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The Nigerian Air Force carried out precision strikes on ISWAP positions on Saturday, focusing on the long-abandoned Jill...
13/04/2026

The Nigerian Air Force carried out precision strikes on ISWAP positions on Saturday, focusing on the long-abandoned Jilli market in Borno State, which had reportedly been repurposed by the group as an operational base. Given the circumstances, anyone frequenting that location must confront the possibility that they were either unknowingly enabling ISWAP’s activities or directly participating in its economic network.

Like many terrorist groups pursuing territorial control, ISWAP operates through a structured system that combines governance, military operations, and commercial activity. As such, efforts by the state to dismantle these networks cannot be selective—every component becomes a viable target. Credible intelligence has consistently identified Jilli market as a hub for logistics, coordination, and planning. Acknowledgment is due to voices like Governor Babagana Zulum and General T.Y. Buratai for providing important context and helping to correct the narrative that civilians were the intended targets.

NASENI: Driving Nigeria’s Electric TurnFor decades, Nigeria’s industrial ambition has been loud in rhetoric and thin in ...
02/02/2026

NASENI: Driving Nigeria’s Electric Turn

For decades, Nigeria’s industrial ambition has been loud in rhetoric and thin in ex*****on. Too often, government-owned agencies have spoken the language of innovation without delivering products that touch everyday life. That is why the sight of a made-in-Nigeria electric sedan and pick-up truck—designed, assembled and test-driven by the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure (NASENI)—feels quietly momentous.

The reaction of one test driver, Ezinne, a banker encountering an electric vehicle for the first time, was telling. For her, she was simply surprised—by the smoothness, the silence, and the refinement of the ride. That sense of surprise matters. It is the first crack in Nigeria’s long-held scepticism that locally driven industrial projects can meet global standards.

Mind you, Electric Vehiclesp (EVs) are no longer futuristic curiosities. In much of Asia—China most conspicuously, but also parts of Southeast Asia—they now account for a substantial share of new vehicle sales. Governments there did not wait for perfect conditions. They aligned industrial policy, climate objectives and urban transport needs, and then backed domestic manufacturers with incentives, infrastructure and regulatory clarity. Nigeria is late to this party, but not locked out.

NASENI’s entry into electric vehicle manufacturing is therefore significant not merely because it is novel, but because it is strategic. Let me explain: Urban mobility in Nigeria is at a breaking point. Cities are congested, fuel costs volatile, and air quality steadily deteriorating. EVs address all three pressures at once. They produce no tailpipe emissions, reduce dependence on imported refined fuel, and—crucially for households and fleet operators—offer lower running and maintenance costs over time, despite higher upfront prices.

How do they work? At their core, EVs replace the internal combustion engine with an electric motor powered by rechargeable batteries, typically lithium-ion. Energy stored in the battery is converted directly into motion, eliminating many of the moving parts that make petrol vehicles noisy, inefficient and expensive to maintain. Fewer parts mean fewer breakdowns, too. Electricity—whether drawn from the grid, solar installations or hybrid charging systems—offers a more predictable cost base than petrol or diesel in an economy prone to energy shocks.

For Nigeria, the implications are profound. EV adoption dovetails neatly with the country’s push for renewable energy, local manufacturing and climate resilience. Fleet vehicles—buses, delivery vans, government cars—are an obvious starting point. So too are ride-hailing services operating in dense urban corridors. With the right charging infrastructure and fiscal incentives, EVs could move from what many see as an elite indulgence, to a practical solution to our mobility needs.

That NASENI is leading this charge is no accident. Under the leadership of Khalil Halilu, the agency has reoriented itself around a simple framework: the three Cs—Commercialisation, Collaboration and Competitiveness. The EV project sits squarely at their intersection.

Commercialisation ensures that innovation does not end in laboratories or pilot announcements, but results in products that can be sold, scaled and sustained. Collaboration brings together engineers, private sector partners and policymakers in a country where silos have long undermined progress. Competitiveness insists—quietly but firmly—that Nigerian products must stand up to international comparison, not be excused from it.

This matters because government-led industrial ventures often fail for predictable reasons: political interference, lack of market discipline, and an aversion to risk. NASENI’s EV initiative suggests a different instinct—one that sees the state not as a permanent manufacturer, but as a catalyst. If nurtured properly, this effort could crowd in private investment, deepen local supply chains and create skilled jobs in engineering, battery technology and vehicle assembly.

