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17/12/2025

STATEHOUSE PRESS RELEASE



Engineers Farouk Ahmed, Gbenga Komolafe resign, President Tinubu nominates successors to the Senate for approval

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has asked the Senate to approve the nominations of two new chief executives for the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC).


The requests followed the resignation of Engineer Farouk Ahmed of the NMDPRA and Gbenga Komolafe of the NUPRC. Both officials were appointed in 2021 by former President Buhari to lead the two regulatory agencies created by the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

To fill these positions, President Tinubu has written to the Senate, requesting expedited confirmation of Oritsemeyiwa Amanorisewo Eyesan as CEO of NUPRC and Engineer Saidu Aliyu Mohammed as CEO of NMDPRA.

The two nominees are seasoned professionals in the oil and gas industry.

Eyesan, a graduate of Economics from the University of Benin, spent nearly 33 years with the NNPC and its subsidiaries. She retired as Executive Vice President, Upstream (2023–2024), and previously served as Group General Manager, Corporate Planning and Strategy at NNPC from 2019 to 2023.

Engineer Saidu Aliyu Mohammed, born in 1957 in Gombe, graduated from Ahmadu Bello University in 1981 with a Bachelor's in Chemical Engineering. He was announced today as an independent non-executive director at Seplat Energy.

His prior roles include Managing Director of Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company and Nigerian Gas Company, as well as Chair of the boards of West African Gas Pipeline Company, Nigeria LNG subsidiaries, and NNPC Retail.

He also served as Group Executive Director/Chief Operating Officer, Gas & Power Directorate, where he provided strategic leadership for major gas projects and policy frameworks, including the Gas Masterplan, Gas Network Code, and contributions to the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

17/12/2025

Bandits were not using normal towers. They bounce calls off multiple towers — Minister of Communication, Bosun Tijani

The Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Bosun Tijani, has dismissed claims that k+dnappers and criminals continue to operate with unregistered or fra¥dulent registered SIM cards, despite Nigeria’s NIN-SIM linkage policy.

Speaking on Channels Television’s Politics Today with Seun Okinbaloye, Tijani said he was unaware of any evidence proving that unregistered SIMs still exist within the telecoms system.

“I don’t know where that information is coming from or who has the evidence that there are people using SIMs that are not registered,” the minister said, noting that Nigeria’s biometric systems, including BVN and NIN, should ordinarily make criminal tracking possible.

According to Tijani, the issue of criminal communication is far more technical than commonly portrayed. He explained that telecom operators had previously conducted a nationwide SIM-cleanup exercise to eliminate improperly registered lines.

He revealed that security agencies discovered criminals were using specialised technology to make calls without relying on conventional telecom towers. “They were not using normal towers. They bounce calls off multiple towers, and when they leave an area, the signal disappears,” he said.

Tijani explained that this discovery informed President Bola Tinubu’s directive for government investment in telecom infrastructure, particularly in underserved and unconnected areas where criminals often operate.

The minister added that Nigeria is upgrading its two communication satellites to ensure coverage in areas where terrestrial towers are ineffective.

He noted that Nigeria remains the only country in West Africa with communication satellites and is expanding its fibre and satellite capabilities to improve national security and digital inclusion.

16/12/2025

FAROUK AHMED RESPONDS......

A Question Of Integrity: Engr. Farouk Ahmed Responds

Statement by the Chief Executive Officer, Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority.

December 16, 2025


Recent allegations regarding the financing of my children's education have necessitated this response—not because I fear scrutiny of my finances, which I welcome, but because the timing and nature of these claims demand context that only three decades of public service can provide.

Since 1991, I have dedicated my professional life to Nigeria's petroleum sector, rising through merit and competence from a junior engineer in the Department of Petroleum Resources to my current position as Chief Executive of the NMDPRA.

This journey,spanning many administrations, economic cycles, and countless regulatory challenges,has been guided by a single unwavering principle:

The national interest of Nigeria transcends all personal considerations.

A Career Built on Technical Excellence

My entry into petroleum administration came through Nigeria's competitive civil service examination, not political patronage.

I spent my formative years in the technical divisions,crude oil marketing, gas supply monitoring, and downstream operations

These are divisions ,where decisions are measured not by political expediency but by engineering precision and market realities.

By 2012, I had risen to General Manager of the Crude Oil Marketing Division, overseeing Nigeria's most critical revenue stream during a period of unprecedented global oil price volatility.

