News
FG backpedals on tax laws guidelines, cites uncertainty
The federal government has halted the issuance of guidelines for the implementation of the new tax laws, citing uncertainty over the final version, Taiwo Oyedele, Chairman, Presidential Tax Reform Committee, has revealed.
He said he had told the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS) and the Joint Revenue Board (JRB) to wait because guidelines on the implementation of tax laws cannot be issued.
Oyedele spoke in Lagos yesterday while responding to questions after delivering a keynote address on the 2026 Economic Outlook organised by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, with the theme ‘ICAN@60: Accountability as the Bedrock for National Development.’
He said concerns over whether the documents currently in circulation represent the final version of the laws prompted him to instruct his team to buy a printed copy of the law from the government’s printer.
He said the feedback from his staff revealed that the National Assembly had taken custody of all printed copies of the tax laws and directed that they should not be sold or made available to the public until lawmakers conclude their review.
Efforts by Daily Trust to get a reaction from the Senate’s spokesman, Senator Yemi Adaramodu (APC, Ekiti South), were unsuccessful as he neither answered several phone calls nor responded to a WhatsApp message seeking his comments on the matter.
Also, calls to the mobile telephone line of the spokesperson of the House of Representatives, Akin Rotimi, did not go through last night.
While acknowledging that legislative review is a normal part of the lawmaking process, Oyedele noted that the restriction on access has reintroduced uncertainty into the tax reform process.
He said: “The Acts Authentication Act says whatever the government printer publishes is the evidence of the law that was passed.
“That government printer published something, which we said is the official version. Lawmakers said it is not what they passed. So, they said they would do their own gazettes.
“They set up their committee, they did their own review, they did their own gazettes. They sent me a copy, soft copy. But that’s not what the Acts Authentication Act says.
“So, I sent my staff, go to the government printer and go and buy. They went there, but as of last week, they said it’s not ready. That they should wait.
“So, I also told everybody, the NRS, JRB, you too wait, because we cannot issue guidelines.
“We are not 100 per cent certain that this is the final official position. I called my staff this (yesterday) morning, I said go back there, follow up every day, go, go there, don’t call them, go and sit down there.
“And I got feedback as I was here that says that… I don’t even know whether I should say this or not because I don’t know what the press will report. But in the interest of accountability and transparency, my staff told me that they said everything that they printed, the National Assembly collected from them and said they shouldn’t sell to anyone; that they want to complete their review. While that is good, it also creates uncertainty again.”
The laws — the National Revenue Service (Establishment) Act, the Joint Revenue Board of Nigeria (Establishment) Act, the Nigeria Tax Administration Act, and the Nigeria Tax Act — which took effect on January 1, had elicited criticisms following alleged alterations to the gazetted laws as against the versions passed by the National Assembly.
At the House of Representatives’ plenary in December, Abdussamad Dasuki (PDP, Sokoto) had raised a matter of privilege, alleging discrepancies between the tax laws passed by the National Assembly and the versions gazetted and made available to the public.
Rising under Order Six, Rule Two of the House Rules, Dasuki said his legislative privilege had been breached, insisting that the content of the gazetted tax laws did not reflect what members debated, voted on, and passed.
He said after spending the past three days to carefully review the gazetted copies alongside the Votes and Proceedings of the House as well as the harmonised version adopted by both chambers, he observed discrepancies.
The House later set up a seven-man committee to investigate the allegations and report within one week, which elapsed on December 25.
The legislature on January 3 released Certified True Copies (CTCs) of the approved versions of the tax laws as earlier passed by both chambers and transmitted for presidential assent.
A comparison of the CTCs to the earlier “altered” gazetted versions showed that the discrepancies had been addressed, with the National Assembly approving the versions it passed and disowning the controversial gazetted copies that had stirred public concern.
Reacting yesterday to the allegations that the tax laws had been altered, Oyedele downplayed the impact of any changes, saying they should not affect the core provisions of the tax laws.
“So, in other words, what I’ll say to you is, the explanation we have provided about the law, because all this issue of they’ve altered, they’ve not altered, it’s not even a lot.
“There are few items that shouldn’t affect the main thing that people need, nothing about the tax rate, about the tax burden, the filing deadline.
“So, but this is the best I can say to you, as we speak,” he said.
Oyedele expressed worry over stiff opposition to the tax reforms, including spread of misinformation aimed at undermining the reforms.
The tax expert said some Nigerians were being paid to protest against the report.
“We’ve seen people who have been paid to protest against this reform.
“You see a group, they gave them N30 million to go and protest. In the process of sharing N30 million, this agreement broke. Some of them went to the media and said, we are not doing it again,” he said.
He narrated how misinformation made Nigerian stocks lose a whopping N4.6trn in a day in November 2025.
