@faveda12@gmltony She calls herself a Feminist.
This are the issues. They will make this outrageous takes while calling themselves feminists. And everyone will say this is how feminists are
Nigeria’s ₦400 Billion Turned 'N3trillion' Airtime Lending Crisis: Here's What Is Really Going On.
How did a consumer protection issue suddenly morph into a high-stakes geopolitical public relations war?
Let’s break down the regulator’s shifting game plan and bust the massive myths.👇🏽
The Backstory
In 2025, the FCCPC introduced the DEON Regulations to stop predatory digital loan apps. But then they did something odd: they applied the same heavy rules to telecom airtime borrowing. Airtime advances share zero traits with predatory cash-lending apps.
The Collateral Damage
In April 2026, telcos suspended airtime lending under regulatory pressure, leaving 40 million Nigerians—mostly low-income traders and artisans—without an emergency lifeline. Industry association WASPAN took the FCCPC to court.
The Legal
On April 15, Justice Ambrose Lewis-Allagoa issued an injunction halting FCCPC's enforcement. When the FCCPC didn't comply, WASPAN filed committal proceedings against FCCPC Executive Vice Chairman Tunji Bello on May 18. Facing prison for contempt, the FCCPC backed down and suspended the rules on May 22.
The Service Return
Following the suspension, Airtel and Glo quickly restored their "Borrow Me Credit" services on May 25. MTN, however, delayed its restoration, seeking absolute legal clarity in a highly volatile regulatory climate.
The Shifting Game Plan
Losing in court, the FCCPC shifted its narrative. On Saturday, June 6, near-identical articles hit 7 national news outlets. The consumer protection angle was gone. Instead, anonymous sources claimed they were fighting a "₦3 trillion foreign monopoly".
Myth Buster #1: The ₦3 Trillion "Capital Flight"
The press briefings claimed South African-listed Optasia was siphoning ₦3 trillion annually in profits.
The Reality: The entire Nigerian airtime credit market is valued at only ₦300B to ₦400B annually. You cannot siphon ₦3 trillion from a ₦400 billion market!
Myth Buster #2: The "Foreign Monopoly"
The FCCPC claimed Optasia (Nairtime) holds a complete, 12-year monopoly.
The Reality: Optasia holds no exclusive service license. The market is structurally multi-vendor. Fully Nigerian-owned Creditswitch (founded in 2013 by Tayo Adigun) has operated at scale for over a decade alongside Fonyou, ERL, and Avyra.
Myth Buster #3: The "Faceless Foreign Shell"
Media reports alleged Optasia has no local operations, staff, or infrastructure.
The Reality: Local subsidiary Nairtime Nigeria was incorporated 14 years ago. It is staffed by Nigerians, runs on local tech, and is led by Nigerian CEO/CCO Uchenna Agbo, a founding executive.
The Threads Double-Track Paradox
Hours after the explosive 6 June articles, the FCCPC posted a denial on its official Threads account. They claimed they didn't authorize the leaks or brief journalists.
The catch? That Threads post got only 28 views, while the sensationalized ₦3T monopoly stories reached millions.
Why the Double-Track?
The formal denial gave the FCCPC legal deniability to avoid being jailed for contempt. Meanwhile, the unretracted ₦3T monopoly narrative ran wild in the press to pressure the courts and telcos before the crucial July 20 court judgment.
The Takeaway
When regulatory agencies use strategic PR to bypass court orders, they threaten the rule of law and market stability. On July 20, the Federal High Court will decide who actually regulates this space. Nigeria’s tech economy needs rules, not rhetoric.
@Veltrixspace@annabella9794@Gidi_Traffic I have seen accounts with 7 Million followers struggle with visibility issues too, they say it’s the new algorithm it doesn’t favour bigger accounts rn
@Nonytenderheart Sochi sounds like she has so many patriarchal wounds, she needs to heal.
Women aren’t pick-mes because they don’t agree with your views.
‘Pick-me’ is a sexist term.