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Egwim highlights role of strategic procurement in driving down costs as Farrell advises against misaligned communication
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Immediate past Director General of Bureau of Public Procurement and price intelligence in Imo State, Chief Paschal Egwim said it was the role of strategic procurement to strike the crucial balance between short term cost savings and long-term delivery objectives of businesses, and pointed out that Chief Financial Officers and Chief Executive Officers would always have their eyes on driving down costs.
This was one of the perspectives offered by Egwim in his keynote at the high-impact educational symposium organised by the Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply (CIPS) with the theme: “Driving Value and Sustainability in Resource-Limited Settings via Strategic Procurement” held on Tuesday in Abuja.
He noted that focus should not just be on short term cost savings but also “on strategic cost organisations, cost avoidance, minimising cost drivers and increasing value drivers along the value chains, ultimately increasing value for money in all commercial dealings through the application of risk analysis and mitigation tools, spend analysis tools. Category management, contractor and supplier value analysis and positioning.”
Egwim told the quality audience of procurement professional that strategic procurement must also increase focus on building strong standards, systems, processes, technology and innovations that “provide solutions to emerging challenges like corruption and procurement fraud risks at every stage in the procurement value chain as well as the entire project life cycle.”
He maintained that the introduction of compliance monitoring and other corruption prevention tools (e-Procurement) rather than detection, as well as ensuring the development and use of regulatory governance controls and assurance frameworks, would guarantee the integrity of actions along the value chains and ensure increased shareholders or stakeholders value.
He stated that the objectives of strategic procurement could therefore be achieved not by one single discipline acting alone in a silo but by a multi discipline group working as a coherent team involving all the critical stakeholders to achieve overall business delivery objectives.
Egwim said that strategic procurement must pay attention to the character, personal integrity and antecedents of people hired into the procurement or supply chain organizations by synergizing with Human Resources (department) to conduct proper background checks on people before recruitment into the department.
In his presentation at the symposium, entitled ‘the Stars have aligned. Now is the moment,” Chief Executive Officer of CIPS, Ben Farrell, MBE, stated clearly that “strategy sets direction while narrative shapes belief, which drives execution,” and pointed out that “when the narrative is not aligned and the team hears one thing, feels another, and believes something else, execution doe not just slow down, it fractures.”
Farrell significantly warned against misaligned communication in procurement process. According to him, “misaligned communication breeds doubt, confusion, and disagreement; and in moments of pressure, people don’t fall back on talking points; they fall back on the last thing that felt right to them.”
He said that procurement discipline was growing steadily, disclosing that 13 million people were now in procurement and supply globally and that the turf was growing annually.
In his welcome address, the Northern Coordinator of CIPS, Nigerian Branch, Ambassador Daniel Etameta, said that strategic procurement must be the lens through which “we respond—by building adaptable, ethical, and data-driven supply systems that support resilience and sustainability.”
According to him,“Here in Nigeria, we are undergoing a reform-driven transition. We are seeing a recalibration of our monetary and fiscal policies. We are facing deep challenges—yes—but also immense opportunity. To rebuild trust, enhance transparency, innovate within our constraints, and ensure every naira and every dollar drives real impact.
“And so, today’s gathering matters. These constraints are not barriers; they are catalysts. They should compel us to think creatively, act decisively, and build systems that are resilient by design.”
Etameta took the opportunity of the symposium to extend the CIPS’s appreciation to Dr. Adebowale Adedokun, Director General of the Bureau of Public Procurement, whose visionary leadership, he said, “continues to elevate the strategic relevance of procurement and supply in Nigeria’s development agenda.
“We equally acknowledge the invaluable contributions of our colleagues in the BPP, other ministries and government agencies, private sector leaders, non-governmental organizations, and institutional partners for making today’s event a success.
“Now colleagues, let me be clear: Procurement is no longer a back-office function. It is the engine of service delivery, the guardian of institutional trust and the architect of operational resilience.”
News
Certified True Copy of court judgment ordering NDC deregistration emerges (Photos)
The Certified True Copy (CTC) of the Federal High Court judgment ordering the deregistration of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) has emerged.
The ruling, delivered by Justice Isa H. Dashen of the Federal High Court, Lokoja Judicial Division, set aside the court’s earlier judgment of December 10, 2025, which had directed the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to register the NDC as a political party.
According to the judgment, the earlier decision was nullified because it affected the legal rights of the Peace Movement Party (PMP), which claimed ownership of the logo used by the NDC but was not joined as a party in the original suit.
Following the ruling, INEC is expected to remove the NDC from its list of recognised political parties.
However, the commission has maintained that it will act only after reviewing the Certified True Copy of the judgment.
INEC National Commissioner and Chairman of the Information and Voter Education Committee, Mohammed Kudu Haruna, said the commission had applied for the court document before taking any decision.
> “We have applied for the Certified True Copy of the judgment. Until we receive it, we cannot be in a position to comment on it. However, the position that existed before the December 10, 2025 judgment was that INEC rejected NDC’s letter of intent to be registered as a political party,” Haruna said.
The development comes as the NDC continues to face challenges ahead of the 2027 general elections.
The party has alleged that it was denied the portal access code required to upload the names of its candidates to INEC’s nomination portal, a situation it says threatens the political aspirations of its presidential candidate, Peter Obi, vice-presidential candidate Rabiu Kwankwaso, and other party candidates.
INEC recently shifted the release of portal access codes from June 26 to Monday, June 29, to streamline submissions by eligible political parties.
Under the commission’s timetable, presidential and National Assembly candidates are expected to upload their nomination forms between June 27 and July 11, 2026, while governorship and state assembly candidates have from July 18 to August 8, 2026.
Confirming the denial of access, the NDC’s National Publicity Secretary, Osa Director, said the party’s request for the upload credentials was unsuccessful.