“The new tax laws exempt someone who sells up to 150 million Naira a year. Why are people selling 1 million Naira in panic?
The danger of misinformation. That fake news, because it’s fake, it’s not supported by data, led to real losses for people, including some people whose pensions are with PFAs, lost money,” he said.
Speaking on the theme, Oyedele described accountability as a bridge between reform and results.
“Your reforms can be brilliant. I’ve never seen any reform idea in Nigeria that is not brilliant.
“We’re just not very good with execution. And one of the reasons why execution failed is poor accountability,” he said.
He called on Nigerians and professionals to build trust and seek knowledge while demanding accountability.
“When trust rises, reforms are easier, and resistance to reform declines and results are better. Number two, let’s seek knowledge,” he said.
At the panel session, the Director-General of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Dr Chinyere Almona, demanded interagency engagement during the implementation of the tax reform laws in order to produce the desired result.
Almona noted that usually there are conflicts within the policy execution architecture, while calling for the use of technology and a centralized system in monitoring execution of the policies.
Also speaking, the Director-General of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Segun Ajayi-Kadir, called for the policy implementation that brings about inclusive growth “without compromising competitiveness.”
He said contribution of the manufacturing sector to the GDP has not been up to 10 per cent, while lamenting the myriad of challenges confronting the sector.
He also expressed worry over what he called escalation of the unsold inventory, which he puts at N2 trillion across the sector.
Earlier, the chairman in session, Mohammed Hayatudeen, noted that Nigeria was entering 2026 with a delicate but defining moment.
He said after the turbulence of the 2023–2024 reform cycle, the economy had regained stability with inflation moderated, the exchange rate stabilised, and external revenue strengthened.
Despite this, Hayatudeen expressed worry that the poverty rate is still high in the country.
He called for proper implementation of the tax reform laws into “favourable outcomes.”
He said: “This also raises important questions for practitioners and policymakers alike. Will ambition in tax policy be matched by capacity in tax administration and compliance? Laws alone do not raise revenue, capacity does. Systems do and professionals do. How these reforms are executed will test institutions in terms of their durability and efficacy.”
In his welcome remarks, the ICAN President, Mallam Haruna Nma Yahaya, said accountability remains critical to Nigeria’s economic stability and long-term development, as the country navigates ongoing reforms and fragile recovery.
He said the 2026 ICAN Economic Outlook was a deliberate platform to link professional responsibility with national progress.
Yahaya noted that Nigeria’s economy showed signs of stabilisation in 2025, with real GDP growth rising above 4 per cent in the second quarter, driven by improvements in manufacturing, trade, and services.
He added that inflation eased toward the mid-14 percent range by the end of the year, reflecting tighter monetary policy and improved supply conditions, with expectations of further moderation in 2026 if fiscal discipline is sustained.
According to him, external buffers also strengthened as foreign exchange reserves rose to multi-year highs, supported by stronger exports and reforms in the foreign exchange market. He said trade and current-account balances returned to surplus, while private-sector activity improved, with the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) reaching 57.6 points, indicating strong expansion and improved business confidence.
Despite these gains, Yahaya warned that progress remains fragile and could be undermined without discipline, transparency, and strong institutions.
“Accountability is not merely governance ideal; it is an economic imperative,” he said, stressing that weak enforcement of laws, corruption, and poor consequences for misconduct continue to erode public trust and slow economic transformation.
He cited global evidence showing that countries with strong institutions and transparent systems perform better economically than those with weak governance structures.
The ICAN president urged participants to move beyond diagnosis to proposing practical solutions that strengthen institutions and improve governance outcomes.
He expressed optimism that ICAN’s impact in the coming years would surpass its achievements over the past six decades, calling on members and stakeholders to remain committed to accountability as a driver of national development.
Reacting on Wednesday to the allegations that the tax laws had been altered, Oyedele downplayed the impact of any changes, saying they should not affect the core provisions of the tax laws.
“So, in other words, what I’ll say to you is, the explanation we have provided about the law, because all this issue of they’ve altered, they’ve not altered, it’s not even a lot.
“There are few items that shouldn’t affect the main thing that people need, nothing about the tax rate, about the tax burden, the filing deadline.
“So, but this is the best I can say to you, as we speak,” he said.
Oyedele expressed worry over stiff opposition to the tax reforms, including spread of misinformation aimed at undermining the reforms.
The tax expert said some Nigerians were being paid to protest against the report.
“We’ve seen people who have been paid to protest against this reform.
“You see a group, they gave them N30 million to go and protest. In the process of sharing N30 million, this agreement broke. Some of them went to the media and said, we are not doing it again,” he said.
He narrated how misinformation made Nigerian stocks lose a whopping N4.6trn in a day in November 2025.