Those years taught me that regulatory integrity is not merely about following rules, but about understanding that every decision affects millions of Nigerians who depend on affordable, reliable energy.

When I became Deputy Director in 2015, inheriting responsibility for downstream regulation amid fuel scarcity and pricing controversies, I learned that principled positions often create powerful opponents.

My appointment as NMDPRA Chief Executive in 2021 came with a clear mandate: implement the Petroleum Industry Act's reforms with transparency and without favor.

I accepted this responsibility understanding its implications.

Reforming a sector characterized by decades of opacity, preferential licensing, and regulatory capture would necessarily antagonize entities whose business models depended on that very opacity.

The Education Question: Facts Over Innuendo

The allegation that I spent $5 million on my children's Swiss secondary education is presented as evidence of corruption inconsistent with my official income.

This requires factual correction.

Three of my four children received substantial merit-based scholarships ranging from 40% to 65% of tuition costs,verifiable information are available to any authorized investigation.

My late father, a Northern Nigerian businessman who established education trust funds for his grandchildren before his 2018 passing, provided additional support consistent with our cultural traditions of collective family investment in education.

When scholarships, family contributions, and my own savings accumulated over three decades are properly accounted for, my personal financial obligation was entirely consistent with someone of my professional standing and length of service.

My annual compensation as NMDPRA CEO,approximately ₦48 million including all allowances,is publicly available in our audited reports.

Combined with legitimate savings from decades of federal employment, cooperative investments available to all civil servants, and family resources, funding my children's education required neither corruption nor living beyond my means.

I have submitted detailed asset declarations to the Code of Conduct Bureau every year since entering public service. Every income source, investment, and significant expenditure is documented and available for scrutiny.

I hereby publicly authorize all educational institutions my children have attended to disclose financial records to authorized Nigerian government investigators, confident that such disclosure will reveal the substantial gap between allegation and reality.

As well it most be noted that schools abroad do not accepts fees that are not legitimately earned ,this is why in the Nigerian social media parlance,they call it saner climes.

Regulatory Independence and Its Discontents

These allegations resurface precisely when NMDPRA has enforced quality standards revealing substandard petroleum products in the market, implemented stricter licensing requirements, and insisted on transparent pricing mechanisms that eliminate opacity benefiting certain market players. This timing is not coincidental.

The characterization of NMDPRA's Q1 2026 import licensing approvals as "economic sabotage" fundamentally misunderstands our statutory mandate.

Section 7 of the Petroleum Industry Act obligates us to ensure supply security and prevent scarcity. Granting import licenses when domestic supply proves insufficient is not sabotage,it is our legal duty.

A single-source supply model, regardless of ownership, creates dangerous vulnerabilities that no responsible regulator can ignore.

Since 2021, NMDPRA has published detailed monthly supply reports, established public data portals showing licensing and pricing information, and submitted to rigorous audits by international firms.

We have reduced fuel queues through improved supply chain management, implemented depot-to-station tracking to eliminate diversion, and enforced quality standards uniformly without favor or discrimination. These reforms have naturally created friction with entities whose business models depended on regulatory opacity and preferential treatment.

I make no apology for prioritizing Nigeria's interests over individual commercial preferences.

This is precisely what regulatory independence requires and what my oath of office demands.

An Invitation to Investigation

I formally and publicly request the Code of Conduct Bureau to conduct comprehensive review of all my asset declarations since 1991, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to examine all my financial transactions and sources of income, and the National Assembly to exercise its oversight function regarding any allegations of regulatory compromise during my tenure.

I will cooperate fully, provide all documentation, and answer all questions under oath if required. My only stipulation is that investigations be genuine, professional, and free from predetermined conclusions driven by commercial interests seeking regulatory favor.

The Price of Principle

I did not pursue this office for personal enrichment. I accepted this responsibility because after three decades in Nigeria's petroleum sector, I believed I understood both its potential and its pathologies well enough to contribute meaningfully to necessary reforms.

Those reforms,transparency in licensing, quality assurance, supply chain integrity, regulatory independence—have created winners and losers. Entities that previously benefited from opacity naturally resist change.

I understand this dynamic.

What I cannot accept is the weaponization of my family's privacy and the distortion of facts to serve commercial agendas.

If the price of regulatory independence is personal attacks and manufactured scandals, I accept that price.

