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Information and Communication Technology (ICT) projected to surpass oil as Nigeria’s top earner, minister says at Lagos tech conference

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Nigeria’s Information and Communication Technology (ICT) sector is on course to outperform oil and gas as the country’s biggest revenue earner by 2027, according to Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Dr. Bosun Tijani.”Read Original/For More…Read D Full Story Here Now.”

Speaking at the opening of the GITEX Nigeria Tech Expo and Future Economy Conference in Lagos on Wednesday, Tijani said ICT already contributes between 16 and 18 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and is projected to rise to 21 per cent within two years. This, he added, makes the sector the fastest-growing contributor to Nigeria’s economy, cutting across agriculture, education, manufacturing, and governance.

The minister highlighted federal government initiatives aimed at supporting the sector’s growth. These include Project Bridge, a 90,000km fibre backbone to connect every state and local government; the 3MTT programme, described as the world’s largest digital skills initiative; and the forthcoming National Digital Economy and New Governance Bill, which he said will strengthen trust and accountability.

“The digital economy is not just about mobile apps or platforms; it is about technical efficiency and delivering productivity gains that transform entire sectors,” Tijani said. He added that President Bola Tinubu has placed technology at the heart of the Renewed Hope Agenda to expand opportunities, reduce inequality, and create shared prosperity.

Between 2019 and 2024, Lagos alone attracted more than US$6 billion in foreign tech investment, securing its position as Africa’s leading digital hub. The state accounts for over 70 per cent of Nigeria’s total tech inflows and hosts hyperscale data centres, extensive fibre networks, and 23 of the country’s 28 fastest-growing companies, according to the Financial Times.

In his welcome remarks, Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, described Lagos as the “rightful capital of technology in Africa.” He recalled that the state pioneered digital revenue collection 20 years ago with Oracle technology and has since evolved into “Africa’s innovation nerve centre and a launchpad for Africa’s tomorrow.”

Sanwo-Olu said Lagos is building a “data-driven government where policy decisions respond to real-time insights,” stressing that diversity fuels the state’s resilience and creativity.

GITEX Nigeria, West Africa’s largest technology gathering, brings together industry leaders, policymakers, investors, and startups to explore digital transformation across multiple sectors. The Lagos event follows a two-day Government Leadership & AI Summit in Abuja.

BREAKING NEWS: Will The Court Accept Such Case?? Video Goes Viral After Man Sues His Wife For Taking Away Their Daughter From Him Because He Planned of Marrying His Daughter.

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Nigerian housekeeper arrested for allegedly stealing money from her employer in Libya

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In Benghazi, Libya, a Nigerian housekeeper was arrested on February 8, 2026, for allegedly stealing from her employer.

Authorities accused her of taking 98,000 dinars from the household.

The incident attracted media attention, raising questions about trust and security in domestic work.

The woman, whose motives remain unclear, was detained pending further investigation. Her story highlights the challenges faced by foreign domestic workers and the importance of proper oversight.

The case serves as a reminder of the fragile boundaries of employer-employee relationships amid economic and social pressures.

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2027: How 3 southern senators scuttled real-time e-transmission of election results — Sources

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Fresh facts have emerged on how the Senate rejected a proposal to make real-time electronic transmission of election results mandatory, ahead of the 2027 general election.

The recommendation, which also triggered wider reforms on election timelines, penalties for electoral offences and voting technology, was voted down by the 10th Senate under the leadership of Senate President, Senator Godswill Akpabio.

At the centre of the controversy is Section 60(3) of the bill, dealing with the transmission of polling unit results. The provision was recommended by the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters, chaired by Senator Simon Lalong (APC, Plateau South).

Sources told Vanguard that during clause-by-clause consideration of the committee’s report, the Senate initially worked on a version that retained real-time electronic transmission.

However, after hours of deliberations and as plenary dragged late into the evening, the final version passed by the Senate was altered at the last minute to expunge the provision.

This, sources said, was even though the Senate had earlier approved electronic transmission overwhelmingly during a closed session.

