A former chairman of one of the top banks, who is a silent follower here, and we have never physically met, was on the phone with my family till midnight on the night I was being dragged here, trying to intervene.
Two months later, his company offtook one of our projects for almost half a billion Naira.
I also randomly retweeted a sick baby's fundraising. He came to my DM, asked whether I confirmed the case, asked for the hospital account and sent N10m, the entire hospital bill, for the baby's surgery.
May almighty Allah continue to bless him.
We have never met in person but he is such a kind person.
Our paths crossed on Twitter.
Rotimi obasanjo, a House of Representatives aspirant on the NDC platform, has alleged fraud during the party's primaries in Lagos State, citing concerns over the counting process and the handling of results.
Lol π
PRESS RELEASE
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Abuja, 9 June 2026
The Federal Government welcomes the publication of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) 2026 Article IV Mission Concluding Statement on Nigeria and notes its overall positive assessment of the country's economic reform programme. The report provides further independent validation that the bold and necessary reforms undertaken under the leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, are strengthening macroeconomic stability, restoring confidence, and laying the foundation for sustainable and inclusive growth.
The IMF observed that reforms implemented over the past two and a half years have yielded improved macroeconomic outcomes and enhanced Nigeria's resilience to external shocks. The Fund specifically highlighted improvements in foreign exchange market functioning, stronger external buffers, ongoing fiscal and revenue reforms, banking sector resilience, and growing macroeconomic stability. These developments affirm that Nigeria is moving in the right direction and is better positioned to withstand global economic uncertainties than at any time in recent years.
The Government is particularly encouraged by the IMF's recognition that the difficult but necessary decisions to end fuel subsidies, eliminate deficit monetisation, liberalise the foreign exchange market, and strengthen fiscal discipline have contributed significantly to reducing vulnerabilities and rebuilding confidence in the economy. The report notes that Nigeria now faces global shocks with stronger policy frameworks and buffers than before.
The recent conflict in the Middle East has created new challenges for economies around the world through higher energy prices, rising food costs, tighter financial conditions, and disruptions to global supply chains. While these developments present inflationary pressures, the IMF acknowledged that Nigeria has demonstrated notable resilience. Despite significant increases in global energy prices, the foreign exchange parallel market premium has remained below five percent, sovereign spreads have remained broadly stable, and investor confidence has been preserved.
The IMF further noted that Nigeria is well positioned to benefit from higher energy prices through stronger export earnings, improved fiscal revenues, and increased foreign exchange inflows.
The Federal Government remains focused on translating these opportunities into long-term gains by increasing crude oil production, expanding domestic refining capacity, growing gas production and exports, and attracting new investments across the energy value chain.
The Government acknowledges the IMF's observation that poverty and food insecurity remain significant challenges. While progress is being made in terms of per capita income growing by nearly 10 percent in 2025 indicating marked reduction in poverty levels, we are mindful that macroeconomic stability, while necessary, is not sufficient on its own. Economic growth must be inclusive and must translate into tangible improvements in the welfare of Nigerians.
Accordingly, the Government continues to strengthen targeted social protection programmes, including direct cash transfers to vulnerable households, support for small businesses, student financing through the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND), consumer credit initiatives, healthcare investments, and interventions aimed at improving livelihoods and expanding economic opportunities.
In agriculture, the Government is scaling up investments through the Renewed Hope National Agricultural Mechanisation Programme and other initiatives designed to improve productivity, expand irrigation and dry-season farming, enhance access to inputs and financing, strengthen value chains, and improve food security. These efforts are aimed at moderating food inflation while creating jobs and raising rural incomes.
The Federal Government also welcomes the IMF's recognition of the progress being made in domestic revenue mobilisation and public financial management reforms. The successful implementation of Nigeria's new tax laws, the digitisation of revenue collection processes, improved transparency in public finance, and enhanced accountability mechanisms will continue to strengthen fiscal sustainability while ensuring a fairer and more efficient tax system.
We note the IMF's recommendations regarding fiscal reporting, budget transparency, and data reconciliation. The Government is already taking steps to strengthen fiscal data integrity, improve coordination among relevant institutions, enhance transparency in budget execution, and deepen public financial management reforms. Efforts are ongoing to improve fiscal reporting systems and ensure that economic and fiscal statistics continue to meet the highest international standards.
The report's medium-term outlook reinforces confidence in Nigeria's economic prospects. The IMF projects continued economic growth above four percent, improving external reserves, rising investment, and strengthening fiscal revenues over the medium term. Public debt has already declined relative to GDP, while reserve buffers have strengthened considerably. These outcomes which complement recent sovereign credit rating upgrades by leading international rating agencies reflect the growing resilience of the Nigerian economy and the positive impact of ongoing reforms.
The Federal Government remains firmly committed to maintaining macroeconomic stability, accelerating inclusive growth, strengthening fiscal discipline, deepening structural reforms, improving the investment climate, expanding infrastructure, enhancing human capital development and job creation. We will continue to pursue policies that support private sector growth, attract domestic and foreign investment, and improve the competitiveness of the Nigerian economy.
While challenges remain, the direction is clear and the foundations are stronger. The ultimate objective of these reforms is not merely improved economic indicators, but better outcomes for every Nigerian - lower inflation, decent jobs, higher incomes, greater economic opportunity, and a better quality of life.
πππ’π°π¨ ππ²ππππ₯π
Honourable Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy
Federal Republic of Nigeria
When we are all ready, the real conversation about separation will happen and everyone will deal with their mess and issues. Till then Lord have mercy π. Na real God hand we dey
You just committed another offenseπ
According to Shariah law a Muslim cannot stop being a Muslimππ it's a serious crime, punishable by death. Iku pa e πππ
Nigeriaβs total merchandise trade stood at N34,788.59 billion in Q1 2026.
Total exports in Q1 2026 were valued at β¦21,169.27 billion, reflecting a 2.77%
increase compared with β¦20,598.48 billion in the corresponding quarter of 2025, and an 11.63% increase compared with β¦18,963.41 billion in Q4 2025.
The value of total imports stood at β¦13,619.33billion in the first quarter of 2026, representing a 18.17% decrease from the value recorded in the corresponding quarter of 2025 (β¦16,644.42billion) and a 21.05% decrease compared to the value recorded in Q4 2025 (β¦17,250.93 billion).
Read the Q1 2026 Foreign Trade Statistics Report here: https://t.co/frBNhg0uaV
If you are flying through Lagos MMIA, budget one extra hour for your airport protocol. The old terminal has been shut down completely. The airlines that used to process passengers there now do so at a makeshift terminal. The new terminal continues to operate as usual.
I probably missed this information, because I had to find out the hard way. Donβt be like me. Know this now.
As we get closer to the elections, you will start reading statements you should have read years ago. This wasnβt a thing in the last election because they didnβt care for northern Muslim votes then.
Birthday messages that were never a thing will start flying up and down. When you see these signs, thatβs how you know the wonders of elections are nearby.
All of a sudden they care about stereotyping crime. These hypocrisy are so easy to spot, even without trying.