I will not be intimidated into abandoning statutory duties or granting preferential treatment to any entity, regardless of their economic power or media reach.

Conclusion

Three decades of service to Nigeria's petroleum sector have taught me that integrity is tested not in comfortable moments but when powerful interests demand compromise. These allegations represent such a test.

My response is simple: investigate thoroughly, examine every claim, scrutinize every transaction. My record both financial and professional will withstand any legitimate inquiry.

The reforms we have implemented at NMDPRA serve Nigeria's long-term interests even when they create short-term friction with powerful stakeholders. I remain committed to this mandate, confident that history will vindicate principled regulation over expedient accommodation.

Engr. Farouk Ahmed
Chief Executive Officer
Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority.

Mr Dangote alleged that Mr Ahmed spent $2,000,000 on tertiary education for four years for his four children, adding tha...
16/12/2025

Mr Dangote alleged that Mr Ahmed spent $2,000,000 on tertiary education for four years for his four children, adding that $210,000 was spent on Faisal's 2025 Harvard MBA.

Via:

16/12/2025

Dr. Olawale Sulaiman is a U.S.-based Nigerian neurosurgeon who has chosen to give back to his homeland by regularly traveling to Nigeria to provide free, life-saving surgeries for underprivileged patients. To make this possible, he negotiated a significant pay cut with his American employer so he could spend up to about 12 days each month in Nigeria performing complex brain and spinal operations that many patients otherwise could not afford. He lives in Louisiana with his family but splits his time between the U.S. and Nigeria, using his expertise to address the severe shortage of specialized medical care in his home country.

Sulaiman’s work is driven by his own experiences growing up in Lagos, where limited resources and access to care shaped his drive to serve others. Alongside his wife, he founded RNZ Global and its nonprofit arm, the RNZ Foundation, which facilitate medical missions, training, and free care for thousands of patients. Through these efforts, he has performed hundreds of free surgeries and continues to advocate for improved healthcare infrastructure and access in Nigeria.

16/12/2025

Doctorate Degree Seems To Have Been Considerably Cheapened In Recent Times -Usman
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“The academic Doctorate degree in any field of study used to be the most difficult degree to obtain from any Nigerian University. It could take as much as five years for a hardworking academic and as long as ten or more for those outside the academic environment to obtain a Doctorate degree through a dint of hard work. However, in recent times, the Doctorate degree seems to have been considerably cheapened and made almost an all-comers affair in Nigeria.

“It’s now very common to find even persons outside the academic environments being awarded Doctorate degrees by all sorts of Universities in Nigeria and within a time as short as three years or in some cases, even shorter. It’s either the standards for the highest degree have been compromised in terms of academic requirements or the Ph.D. has lost its value and prestige as an academic qualification.

“I should not be misunderstood in this opinion. There are still those who earn their Ph.D. through hard work, academic excellence, and in strict compliance with rigid, time- and energy-sapping intellectual endeavors. It should, however, be admitted that many are now cutting corners with the connivance of University authorities to be awarded the Ph.D. in undeserving circumstances, and this lowers the quality and esteem of the degree in the eyes of the public.” -Yusuf Shehu Usman, Esq

16/12/2025

The Federal Government has announced a nationwide ban on the admission and transfer of students into Senior Secondary School Three (SS3) in all public and private schools, beginning from the 2026/27 academic session.

The announcement, signed by Boriowo Folasade, Director of Press and Public Relations at the Federal Ministry of Education, said the directive was part of efforts to curb examination malpractice and restore credibility to Nigeria’s education system.

“The Federal Government, through the Federal Ministry of Education, has announced a nationwide prohibition on the admission and transfer of students into Senior Secondary School Three (SS3) in all public and private secondary schools,” the statement read.

According to the ministry, the policy follows growing concerns over the increasing incidence of malpractice, including the use of so‑called special centres during external examinations.

It explained that admissions and transfers will now be restricted strictly to Senior Secondary School One (SS1) and Senior Secondary School Two (SS2). “Admission or transfer into SS3 will no longer be permitted under any circumstance,” the ministry stated.

Officials said the measure is aimed at discouraging last‑minute movement of students for examination‑related advantages, ensuring proper academic monitoring, and promoting continuity in teaching and learning.

School proprietors, principals, and administrators nationwide have been directed to comply fully with the policy.