“The new tax laws exempt someone who sells up to 150 million Naira a year. Why are people selling 1 million Naira in panic? The danger of misinformation. That fake news, because it’s fake, it’s not supported by data, led to real losses for people, including some people whose pensions are with PFAs, lost money,” he said.
Speaking on the theme, Oyedele described accountability as a bridge between reform and results.
“Your reforms can be brilliant. I’ve never seen any reform idea in Nigeria that is not brilliant.
“We’re just not very good with execution. And one of the reasons why execution failed is poor accountability,” he said.
He called on Nigerians and professionals to build trust and seek knowledge while demanding accountability.
“When trust rises, reforms are easier, and resistance to reform declines and results are better. Number two, let’s seek knowledge,” he said.
At the panel session, the Director-General of the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), Dr Chinyere Almona, demanded interagency engagement during the implementation of the tax reform laws in order to produce the desired result.
Almona noted that usually there are conflicts within the policy execution architecture, while calling for the use of technology and a centralized system in monitoring execution of the policies.
Also speaking, the Director-General of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), Segun Ajayi-Kadir, called for the policy implementation that brings about inclusive growth “without compromising competitiveness.”
He said contribution of the manufacturing sector to the GDP has not been up to 10 per cent, while lamenting the myriad of challenges confronting the sector.
He also expressed worry over what he called escalation of the unsold inventory, which he puts at N2 trillion across the sector.
Earlier, the chairman in session, Mohammed Hayatudeen, noted that Nigeria was entering 2026 with a delicate but defining moment.
He said after the turbulence of the 2023–2024 reform cycle, the economy had regained stability with inflation moderated, the exchange rate stabilised, and external revenue strengthened.
Despite this, Hayatudeen expressed worry that the poverty rate is still high in the country.
He called for proper implementation of the tax reform laws into “favourable outcomes.”
He said: “This also raises important questions for practitioners and policymakers alike. Will ambition in tax policy be matched by capacity in tax administration and compliance? Laws alone do not raise revenue, capacity does. Systems do and professionals do. How these reforms are executed will test institutions in terms of their durability and efficacy.”
Accountability critical to economic stability – ICAN President
In his welcome remarks, the ICAN President, Mallam Haruna Nma Yahaya, said accountability remains critical to Nigeria’s economic stability and long-term development, as the country navigates ongoing reforms and fragile recovery.
He said the 2026 ICAN Economic Outlook was a deliberate platform to link professional responsibility with national progress.
Yahaya noted that Nigeria’s economy showed signs of stabilisation in 2025, with real GDP growth rising above 4 per cent in the second quarter, driven by improvements in manufacturing, trade, and services.
He added that inflation eased toward the mid-14 percent range by the end of the year, reflecting tighter monetary policy and improved supply conditions, with expectations of further moderation in 2026 if fiscal discipline is sustained.
According to him, external buffers also strengthened as foreign exchange reserves rose to multi-year highs, supported by stronger exports and reforms in the foreign exchange market. He said trade and current-account balances returned to surplus, while private-sector activity improved, with the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) reaching 57.6 points, indicating strong expansion and improved business confidence.
Despite these gains, Yahaya warned that progress remains fragile and could be undermined without discipline, transparency, and strong institutions.
“Accountability is not merely governance ideal; it is an economic imperative,” he said, stressing that weak enforcement of laws, corruption, and poor consequences for misconduct continue to erode public trust and slow economic transformation.
He cited global evidence showing that countries with strong institutions and transparent systems perform better economically than those with weak governance structures.
The ICAN president urged participants to move beyond diagnosis to proposing practical solutions that strengthen institutions and improve governance outcomes.
He expressed optimism that ICAN’s impact in the coming years would surpass its achievements over the past six decades, calling on members and stakeholders to remain committed to accountability as a driver of national development.
News
Tottenham fires head coach, Thomas Frank as club edges close to relegation
Tottenham Hotspur have parted ways with manager Thomas Frank after a disappointing run of results left the club hovering just five points above the relegation zone.
Frank’s departure comes after Tuesday’s 2-1 home defeat to Newcastle United, which saw the team slide to 16th place in the Premier League table with 29 points from 26 matches.
The decision to sack Frank was made due to the team’s poor performance, which saw them win just twice in their last 17 league games.
Despite being given time and support since his appointment in June 2025, Frank struggled to replicate his success at Brentford, where he consistently over-performed with limited resources.
Recall that Frank was appointed as the new Tottenham head coach in June 2025, succeeding Ange Postecoglou, who was sacked despite winning the Europa League.
Frank’s tenure was marked by inconsistent results and setbacks, including a notable incident where he was seen drinking from a coffee cup bearing the badge of rivals Arsenal.
