court on a criminal complaint alleging the offences of incest, criminal intimidation, and assault.

The particulars of the complaint disclosed that the defendant, who is the biological father of the victim, repeatedly subjected his own daughter to sexual abuse.

The first complainant in the case, Mohammed Audi, who is an uncle of the girl, had earlier told the court that after discovering the pregnancy, the defendant attempted to persuade his daughter to falsely accuse another person, and later sought to procure an abortion to terminate the pregnancy, both of which proposals the daughter rejected.

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When the complaint was read to the defendant, he pleaded guilty, stating that he committed the odd act of replacing paternal love with predatory lust.

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Speaker Abbas Pledges Sweeping Business Law Reforms, Vows to Scrap Obsolete Legislation Hindering Investment

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…promise regulatory certainty, lower cost of doing business, stronger support for enterprises

By Gloria Ikibah

Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Abbas Tajudeen, has pledged that the National Assembly will repeal outdated laws that impede enterprise, while pursuing far-reaching legislative reforms aimed at improving Nigeria’s competitiveness, attracting investment and accelerating economic growth.

He also promised greater regulatory certainty, reduced cost of doing business, expanded access to finance for businesses and stronger legislative oversight to ensure government agencies faithfully implement economic reforms.

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Speaker Abbas made the commitments on Thursday at the Legislative Business Breakfast Meeting held at the National Assembly as part of activities marking the 2026 National Assembly Open Week. The meeting was themed: “The Business of Growth: Legislative Priorities for Investment, Competitiveness and Economic Transformation.”

Setting out what he described as the House legislative priorities for the private sector, the Speaker unveiled five major commitments.

He said: “First, on regulatory clarity and legislative predictability, we commit that laws affecting business will be stable, transparent, and made with your input, so that no investor is ever ambushed by a rule they could not foresee.

“Second, on the cost of doing business, we will build on the tax reforms to harmonise levies across all tiers of government, so that one enterprise is not taxed to exhaustion by federal, state and local authorities at the same time.

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“Third, on access to finance, we will strengthen, through law and through oversight, the institutions that lend to the real economy, and press for financing that actually reaches the small and medium enterprises that employ most of our people.

“Fourth, on competitiveness, we will repeal the obsolete laws that frustrate enterprise, and legislate to support local manufacturing, agriculture, and our readiness for the continental market.

“And fifth, on delivery, we will use our oversight not to harass the private sector, but to hold public agencies to account for implementing these reforms faithfully and courteously.”

Abbas said the commitments were informed by extensive consultations with business leaders and reflected the House’s determination to respond to the concerns of the organised private sector.

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Explaining why he chose to speak after other participants, the Speaker said Parliament must first listen before legislating.

“I thank you for the candour of this morning’s conversation. I chose to speak last, and deliberately so, because a legislature that wishes to serve the economy must first learn to listen to it. I have heard your presentations and followed the agenda set for us by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group. I speak to you not with the usual assurances but with a considered response and firm commitments”, he said.

He argued that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s economic reforms were fundamentally designed to unlock private sector growth rather than expand government.

“Let me begin with a truth that must anchor everything else I say this morning. The reforms of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, were not undertaken for the benefit of government. They were undertaken for you. Governments do not create wealth. They create the conditions in which wealth can be created, and it is you, the entrepreneurs, the manufacturers, the farmers, the traders and the investors of Nigeria, who turn those conditions into factories, into harvests, into exports and into jobs.

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“The President has made it plain that his agenda is private-sector-led. That places you not at the margins of the Renewed Hope Agenda, but at its very centre. And a Parliament that understands this will measure its own success by one test above all, whether the laws it makes help you to invest, to grow and to employ”, Abbas added.

The Speaker acknowledged the mounting pressures confronting businesses, saying manufacturers and investors had consistently raised concerns over high borrowing costs, shrinking access to credit, foreign exchange volatility, multiple taxation, poor electricity supply, insecurity, policy uncertainty and port inefficiencies.

“Let me first prove to you that we heard you clearly. You told us, as the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria has told the whole nation, that borrowing has become prohibitively expensive, and that credit to the manufacturing sector actually shrank by close to two trillion Naira last year, starving industry of the money it needs to grow.

“You told us that the liberalisation of the exchange rate, though necessary, has raised the cost of the machinery and raw materials you must import. You spoke of power that remains unstable despite higher tariffs, forcing factory after factory to run on costly diesel. You spoke of multiple taxation, of too many agencies collecting too many levies at the same gate despite the recently passed tax laws. And you spoke of the difficulty of clearing goods through our ports, the drag of insecurity on farms and supply lines, and the uncertainty that comes when policy shifts without warning.

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“These are not idle complaints. They are the honest testimony of the men and women who create our jobs, and this House has heard them”, he noted.

Although he admitted that recent reforms had imposed hardship on Nigerians, Abbas maintained they were unavoidable.

He insisted that Parliament had not merely supported the administration’s reforms but had actively driven them through legislation.

“Permit me to place these concerns within the larger picture. The decisions this country took, to remove the costly fuel subsidy, to stop the reckless printing of money to cover deficits, and to unify our fractured exchange rates, were long avoided but could no longer be postponed. They have been hard, and I will not pretend otherwise.

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“But the world’s most sober observers now tell us the direction is right. The International Monetary Fund, in its most recent assessment, has commended these reforms for rebuilding confidence and reducing our vulnerabilities, and projects that our economy will grow by more than four per cent this year.