An ad-hoc committee, chaired by Senator Niyi Adegbonmire, APC (Ondo Central), had also endorsed it after more than one year of consultations.

The Adegbonmire committee engaged INEC, civil society organisations and stakeholders through joint sessions and zonal public hearings, where consensus was reportedly reached that electronic transmission must be explicitly legalised to avoid the legal controversies that trailed the 2023 general elections.

Page 45 of the report of the Senate Committee on Electoral Matters, Clause 60(3) provided: “The Presiding Officer shall electronically transmit the results from each polling unit to the IREV portal in real time and such transmission shall be done after the prescribed Form EC8A has been signed and stamped by the Presiding Officer and/or countersigned by the candidates or polling agents available at the polling unit.”

A source said that when senators got to the clause, many assumed it would pass smoothly, given prior resolutions.
“That was when the unexpected happened,” the source said, adding that three ranking Southern senators allegedly intervened.

According to the source, the senators approached the Senate President and urged him to retain the provision of the 2022 Electoral Act.

Akpabio was said to have upheld the existing law, which allows electronic transmission only after votes are counted and publicly announced at polling units.

Instead of “transmission,” the word “transfer” was adopted, in line with the 2022 Act, even though no fresh debate was conducted on the floor.

The rejected amendment would have mandated real-time upload of results to IReV immediately after completion of Form EC8A.

The adopted provision states: “The Presiding Officer shall transfer the results, including the total number of accredited voters and the results of the ballot, in a manner as prescribed by the commission.”

Senate bows to pressure, to hold emergency sitting tomorrow, instead of Feb 24

However, following the widespread criticisms that have trailed its rejection of a proposed amendment to Clause 60, Subsection 3, of the bill, which sought to make the real time electronic transmission of election results mandatory, the Senate has been forced to reconvene an emergency plenary sitting tomorrow, February 10, 2026, at 12:00 noon.

It had on Wednesday, adjourned plenary till February 24.

The new development to reconvene tomorrow was formally contained in an official notice dated February 8, 2026, signed by the Clerk of the Senate, Emmanuel Odo, on the directive of the President of the Senate, Senator Godswill Akpabio.

The notice to the senators, sighted yesterday, read: “I am directed by President of the Senate, Distinguished Senator Godswill Obot Akpabio, to inform all senators of the Federal Republic of Nigeria that an emergency sitting of the Senate has been scheduled to hold as follows: Date: Tuesday, 10 February, 2026. Time: 12:00 Noon.

“Venue: Senate Chamber. Senators are kindly requested to note this emergency sitting date and attend. All inconveniences this will cause to senators are highly regretted.”

Although the official notice did not state the reason for the emergency session, the timing strongly suggests a connection to the intense national controversy trailing the Senate’s handling of key provisions in the Electoral Act amendment, particularly Section 60(3).

The Senate had adjourned plenary last week after the passage of the Electoral Act (Amendment) Bill, 2026, to allow lawmakers participate in ongoing budget defence sessions by ministries, departments and agencies, MDAs, ahead of the final consideration of the ¦ 58.47 trillion 2026 Appropriation Bill, scheduled for March 17.

Recall that during the clause-by-clause consideration of the Electoral bill, the Senate, presided over by Akpabio, adopted a motion moved by Senate Chief Whip Tahir Monguno, APC, Borno North and seconded by the Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin, APC, Kano North, to reject the proposed Section 60(3).

The rejected amendment sought to make real-time electronic transmission of election results from polling units to the INEC Result Viewing (IReV) portal mandatory. It proposed that:

“The presiding officer shall electronically transmit the results from each polling unit to the IReV portal in real time, and such transmission shall be done after the prescribed Form EC8A has been signed and stamped by the presiding officer and/or countersigned by candidates or polling unit agents, where available.”

Instead, the Senate retained Section 60(5) of the Electoral Act, 2022, which states.

Parliamentary sources said the Senate must reconvene to approve the votes and proceedings to validate the decisions taken.

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