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Nigerians score CrediCorp, power, agric ministries low

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Nigerians have rated the Ministries of Power and Agriculture and Food Security low on the Presidency’s Central Results Delivery Coordination Unit tracker, Sunday Ekwutos reports.

Data obtained by our correspondent from the tracker also revealed that the Ministry of Interior topped the chart, buoyed by multiple five-star reviews applauding improvements in passport and visa issuance.

On April 8, 2024, the Special Adviser to the President on Policy and Coordination and head of the CDCU, Hadiza Bala-Usma, inaugurated the Citizens’ Delivery Tracker.

Bala-Usman said the tracker would provide a “strong feedback loop” between citizens and the government and hold ministers and heads of government agencies accountable based on key deliverables.

 

“The Citizens Delivery Tracker App…will be constantly modified to enhance ease of use and maintain a strong feedback loop between citizens and their government,” she explained at the Go-Live event of the CDT in Abuja.

According to the latest CDCU data covering the last six months, citizens submitted 217 ratings overall, with an average of 3.1 out of 5 stars across agencies.

“The Ministry of Interior led with an average of 4.3, while the lowest-rated agency, the Nigerian Consumer Credit Corporation, recorded 1.7,” the report read.

Tinubu’s eight priority areas

The deliverables border on the eight priority areas of the Bola Tinubu administration.

The CDT outlined 204 deliverables and 888 indicators to assess government ministries, departments and agencies. The deliverables comprised various government policies, projects and programmes scheduled for completion between 2024 and 2027.

In arriving at the deliverables and key performance indicators, Bala-Usman said the CDCU, supported by development partners and consultants, held numerous bilateral meetings with all the ministers, permanent secretaries, and their respective technical teams for six weeks.

The tracker came months after President Bola Tinubu announced plans for ministerial assessment at the cabinet retreat in November 2023.

At the cabinet retreat for ministers, presidential aides, permanent secretaries and top government functionaries, Tinubu said the CDCU would be strengthened to make citizens an integral part of his government’s monitoring and performance management process.

Direct citizens’ feedback

A summarised breakdown of the feedback availed to Sunday Ekwutos indicated that fertiliser and other inputs did not get to real farmers because of the absence of a proper database.

“I suggest there should be agric extension workers across the 774 LGAs to collate the data and support; that way, genuine farmers will be reached, not paper ones,” Damilola Ogidan, who rated the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security 2 out of 5, said.

Another respondent, Aimufua Emmanuel, in his rating of the Federal Ministry of Power, wrote, “Your excellency, I don’t know what we have done to God to give us a man like the power minister to take charge of the power sector. He’s by far the least performing minister in your cabinet. Ever since the beginning of this administration, our case has been from frying pan to fire. I live in Sangotedo, and since May last year, we have never had four hours of light in a day. At times we go one week without light blinking for a second, it is very obvious the power minister knows nothing about the power sector, listen to him and you’ll be quick to tell he knows nothing about generation, transmission and distribution of power. This man is clueless.’ He rated the Ministry of Power 1 out of 5.”

However, another Nigerian, Nasir Abubakar, rated the Power Ministry 4 out of 5.

He advised that there should be legislation that would compel power distribution companies to supply electricity to consumers and they should be responsible for the repairs and maintenance of their equipment.

The report continued: “One user, Lukman Kazeem, rated CrediCorp one star, commenting, ‘No indication that this agency is performing. No projects in the project list.’ The Delivery Manager for CrediCorp responded to clarify the agency’s status and ongoing initiatives.

“Oluwafemi Olanrewaju gave the Ministry of Interior five stars, commending ‘the improved processing time for visa issuance,” a key deliverable tied to the ministry’s priority.

 

“Feedback on the Federal Inland Revenue Service ranged from top marks to mid-level scores. Suleiman Umar rated the FIRS five out of five, stating, ‘I support Zach on his revenue reform…all MDA’s generating revenue should use FIRS account such that they don’t touch the revenue. Let’s have a centralised system of revenue collection.’”