“We approached INEC to collect the access code to upload the names of our candidates to the INEC portal. They told us that they will get back to us,” he said.
Director added that the party would return to the commission while pursuing legal action to halt the implementation of the court judgment.
“We will go back there by tomorrow. I believe by tomorrow we must have filed a stay of execution in court,” he said.
Full Judgement:















News
Bandit kingpin’s leaked audio threatens attacks in Katsina unless demands are fulfilled
A leaked audio recording allegedly featuring notorious bandit leader Kachalla Muhammadu (also known as Kachalla Maha or Muhammadu Kachalla), has sparked widespread alarm in Katsina State. In the Hausa-language recording circulating on social media, the bandit commander issues dire threats of coordinated mass attacks on civilians, infrastructure, and elites if his demands are not fulfilled.
According to summaries and excerpts shared widely on X and local media, Kachalla Muhammadu demands:
The immediate release of two of his arrested associates.
The return of seized cattle.
He warns that failure to meet these conditions by a reported deadline (as recent as June 29 in some accounts) will trigger:
Deadly attacks on civilians and farms in Matazu and surrounding areas.
Strikes on Jikamshi town.
Attacks on villages in Kano State.
Destruction of the strategic Karaduwa Bridge.
Broader disruption of farming activities and potential targeting of prominent individuals (elites).
The bandit leader also boasts of having informants within the security forces who allegedly tip him off about impending operations, including high-level strategies. He claims involvement in recent incidents and disputes official accounts surrounding the death of retired Major General Rabe Abubakar (also referred to as General Rabe), who was abducted along with his wife. Kachalla allegedly links the general’s death to a snake bite in captivity rather than other reported causes and accuses locals of betrayal.
Kachalla Muhammadu has been linked to a series of violent activities in the Matazu-Musawa axis of Katsina State, including cattle rustling, kidnappings, and attacks on communities. He was reportedly once part of a government-backed peace initiative but has since resumed operations amid disputes over arrests and seizures during military actions.
The abduction of retired Maj. Gen. Rabe Abubakar and his wife drew significant attention, with the general later dying in captivity. Security forces have conducted operations in the area, rescuing some hostages and arresting alleged associates of the bandit leader, but Kachalla Maha remains at large.
https://x.com/abdool_moh/status/2071175115010654540?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
The audio has fueled outrage and fear among residents, with many expressing concerns over alleged infiltration of security networks and the boldness of bandit groups. Local officials, including the Matazu Local Government Chairman, have reportedly engaged in negotiations with the bandit leader in previous leaked communications.
Authorities have not yet issued an official response to the latest audio as of the latest reports. Security operations continue in the region, with troops targeting bandit hideouts.Note: Details stem from unverified circulating audio and social media reports. Official confirmation and independent verification are ongoing. Residents in affected areas are advised to remain vigilant.
News
Don’t Speak For Victims, We Need Help’ – Christians Reject Trump’s Claim Of Ending Killings In Nigeria.
The Christian Association of Nigeria in the 19 northern states and the Federal Capital Territory, alongside the Ecumenical Synods of Bishops, Archbishops, Apostles and Senior Clergy, has flatly rejected United States President Donald Trump’s assertion that American military intervention has ended the killing of Christians in Nigeria, describing the claim as dangerously misleading and detached from reality.
Trump had declared during a Washington event on Friday that recent US military action in Nigeria largely halted attacks on Christian communities and significantly weakened those responsible for the violence.
“As you know, we recently struck Nigeria and largely ended the slaughter of great Christian populations,” the US President told his audience.
But responding with palpable frustration, Chairman of CAN in the 19 northern states and the FCT, Rev. Joseph Hayab, insisted that only victims of insecurity—not the American president—could assess whether any meaningful improvement had occurred.
“The right people who should tell whether Trump has succeeded should be Nigerian Christians or Northern Christians, not Trump himself. But probably he is getting his information from the wrong source,” Hayab told Sunday PUNCH.
“Trump should allow the victims to make that confession, not him. The victims are the right people who can tell whether whatever he has done has yielded any success.”
While acknowledging that the United States had carried out operations against terrorist elements, Hayab maintained that the intervention had not stopped the daily bloodshed.
“The strategy Trump’s America is adopting is not good enough because after the US forces struck in Sokoto last December, they went on a long recess. They came recently again and killed some ISIS commanders, but people are still being killed here every day,” he stated.
The CAN chairman issued a direct appeal: “We want help, but the help shouldn’t be propaganda. It should be genuine help, not propaganda or misinformation.”
He challenged the White House narrative by pointing to ongoing abductions across multiple states.
“All those people who are still in bandits’ captivity in Oyo, Kwara and Kogi, what has happened? People are still in Kwara, Katsina, Borno and other states. Trump and his men can find a better story.”
In a separate reaction, the Ecumenical Synods of Bishops, Archbishops, Apostles and Senior Clergy said there was no convincing evidence that the reported US intervention had achieved the results Trump claimed.
International Secretary of the body, Archbishop Osazee William, did not mince words.
“I don’t seem to agree with him because, in the first place, I have yet to see evidence of that claim. I think there was a kind of warning strike in Sokoto, but I didn’t see any visible killing. This is not the kind of intervention we were hoping and looking forward to. We are looking at a good intervention,” he said.
William also expressed deep concern over reports of possible behind-the-scenes negotiations that may be shaping the US position on Nigeria’s security challenges.
While acknowledging that a symbolic message may have been sent through the reported operation, the bishops insisted it had not addressed the country’s escalating security crisis.
The Christian leaders jointly called for sustained, transparent collaboration between Nigerian authorities and international partners to tackle insecurity, protect vulnerable communities, and restore lasting peace—not score political points through “propaganda.”
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