The ministry warned that any violation would attract sanctions in line with existing education regulations and guidelines.

Via:

15/12/2025

Authorities were stunned to discover that a 9-year-old boy had been living entirely alone for two years after his mother left to stay with her partner several kilometers away. He survived on cake, canned food, and anything he could manage on his own, without heat, without hot water, and without any adult to rely on. Even more incredibly, he still woke up every morning, walked to school, and stayed on top of his grades, never once letting his teachers suspect what he was going through.

His resilience and discipline have shocked communities worldwide, raising questions about how something so serious went unnoticed for so long. Yet teachers describe him as polite, hardworking, and remarkably strong for his age. His story is heartbreaking but also shows a level of courage and determination far beyond his years.

15/12/2025

During the recent tragic sh00ting at Bondi Beach in Sydney, a man named Ahmed al Ahmed, a 43-year-old fruit shop owner and father of two, stepped in to stop one of the attackers.

Ahmed wasn’t trained for this, he’s just a regular guy running his shop and taking care of his family but when he saw the sh0oter, he ran toward him, wrestled the gun away, and tried to protect others nearby.

Unfortunately, Ahmed was sh0t twice during the struggle, but thanks to his bravery, many lives were likely saved. He is now in hospital recovering, and doctors say he is stable.

What makes this story so powerful is that Ahmed didn’t hesitate. He didn’t think about fame or money; he just acted to help others.

Local authorities and the Australian Prime Minister have praised him as a true hero.

It’s a reminder that sometimes, ordinary people can do extraordinary things. Ahmed could have run away, but instead he chose courage, showing us all the impact one person can make.

Let’s send him our best wishes for a full recovery and appreciate the everyday heroes around us.

15/12/2025

In 2017, a Syrian sailor named Mohammad Aisha signed on as chief officer of the MV Aman, a container ship sailing under a Bahraini flag. Just two months later, Egyptian authorities detained the vessel over expired safety certificates. When the ship’s owners went bankrupt and the crew gradually left, Aisha was left behind. By court order, he had been made the ship’s “legal guardian,” meaning he was forbidden to leave until the vessel’s fate was settled. For nearly four years, he lived completely alone on an abandoned ship with no power or running water, often swimming ashore to find food, charge his phone, or bring supplies. He described the vessel as being like a coffin, haunted by insects and silence. After years of international pressure from the International Transport Workers’ Federation, Aisha was finally released in 2021 and returned home, bringing an end to one of the most extraordinary modern cases of maritime abandonment.

15/12/2025

A man who spends 5 million dollars (about ₦7.3 billion) just on the secondary school education of his four children.

This man is Engr. Farouk Ahmad the Chairman of Nigerian Mainstream and Downstream. He reportedly spent ₦7.3 billion on secondary education for only four children. This is the reality of Nigeria.

Our country is drowning in corruption, yet many of us choose to close our eyes. Instead of demanding accountability, we are often told to pray about problems that human beings created and that human beings can fix.

Even Aliko Dangote, the richest Black man in the world, has said that his children did not attend schools of such extreme cost. But in Nigeria, someone suddenly appears from nowhere, lives large, and spends public money as if it belongs to him alone.

This is a country where millions of people do not know where their next meal will come from. Graduates roam the streets for years, looking for just a small opportunity to change their lives. Parents struggle to pay basic school fees. Hospitals lack equipment. Roads are death traps.

Yet one person can spend billions of naira on secondary education alone. And the painful truth is this, he is not the only one. He is just one out of thousands of corrupt leaders bleeding this country dry.

If we stay silent, nothing will change. Nigeria will not change by prayers alone. It will change when citizens speak up, ask questions, and refuse to accept injustice as normal.

15/12/2025

A 25-year-old man, Adamu Abdullahi, was lynched to death by a mob in Suleja, Niger State, after allegedly stabbing his mother, Hauwa Sanusi, to death during a dispute over inheritance.

The incident occurred in the early hours of Saturday, December 13, 2025, shortly after Abdullahi returned to the area following a long absence and confronted his mother over his share of his late father’s property, which she had kept in her custody.

According to witnesses, he attacked her with a knife, and her screams alerted neighbours who apprehended him as he tried to flee and beat him severely, leading to his death. The Niger State Police Command confirmed that both mother and son died in the incident, stating that the knife was recovered and investigations are ongoing to identify and arrest members of the mob involved in the lynching.

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