“Segun Owolabi rated the FIRS three out of five, citing issues with taxpayer data: ‘The stats of captured taxpayers across Nigeria has not been consistently updated… many low-income earners are being taxed by their employer even when the law stipulates taxable and nontaxable income.”

CrediCorp recorded the lowest rating, averaging only 1.7 stars.

In the same timeframe, Priority 6—covering Health, Education, and Social Investment—achieved the best performance (74 per cent), while Priority 4—concerning Energy and Natural Resources—posted a comparatively lower figure (53 per cent).

During this period, delivery managers maintained an average response time of 3.2 days, with 30 actively engaging citizen feedback and resolving about 76 per cent of submitted issues.

The CDCU noted that the tracker’s 1 to 5 stars rating system was linked to verified performance indicators for each deliverable.

It encouraged citizens to rate and leave contextual feedback, which ministry representatives would address.

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BREAKING: Dangote Refinery Announces Massive Reduction in Petrol Price

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The Dangote Refinery has significantly slashed its ex-depot petrol price in a strategic move to gain a competitive edge over the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) and other petroleum marketers across the country.

According to DAILY POST checks on Petroleumpriceng on Friday morning, the refinery’s ex-depot price has dropped to N699 per litre, down from N828 per litre. This reflects a reduction of N129, representing 15.58%.

This latest review marks the 20th price adjustment by the refinery this year and comes just weeks before the busy Yuletide season.

The reduction also follows recent price cuts by the NNPC and independent filling stations, which have lowered pump prices at least twice in the last three weeks, bringing the retail cost of petrol to between N915 and N937 per litre in Abuja.

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Fraudster Arrested For ID Theft Offers Victim N10Million To ‘Sell Her BVN’ In Osun

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Authorities in Osun State have uncovered a major identity-theft ring after fraudsters, accused of stealing the BVN and NIN of local businesswoman Mrs. Fadahunsi Janet Gbemisola, allegedly tried to bribe her to “overlook” the compromise of her BVN.

The case has raised serious concerns over banking security, police integrity, and a nationwide data breach involving more than 150 Nigerians.

Mrs. Fadahunsi, who spoke to SaharaReporters on Monday, said the ordeal began on November 28, 2024, when she lost her phone in transit. The device contained her OPay and Palmpay SIM cards.

“I tried calling the phone, but it wasn’t picked,” she recalled. “By the following morning, it had been switched off, so I reported the matter to the police.”

Days later, she was locked out of her OPay account. According to her, Opay officials informed her that the breach originated from MoniePoint Microfinance Bank, even though she had never opened an account with the institution.

When she visited MoniePoint, staff presented her with an account profile, 8028946149, bearing her full name, BVN, NIN, and photograph. The only mismatched details were the address and phone number used to open the account.

“The officer told me I cannot deny the account because my picture and name were there,” she said. “I was shocked because I had never opened any MoniePoint account in my life.”

She later obtained a court order from the Chief Magistrate Court, Ejigbo (MEJ/M4/25) directing MoniePoint, GTBank, Opay, and Palmpay to lift restrictions placed on her BVN. Despite serving all institutions, she said MoniePoint denied ownership of the same account.

Frustrated, she went to the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in Osogbo, where officials reviewed MoniePoint’s submission and confirmed that her BVN and NIN had indeed been used to open the fraudulent account.

“They showed me the form. My picture was there, my BVN was there, my NIN was there,” she said. “But the address and signature were not mine.”

According to her, CBN officials told her plainly that “until you find the person who used your identity, you cannot defend yourself.”

Confronted with the daunting task of tracking down the fraudster and with funds received from family members to bury a loved one frozen in her accounts, she sought help from the police.

Following a petition at the State Criminal Investigation Department in Osogbo, investigators traced the suspect, identified as Calistus Obi, to the Lagos–Ogun border and arrested him on March 28, 2025.

During investigation, the Police Monitoring Unit at Osogbo were able to recover from the suspect “67 SIM cards, multiple phones and evidence of over 150 identities, including BVN and NIN records, allegedly used to open MoniePoint accounts for their international syndicated fraudsters were discovered.”

