A safety officer with the Federal Road Safety Corps Supervising the production of National Drivers Licence.
A core adherence to PROCESS
INTEGRITY personified
HERITAGE 👑👶🏾: Igbo Ora, the Twin Capital of the World, Honours the Sacred Yoruba Legacy of Ìbejì
The Iya Ibeji statue in Igbo Ora, Oyo State, stands in honour of the revered custodian of Ìbejì, one of the most treasured traditions in Yoruba civilisation. Recognised as the Twin Capital of the World, Igbo Ora remains a proud guardian of this enduring heritage, where the birth of twins is celebrated as a divine blessing and a defining symbol of Yoruba cultural identity. The monument reflects the town's steadfast commitment to preserving and promoting this sacred legacy for generations to come.
Not every financial institution will survive.
The CBN has revoked the licences of 46 microfinance banks for failing to meet regulatory requirements.
Before you deposit your hard-earned money anywhere, do your homework.
Good returns mean nothing if your capital isn't protected.
Fuel markets are complex, but commercial logic is often simple.
Recent claims have suggested that products produced locally are exported to neighbouring countries and then re-imported into Nigeria. Before accepting such claims, it is worth asking a few important questions:
• Does it make commercial sense to incur additional shipping, storage, financing and handling costs only for a product to return and compete in its largest and closest market?
• Who benefits financially from such a transaction?
• Where is the value created along the chain?
Nigeria remains one of the largest fuel markets in Africa, and domestic demand remains the priority. Exports occur only for volumes not purchased by domestic marketers.
As with any market discussion, facts, economics, and commercial realities matter.
Swipe through to understand the commercial logic behind the conversation.
#DangoteRefinery #EnergySecurity #DomesticRefining #FuelMarkets #NigeriaEnergy #Industrialisation #MadeInNigeria
Written by @MatAshimolowo .official
WE WILL NOT BE SILENT
A Celebration of Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye
There comes a time when silence becomes ingratitude.
There comes a time when honour becomes a sacred duty.
There comes a time when sons and daughters must rise to celebrate the gifts that God has given to a generation.
This is such a time.
We refuse to be silent while men and women of eternal significance are reduced to headlines, controversies, and social media trends.
We refuse to stand by while those who have sacrificed decades in service to God and humanity are casually criticized by people who have built nothing, fathered nobody, planted no churches, and transformed no nations.
The sons and daughters of prophets must never be silent while cheap publicity seekers use great men as instruments for attention.
A generation that does not honour its fathers has no future.
A people who cannot recognize greatness in their midst will eventually suffer the tragedy of its absence.
Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye is not merely a church leader.
He is not merely a denomination head.
He is not merely a respected minister.
He is one of the most significant Christian leaders of our generation and one of the greatest spiritual gifts God has given to Africa and the global Church.
We should never allow a man who chose humility to become the chewing stick of the uninformed.
We should never permit the noise of critics to drown out the voice of history.
We should never watch while modern-day Sauls seek to intimidate, discredit, or silence God's servants.
Scripture records how King Saul pursued David.
Scripture records how Doeg the Edomite became an instrument of destruction against the priests of God.
Throughout history, political power has often sought to suppress prophetic voices.
Yet God has always preserved His servants and vindicated His purpose.
The Church must never become indifferent when its fathers are unfairly attacked.
Nor should we wait until our prophets cross into eternity before we begin to celebrate them.
Too often, flowers are sent to funerals when they should have been delivered while the recipient was still alive.
Medical people, I have a question. Don’t be angry please
When taking blood for tests, why must you look for veins? If you chook the needle anywhere, blood will definitely come out. Why must you look for a vein?
A little girl in Boston went home one day and asked her Nigerian mother if she could change her name to Zoe.
Nobody at school could say Uzoamaka.
Her mother was cooking. She didn't even turn around.
"If they can learn to say Tchaikovsky, Michelangelo, and Dostoyevsky, they can learn to say Uzoamaka."
That girl kept her name.
Then she went to Hollywood and won three Emmy Awards.
And now the whole world knows exactly how to say Uzoamaka Aduba.
Your name is not a burden. It's a prophecy.
SWDC Secures Rail Operations Licence
The South West Development Commission has obtained a provisional rail operating licence from the NRC. This development, which builds on the extensive rail master planning work pioneered by the DAWN Commission, marks a decisive shift from vision to implementation.
Read the full article here: https://t.co/fOiLQQ7Mno
@swdc
@elonmusk@Starlink Can you do something about this issue so as to save the populace not only in Nigeria but everywhere terrorists may be using your device ?
Over 400 Starlink devices used by Boko Haram and ISWAP insurgents have been intercepted and seized by troops.
400! It makes you wonder how insurgents are getting a stable internet connection. Well, there you have it.
Dear @channelstv@ARISEtv@tvcnewsng@NTANewsNow, please when next you go for a media briefing with FCT Minister @GovWike, kindly ask him about the following:
1. Cows taking over roads, now including highways, in Abuja
2. Waste collection and mountains of refuse in various parts of town
3. Swarms of young children, who should be in school, begging at traffic lights and junctions under the supervision of adults sitting under nearby trees.
4. The pandemic of driving “one-way” against traffic.
5. Aggressive street traders, especially the ones selling windscreen wiper blades, who insist on putting their hands on your windscreen.
6. All commercial vehicles, including Keke, that believe that traffic lights don’t apply to them.
Others may have other things to add but it would be good to get answers to these first.
Thank you.
Most Nigerian investors are putting money into companies they cannot read.
Not because they are not smart. Because nobody taught them how financial statements work.
This thread fixes that. Save it before you invest another kobo.
.@SecDuffy: 53% of Commercial Driver's Licenses issued to foreigners in New York were issued illegally.
We gave them FOUR MONTHS to comply with the law. They refused, so we had no choice but to pull funding — and if they still refuse, we can pull their ability to issue CDLs.
The promotion exercise saw a total of 120 senior officers elevated across different cadres, including 19 Assistant Corps Marshals, 55 Corps Commanders, and 46 Deputy Corps Commanders, aimed at strengthening leadership capacity and enhancing operational efficiency within the Corps
The decoration ceremony, which formally confers the new ranks on the officers, is in line with established protocol, as promoted personnel are required to be decorated before adorning their new ranks.
The Corps Marshal of the Federal Road Safety Corps, Shehu Mohammed, recently decorated 19 newly promoted Assistant Corps Marshals alongside Corps Commanders, following their elevation as part of the Corps’ 2026 promotion exercise.