News
Sri Lanka President Dissanayake picks Harini Amarasuriya as PM

Published
6 months agoon
By
Ekwutos BlogBy Uditha Jayasinghe
COLOMBO (Reuters) -Sri Lanka’s new president, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, named Harini Amarasuriya, a college professor and first-time lawmaker, as the new prime minister of the Indian Ocean island nation on Tuesday, making her the third woman to be appointed to the post.
Dissanayake, 55, a Marxist-leaning firebrand politician, who was elected president in the election held on Saturday, was also scheduled to pick the rest of his cabinet.
An academic with a doctorate in social anthropology from the University of Edinburgh, Amarasuriya, 54, became a parliamentarian in 2020 under Dissanayake’s NPP coalition and will also hold the portfolios of foreign affairs, education and media.
Amarasuriya is the third woman prime minister of Sri Lanka, following the world’s first woman prime minister, Sirimavo Bandaranaike in 1960, and her daughter Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga.
Dissanayake ran as the candidate for the National People’s Power (NPP) alliance, which includes his Janatha Vimukhti Peremuna (JVP) party that traditionally championed Marxist economic policies centred on protectionism and state intervention.
He and his new cabinet now face the task of establishing an interim government, with analysts predicting Dissanayake will dissolve parliament and call a snap general election as his party has just three of 225 seats in the current house.
Dissanayake’s intentions to slash taxes and desire to revisit the terms of a $2.9 billion International Monetary Fund bailout have worried investors, who fear that it could delay a crucial $25 billion debt restructuring.
Just before Dissanayake was took the oath of office on Monday, Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardene resigned, effectively dissolving the cabinet.
(Reporting by Uditha Jayasinge, Writing by Shilpa Jamkhandikar; Editing by YP Rajesh; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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Niger Assembly confirms new Electricity Regulatory Commission members

Published
1 hour agoon
March 13, 2025By
Ekwutos Blog
The Niger State House of Assembly has confirmed the appointment of a new chairman and commissioners for the Niger State Electricity Regulatory Commission.
This confirmation follows an executive correspondence from Governor Mohammed Umar Bago, which was read by the Speaker, Muhammad Abdulmalik Sarkin Daji, during a plenary.
The confirmed appointees include Dr Mohammed Sharu (Bida), as chairman; Dr Maiwada S. Bello (Paikoro), as Commissioner for Enforcement and Consumer Affairs; Dr Muhammad Ameen Shakur (Bida), as Commissioner for Licensing and Regulations; Jiro Ahmed Mohammed, (Kontagora), as Commissioner for Rural Electricity Access Management; and Adamu Nagogo (Chanchaga), as Commissioner for Finance and Administration.
The Speaker congratulated the appointees and urged them to utilise their wealth of experience to drive the development of Niger State’s electricity sector.
News
Reps direct NCC to block all pornographic sites in Nigeria

Published
1 day agoon
March 11, 2025By
Ekwutos Blog
The House of Representatives today has directed the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to direct internet service providers in the country to block all websites hosting obscene and pornographic contents with immediate effect.
The lawmakers passed the resolution following a motion sponsored by Dalhatu Tafoki, an All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmaker from Katsina state.
Moving the motion, Tafoki argued that cyber pornography was becoming a global problem and that Nigeria, which according to him is a ‘religious country’ that prohibits against nudity and pornography, had not taken adequate steps to address it.
The legislator said several countries across Asia, Africa, and the Middle East had enacted laws banning pornography.
He also cited warnings from psychologists and sociologists about the negative impact of pornography, including its potential to encourage adultery, prostitution, and addiction.
“Renowned psychologists and sociologists around the world have issued stern warnings on the psychological, sociological and mental consequences of viewing pornographic content,” he said.
Tajudeen Abbas, the Speaker of the House of Representatives subjected the motion to a voice vote where the lawmakers voted in support of it. The House directed the NCC to impose penalties on service providers that fail to comply with the directive
Business
Why retailers, marketers dump Dangote Refinery petrol for import – Stakeholders

Published
2 days agoon
March 11, 2025By
Ekwutos Blog
Petroleum Products Retailers and marketers have explained why petrol imports have persisted despite the Dangote Refinery and other local refineries’ production capacity.
The President, Petroleum Products Retail Outlet Owners Association and the Chairman, Major Marketers Association of Nigeria, Billy Gillis-Harry and Tunji Oyebanji in an exclusive interview with Ekwutosblog on Monday cited fear of healthy market competition, competitive pricing and inadequate petrol production capacity as reasons for the product’s continued import.
This comes amid the National Bureau of Statistics’ foreign trade data showing that petrol imports surged by 105 percent to N15.4 trillion at the end of 2024.
Similarly, the report indicated that fuel imports hit N930 billion in February 2025 alone, raising concerns among stakeholders in the country’s downstream sector.
Recall that the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority said that Dangote Refinery, Port Harcourt and Warri refineries met only 50 percent of the national petroleum products consumption requirement in February 2025. #
However, in a statement last month, the president of Dangote Refinery countered NMDPRA and insisted that the $20 billion Refinery can meet 100 percent of Nigeria’s 100 percent petroleum production requirements.
Nigerians are now left in limbo amid the controversy as NNPC said it has not imported petrol so far in 2025.
Meanwhile, Gillis-Harry and Oyebanji in their insights to Ekwutosblog put clarity to the debate.
Speaking, Gillis-Harry insisted that petroleum retailers get their products from all sources, including Dangote Refinery, NNPC and import.
According to him, petrol retailers will continue to get fuel from sources with the best pricing to avoid a monopoly of the country’s petroleum downstream.
He frowned at a situation where the refinery would reduce fuel prices overnight without due consultation with its partners and retailers.
Gillis-Harry added that healthy competition and price stability must be guaranteed in Nigeria’s downstream sector for the good of Nigerians.
“Retailers are not running away from Dangote Refinery. We patronize every refinery, but we subscribe to full liberation so that we will not run a monopolized downstream sector.
“A situation where one refinery is shifting prices up and down without consideration of retailers is uncalled for.
“We cannot buy a product at N889, and over the night, the prices are dropped to N825, which is unfair.
“We continue to buy petrol from all sources that are profitable to us, either NNPCL, Dangote Refinery or through import”, he told Ekwutosblog.
On his part, Oyebanji explained that local refineries such as Dangote Refinery were not meeting 100 percent of domestic demand- the reason for fuel import to augment the vacuum.
According to him, if local refineries produced enough to meet the domestic market and with competitive prices, no right-thinking businessman would import.
“The report circulated today was for 2024. I don’t understand why it is being played up in the media as if it is new.
“Seems it is to advance a particular agenda. I don’t think local refineries are meeting 100 percent of local demand.
“So, to prevent shortages, some importation is being allowed, but to give the impression that such importation is growing isn’t correct.
“NNPCL, which has been the largest importer up to last year, has confirmed that they have not imported and yet someone is pushing this narrative.
“If local refineries produce enough to satisfy local demand and sell at a competitive price, then no right-thinking businessman will import”, he told Ekwutosblog.
Recall that earlier this month and last month, NNPC and Dangote refineries reduced petrol prices to between N860 and N880 per liter.
The development sparked a price war among the bigwigs in the country’s downstream sector, as Nigerians now buy petrol between N860 and N970 per liter nationwide.
On October 15, 2024, 650, 000 barrels per day, Dangote Refinery kicked off supply of petrol.
At the same, NNPC restarted petrol production at the Port Harcourt and Warri refineries in November and December 2024.

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