During interrogation before the Osun State Commissioner of Police, Mrs. Fadahunsi said the suspect admitted he was working with a man called “Mike” based in China.

“He told the CP that he sends the MoniePoint accounts to the man in China and gets a percentage,” she narrated. “The CP asked him, ‘So you have sold Nigerian people to China because of money?’”

After his arrest, the suspect’s associates allegedly approached both the police and the victim with cash offers to bury the case.

“They called me and said I should say how much I want to forget my BVN,” Mrs. Fadahunsi said. “They offered up to ₦10 million. I refused.”

She also said an influential figure from Lagos contacted the police monitoring unit handling the case and asked them to collect ₦500,000 to release the suspect, but the officers declined.

Lamenting fraudsters in the Nigeria Police Force, she explained that shortly after rejecting the bribe, senior officers from Abuja ordered the Osun State Command to transferred the case to Force Headquarters with immediate effects.

“Unfortunately, the case file was transferred to Force Headquarters Cybercrime unit. When I got to Abuja, they told me the suspect had been released on bail,” she said.

“They suddenly claimed he was not the person who opened the MoniePoint account.”

Her new IPO reportedly told Mrs. Fadahunsi that “until we find the real person, you cannot use your BVN.”

She said investigators in Abuja dismissed the earlier evidence that linked the suspect directly to the phone number used to open the fraudulent MoniePoint account.

According to Mrs. Fadahunsi, attempts by her lawyer to follow up with police in Abuja were met with hostility.

“The IPO told my lawyer, ‘You said you want to write petition against me; go and write it,’ and he dropped the call,” she said.

She added that the released suspect later visited Osun CID, attempting to reclaim his confiscated SIM cards and phones, though Osun officers refused as at the last time she visited.

Months after court orders, petitions, and repeated visits to police and regulators, Mrs. Fadahunsi’s BVN remains blocked. Her GTBank, Opay, and Palmpay accounts are inaccessible.

“I cannot do business. I cannot even open another account,” she said. “My whole life is on hold.”

Growing Concern Over National Data Breach

The case has raised alarms about a massive BVN and NIN breach used to create fraudulent MoniePoint accounts allegedly used to receive funds from across the world.

With at least 150 Nigerians’ identities compromised, the incident signals a potential national security threat.

“This is not just my problem,” she said. “It means anyone in Nigeria can lose their identity and the system will blame them.”

When SaharaReporters contacted the Osun State Command’s spokesperson, DSP Abiodun Ojelabi Zechariah, he said he was not aware of the case but requested for the copy of the petition of the woman.

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GOVS; UZODIMMA, SANWO-OLU MEET CBN GOVERNOR TO DEEPEN ECONOMIC COLLABORATION.

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By Prince Uwalaka Chimaroke
9- DEC- 2025

Governor Hope Uzodimma has announced that he paid an official visit to the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Olayemi Cardoso, as part of efforts to strengthen joint economic strategies aimed at improving the wellbeing of Nigerians. He was accompanied by Lagos State Governor, His Excellency Babajide Sanwo-Olu, whom he described as a brother and valued partner in national development.

During the visit, the leaders engaged in extensive discussions focused on enhancing cooperation between state governments and the apex bank. Their deliberations covered existing economic programmes currently underway across the country, with particular attention to reforms designed to support fiscal stability, promote investment, and protect the livelihoods of citizens.

Governor Uzodimma noted that the meeting also created room to explore fresh avenues for synergy on policies that can stimulate sustainable growth. The goal, he said, is to ensure that shared commitments among key government institutions are consistent with long-term national economic objectives.

He reaffirmed that such collaborations remain essential in addressing present economic challenges and securing a more prosperous future for Nigerians, emphasizing that the dialogue with the CBN Governor underscores a united resolve to deliver impactful results.

The discussion ended with all parties expressing optimism that strengthened partnerships will translate into improved outcomes for the nation’s economy.

 

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