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NIMASA, Nigerian Air Force Strengthen Partnership to Secure Nigeria’s Blue Economy

By Elvis Onuigbo NIMASA and the Nigerian Air Force have renewed their strategic partnership to enhance maritime security, protect offshore assets, and strengthen Nigeria’s growing blue economy. NIMASA and the Nigerian Air Force have renewed their strategic partnership to enhance maritime security, protect offshore assets, and strengthen Nigeria’s growing blue economy. In a renewed effort to secure Nigeria’s vast maritime resources, the Director-General of Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Dayo Mobereola, has reaffirmed the agency’s commitment to strengthening collaboration with the Nigerian Air Force (NAF). Mobereola made this known during a strategic visit to the Chief of the Air Staff, Air Marshal Sunday Kelvin Aneke, at the NAF Headquarters in Abuja. The high-level meeting signals a stronger alliance between Nigeria’s maritime and air security authorities aimed at safeguarding the nation’s territorial waters and critical...

Is Donald Trump fit to lead this country for another 2 years?

Trump Is Fit to Lead — Here's Why Look, whether you like him or not, you have to admit one thing: Donald Trump is not a man who quits. He's been investigated, impeached twice, taken to court more times than most people can count, and even survived an assassination attempt. And after all of that, he came back and won the presidency again. That's not luck — that's a level of resilience most politicians could only dream of. Think back to before COVID hit. The economy was genuinely humming. Unemployment was at record lows for Black, Hispanic, and Asian Americans. People had more money in their pockets. Small businesses were expanding. You don't get numbers like that by accident — that takes someone willing to cut through red tape and actually let the economy breathe. On the world stage, his supporters will tell you — and they have a point — that things felt more contained. The Abraham Accords were a real breakthrough that so-called foreign policy experts...

US Gives Iran 10–15 Days to Accept Nuclear Deal or Face Military Strikes

WASHINGTON, D.C. — February 20, 2026 The Trump administration has drawn a hard, unambiguous line in the sand — and the world is watching to see who blinks first. President Donald Trump has issued one of the most dramatic ultimatums in modern American foreign policy, giving Iran a window of just 10 to 15 days to come to the negotiating table and agree to terms on its nuclear program — or face what administration officials are warning could be a devastating and wide-scale military campaign. The message from the White House is blunt, direct, and backed by an overwhelming show of military force that the region has not seen in years. "We're either going to get a deal, or it's going to be unfortunate for them," Trump said, in language that left little room for diplomatic interpretation. To understand this moment, you have to understand the road that led to it. This is not a crisis that erupted overnight. It has been building through years of broken agreement...

CBN Sounds Alarm: Stablecoins Threatening Nigeria's Foreign Exchange Stability as Digital Dollar Adoption Surges

By Elvis Onuigbo | February 19, 2026 Central Bank  Central Bank Governor Olayemi Cardoso warns that the rapid growth of stablecoin transactions  now approaching $22 billion annually in Nigeria  risks undermining monetary sovereignty and destabilising the naira. In the most forceful public statement yet from Nigeria's monetary authority on the subject of digital assets, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Olayemi Cardoso has issued a sweeping warning that the explosive growth of stablecoins and private digital payment platforms poses a direct threat to the country's foreign exchange stability, monetary sovereignty, and its ability to transmit monetary policy. Speaking at the G-24 Technical Group Meetings in Abuja on Wednesday, February 19, 2026, Cardoso placed Nigeria's stablecoin challenge in a broader global context, arguing that without coordinated international frameworks, emerging market economies like Nigeria stand to lose the most — watching their curr...

Nigeria Rewrites Its Tax Rules — But Can It Make Them Stick?

Tax Reform in Nigeria | February 19, 2026 REFORM AND REVENUE DRIVE: Is Nigeria Expanding Its Tax Net? An In-Depth Policy Analysis | Nigeria Tax Act, 2025/2026 Introduction: The Tax Problem Nigeria Has Always Had There is a question that has haunted Nigeria's fiscal planners for decades, and it goes something like this: how do you run a country of over 220 million people on the back of one commodity? Oil built Nigeria's modern state, but it also made the country dangerously lazy about building a robust, diversified revenue system. When oil prices fell — and they always eventually fell — the cracks showed immediately. Salaries went unpaid. Infrastructure stalled. Social services frayed. The same crisis, different year. For a long time, the answer from successive governments was to borrow. Nigeria's debt profile swelled. But borrowing has a ceiling, and debt servicing eventually crowds out every other line in the budget. The logical conclusion — the one that kept get...