Support, however, cannot be rhetorical. Incentives for EV adoption, clear standards, charging infrastructure and procurement commitments—especially by government itself—will determine whether this experiment matures or withers. Nigeria has a habit of applauding innovation at launch and abandoning it at scale. That mistake would be costly.

Electric vehicles will not solve all of Nigeria’s transport problems. But every industrial transformation begins with a credible first step. A government agency producing electric vehicles that impress first-time drivers is such a step.

If Nigeria is serious about industrialisation, climate responsibility and modern urban mobility, then NASENI’s electric turn deserves not just praise, but protection—and patience.

— Saminu Dikko, is a freelance technology journalist, he writes from Katsina

https://thejour.com/technology/naseni-driving-nigerias-electric-turn/

21/01/2026

American attorney and Christian rights campaigner Amsterdam Robert has challenged assertions of a Christian genocide in Nigeria, presenting a more layered view in a conversation with Tucker Carlson.

Referencing his long standing relationship with the country humorously marked by the nickname “Jewruba” due to his close ties with the Yoruba community.

He highlighted Nigeria’s religiously mixed leadership, pointing out that both Christians and Muslims are represented at the highest levels of power, including the First Lady, who is a Christian pastor, as evidence of a pluralistic society rather than one defined by religious persecution.

‘‘The 40 hectare Solar Industrial Park in Nasarawa, the CNG Reverse Engineering Centre in Abuja training hundreds of eng...
05/12/2025

‘‘The 40 hectare Solar Industrial Park in Nasarawa, the CNG Reverse Engineering Centre in Abuja training hundreds of engineers to irrigate Nigeria project in Bauchi and Jigawa, bridging smart irrigation farmers the National asset Restoration Program, where we have restored over 1000 tractors in Borno and Niger State’’ - Suleiman , The Executive Vice Chairman Chief Executive Officer of the National Agency for Science and Engineering Infrastructure ()

Two Years on the Saddle: How NASENI Is Creating, Innovating, and Leading ‘‘At NASENI, we transform policy documents into...
05/12/2025

Two Years on the Saddle: How NASENI Is Creating, Innovating, and Leading

‘‘At NASENI, we transform policy documents into living maps, guiding Nigeria into a new age of
self-reliance, sustainability and global
competitiveness. This is a true spirit of renewal hope agenda, turning vision into action and action into lasting progress for our nation. NASENI could no longer remain a research agency. We had to become a force of commercialization, turning ideas into industries and industries into jobs’’ —S , Executive Vice Chairman/CEO

Two Years on the Saddle: How NASENI Is Creating, Innovating, and Leading‘‘When I accepted this role. Two years ago, 1 kn...
05/12/2025

Two Years on the Saddle: How NASENI Is Creating, Innovating, and Leading

‘‘When I accepted this role. Two years ago, 1 knew our task was bigger than reforming an agency. It was about reigniting Nigeria's capacity to create, innovate and to lead Africa’’ — , Executive Vice Chairman/CEO

The article written by Ayobami Oyalowo on Nigeria’s Exit From the FATF Grey List is a masterstroke. Mr. Oyalowo indeed c...
29/10/2025

The article written by Ayobami Oyalowo on Nigeria’s Exit From the FATF Grey List is a masterstroke. Mr. Oyalowo indeed captured it perfectly.

“Nigeria’s exit from the FATF grey list should be seen as part of a broader economic recalibration—one that includes subsidy reforms, tax rationalisation, fiscal decentralisation, and efforts to expand the productive base of the economy.

The immediate effects will likely include lower transaction costs, faster remittance flows, and greater export competitiveness — particularly for Made-in-Nigeria goods under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). Over time, these benefits could compound, supporting the President’s vision of a billion-dollar economy that is more resilient, diversified, and inclusive.”

A brilliant and insightful read. I encourage everyone to take a moment and go through this amazing piece.

https://naijacurrents.com/nigerias-exit-from-the-fatf-grey-list-a-major-boost-to-president-tinubus-economic-and-monetary-reforms-ayobami-oyalowo/

28/10/2025

Nigeria Champions Middle-Power Diplomacy and Green Finance at the Berlin Global Dialogue At the Berlin Global Dialogue, Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Maitama Tuggar, join…

28/10/2025

At the Berlin Global Dialogue, Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Maitama Tuggar, joined world leaders and policymakers to highlight Nigeria’s expanding global influence, particularly in advancing Middle-Power Diplomacy and Green Finance as pathways to sustainable developmen...

28/10/2025

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