Frank won just 13 of his 38 games in charge, with a Premier League win percentage of 26.9%, the lowest of any Tottenham manager in the Premier League era.
The team’s fans had been vocal about their discontent with Frank, booing him and chanting for his sacking during Tuesday’s defeat.
The club thanked Frank for his contribution and wished him well in the future.
With Frank’s departure, Tottenham are now searching for itheir sixth permanent manager in seven years, with potential candidates including Roberto De Zerbi, who recently left Marseille.
The team faces a tough challenge in the coming weeks, including a Premier League match against Arsenal on February 22.
News
Primate Ayodele, set to commission Mosque on Saturday
The Leader of INRI Evangelical Spiritual Church, Primate Elijah Ayodele, has concluded plans to commission a mosque, which he single-handedly built, on Saturday, February 14, 2026.
The commissioning will also commemorate his 21-day annual thanksgiving programme, which began in January and will end on Sunday, February 15, 2026.
The mosque building, which the prophet announced plans for last year, is the first of its kind, as there has never been a prominent Christian leader reported to have built a mosque before now.
According to Primate Ayodele, his decision to build the mosque is not because he wants to change his religion, but rather a representation of a direction given to him by God many years ago.
He explained that his church has been home to Muslim faithful, and at different times, he has been invited to preach at Muslim gatherings. Therefore, building a mosque was not difficult, especially after receiving divine direction regarding it.
“My decision to build a mosque is not because I want to become a Muslim, but a direct representation of what God told me to do. I have Muslims attending my church, I attend Muslim programmes to preach when I am called upon, and I have several Muslim friends, so following the God-given instruction was not too hard for me.”
Primate Ayodele also noted that building a mosque as a Christian cleric sends a message of religious tolerance across the globe and further showcases his love for humanity, regardless of differences.
“Beyond being a divine instruction, this is a message of religious tolerance across the globe. If we can resolve the issue of religion in the world, it would definitely be a better place for all of us. I love everyone, regardless of their religion or tribe, and building a mosque further showcases that. God created everyone equally; we should not celebrate things that further divide us.”
Speaking on the operations of the mosque, Primate Ayodele explained that he would be handing it over to the Islamic community without any form of interference in its administration.
“By God’s grace, the mosque will be named after the late mother of President Tinubu, and we will be handing over its operations to the Islamic community without any interference.”
It is worth noting that Primate Ayodele has both privately and publicly supported other churches, especially financially. He has donated funds for church buildings, empowered individuals who are not members of his church, and raised funds for churches other than his own.
News
Scary: CRS records 1,459 cases in five years
Cross River State recorded 1,459 cancer cases between 2018 and 2022, with women accounting for over two-thirds of the total, data from the Calabar Cancer Registry have shown.
Director of the Registry, Prof. Ima-Obong Ekanem, disclosed this at a two-day capacity workshop for Cancer Registrars held at the University of Calabar Teaching Hospital, UCTH.
The training was organised by the National Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment, NICRAT, in collaboration with Linkwell Dynamic Concept.
Of the total cases, 984 (67.4 per cent) were females and 475 (32.6 per cent) males, giving a male-to-female ratio of 1:2. An average of 292 cases was recorded annually — a 51 per cent rise compared to 2009–2013.
Ekanem, also Chief Consultant Pathologist at UCTH, said the report covered only three of the state’s 18 local government areas and excluded benign tumours, in line with global standards.
Among men, prostate cancer led with 149 cases (33.4 per cent), followed by lymphoma, colorectal, breast, mouth and pharynx, larynx, lung, bladder, leukaemia and thyroid cancers.
For women, breast cancer topped the chart with 397 cases (40.3 per cent), followed by cervical cancer with 170 (17.3 per cent). Ovarian, uterine, colorectal and lymphoma cases were also recorded.
In children, 90 cases were documented, with retinoblastoma and lymphoma the most frequent.
Ekanem said over one-third of cancers are preventable through reduced exposure to risk factors and vaccination against Hepatitis B and Human Papilloma Virus, which are linked to liver and cervical cancers.
She urged healthy diets, regular exercise, avoidance of tobacco and excessive alcohol, and reduced sugar and salt intake. She also cautioned against harmful practices such as skin bleaching.
Men above 40, she advised, should undergo annual prostate checks, while women should carry out monthly breast self-examinations and periodic Pap smear and HPV DNA tests.
She noted that screening services remain unaffordable for many, stressing the need for a stronger health system to guarantee access to diagnosis and treatment.
Ekanem cited funding and logistics gaps as major challenges facing the registry and called for support.
NICRAT Director-General, Prof. Usman Malami Aliyu, represented by Bashir Mustapha, said accurate cancer data are vital for planning, budgeting and effective control programmes nationwide.
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