“Yet that same assessment carries a warning we dare not ignore, that poverty and food insecurity in our country remain painfully high. This is precisely the point the Nigerian Economic Summit Group has pressed upon us all: that we must stay the course on reform, but we must now turn these economic gains into visible social progress. Stability at the top means little until it is felt on the factory floor, in the market, and on the family table.

“And let me be clear that this Parliament has not been a bystander to reform. We have been its legislative engine, and our record is one of concrete action”, he stated.

Abbas highlighted key legislative milestones, including the new tax reform laws, the Electricity Act, the Investments and Securities Act, the establishment of six regional development commissions, the recovery of over N60 billion through legislative oversight, the approval of a new national minimum wage, and expanded access to student loans and consumer credit.

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“This is what our Legislative Agenda promised, an economy placed at the very centre of our work”, he said.

Looking beyond Nigeria’s immediate economic challenges, Abbas said the country must position itself to benefit fully from the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

“We also see the opportunities that lie just beyond our present difficulties. The African Continental Free Trade Area has opened a single market of more than a billion people, and Nigeria, as the largest economy on the continent, must be equipped to sell into it and not merely to buy from it.

“Our young people are building a digital and creative economy that already earns this nation global respect, our farmland can feed the region if we add value at home, and our abundant gas can power a fresh wave of industry. The Nigerian Economic Summit Group speaks of a trillion-dollar economy within our reach, and this House intends to legislate deliberately for that ambition”, Abbas said.

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The Speaker challenged business leaders to move beyond annual engagements by maintaining continuous dialogue with Parliament.

“Yet the law can do only so much from a distance. If we are to get this right, we need you as partners, and not merely as petitioners.

“So I ask four things of you. Do not allow this Communiqué to gather dust. Bring it to our relevant committees, on commerce, on trade and investment, on industry, on finance and on banking, as a living working document.

“Come to our public hearings, and come with data, because sound law is built on evidence and not on anecdote. Tell us honestly when a law we have made is not working as intended, so that we can move quickly to amend it.
“And let us, from today, institutionalise this engagement, so that the conversation between Nigerian business and its Parliament no longer waits for an annual breakfast, but becomes a permanent and structured partnership”, he asserted.

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Drawing lessons from South Africa, Kenya, the United Kingdom and India, Abbas argued that sustained dialogue between lawmakers and investors was a hallmark of successful economies.

To entrench that relationship, he proposed the establishment of a standing National Assembly and Business Executive Roundtable (NABER), to meet twice annually.

“So let me move us from lesson to action. I propose, here and now, that we institutionalise this gathering. Let us establish a standing National Assembly and Business Executive Roundtable (NABER), convened twice every year, that brings the leadership of both chambers and our economic committees together with the organised private sector, the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, organised labour and our development partners.

“Its mission would be simple and serious, to keep the conversation between Parliament and the productive economy continuous, structured and grounded in evidence, rather than occasional and reactive. Its purpose would be fourfold: to review, each half-year, the true state of our business environment; to track the implementation of our reforms and the fate of the commitments we make to one another; to shape a shared, pro-growth legislative calendar for the year ahead; and to surface the obstacles to investment early enough for us to remove them by law.

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“The Roundtable should have a permanent home here at the National Assembly Library, so that it endures as an institution and does not depend on the goodwill of any single session”, he said.

Abbas reaffirmed the commitment of the House to supporting enterprise.

“Let me close with a commitment. The commitment is that this House, in step with the Renewed Hope Agenda of Mr President, will remain pro-growth and pro-business, because every job you create is a family lifted, and every investment you make is a vote of confidence in Nigeria”, he noted.

House Leader Rep. Julius Ihonvbere also advocated more frequent engagement between Parliament and the organised private sector, arguing that stronger collaboration was essential to promoting economic growth, strengthening democratic institutions and creating a more favourable business climate.

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Chairman House Committee on Commerce, Rep. Ahmed Munir, said the legislature was aligning its agenda with the needs of businesses by pursuing reforms to improve regulatory certainty, reduce bureaucratic bottlenecks and modernise Nigeria’s commercial laws.

He disclosed that several key bills, including the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Bill, the Climate Resilience Commerce Bill, the Sale of Goods Act Amendment Bill, the Digital Economy Mainstreaming Bill, the Sustainable Finance Bill, amendments to the Bankruptcy Act and reforms to the Nigerian Export Promotion Council Act, were designed to strengthen investment, boost innovation and improve Nigeria’s competitiveness.

Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr Jumoke Oduwole, stressed that legislative backing remained critical to sustaining Nigeria’s economic reforms.
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She said the drive of the Federal Government to promote industrialisation, expand exports and build a $1 trillion economy by 2030 is dependent on strong collaboration between the executive and the legislature.

According to the minister, recent data from the Nigerian Economic Summit Group’s Business Confidence Monitor showed that the country’s business environment remained in expansion territory for the sixth consecutive month, reflecting growing investor confidence in ongoing reforms.

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Executive Secretary of the Policy and Legal Advocacy Centre (PLAC), Clement Nwankwo, identified insecurity and excessive taxation as two of the greatest obstacles to investment in Nigeria.

He warned that insecurity continued to undermine agriculture and economic activity, while multiple taxes and levies imposed by government agencies discouraged investment despite ongoing tax reforms.

Nwankwo urged the House Committee on Commerce and other relevant committees to intensify oversight of regulatory agencies to ensure businesses were protected from excessive taxation and practices that stifle enterprise, stressing that a more business-friendly environment was essential for sustainable economic growth.

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