NANS, NGO unveil online learning platform

A non-governmental organisation, Iykon Global Foundation, in collaboration with the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), has officially unveiled a web-based test engine system and online learning for Nigerian students, both at secondary and undergraduate levels.

It is aimed at enabling students to excel in their educational pursuits and reduce the incidents of abysmal failures.

Speaking during the unveiling of learning platform in Asaba, Delta State capital yesterday, the Executive Director, Iykon Global Foundation, Ambassador Ephraim Ikechukwu Nwonu, said the essence of the initiative was to assist Nigerian students to enable them to pass their examinations with ease and reduce the incidents of failures among students in WAEC, NECO, JAMB and other examining bodies.

He also said the platform would keep the students well informed and also to complement President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s commitments to improving education in his Renewed Hope Agenda policy.

Nwonu said: ‘The whole essence of this initiative is to assist Nigerian students to be able to pass their examinations, including job seekers to be well informed ahead.

‘Also, the initiative will go a long way in complementing the wonderful commitments of Mr. President’s Renewed Hope Agenda in the education sector. I also commend the President for the NELFUND programme for students to have access to education.

‘It is expected that this initiative will serve as an antidote to JAMB, WAEC, and NECO examinations’ abysmal failure, especially in recent times. Job seekers and graduates can also benefit from this all-important initiative.’

Also speaking during the flag off, the President of National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), Comrade Olushola Oladoja, said the web-based test engine system speaks directly to the struggle and advocacy for students to have access to qualitative and affordable education enhanced by technology. He added that the initiative was not just a project but a tool for empowerment, a bridge to excellence, and a strategic response to the evolving educational demands of the 21st century.

He maintained that Nigerian students had been constrained by inadequate learning resources, poor access to practical platforms, and the gap between classroom knowledge and exams preparedness.

24th FIFA U20 World Cup: Flying Eagles go for broke against Saudi Arabia

The Flying Eagles will be aiming for victory against Saudi Arabia on Matchday 2 in the ongoing FIFA U20 World Cup finals in Chile, after a painful loss to Norway in their first group game on Monday.

Despite dominating the game and creating a number of opportunities, the seven-time African champions were unlucky not to have equalized in the second half of the encounter, and probably taken the three points. On two occasions, their appeals for penalty awards were turned down by the referee.

Head Coach Aliyu Zubair is upbeat his wards have shaken off the defeat against Norway as their attention has shifted towards the confrontation with Saudi Arabia, to ensure the team gets the desired result. With the availability of all key players, Coach Zubair may stick to his usual 4-3-3 formation with more focus on attack and ball possession.

Israel Ayuma, Daniel Daga and Charles Agada have all been booked and will have to play with caution to avoid missing the last group game against the Colombians.

Nigeria @65: Our positions on Tinubu’s education reforms

Yesterday, the country clocked 65 years as an independent nation. It was an avenue for reflection, stock-taking and future projections. Students, who are key stakeholders in the education space believe it is not all gloom and doom. They reckoned that the President’s reforms underlined a steely resolve to reposition the sector, thus, it is a ‘work in progress’.

Speaking to CAMPUS LIFE, Oluwagbemileke Oduselu, a 300-Level student at Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Ogun State, said: ‘President Tinubu’s reforms are bold and show intent, but for us, what matters is seeing them work in real time with better funding, digital learning tools, and skills that match today’s job market.

‘The education system has definitely had its share of ups and downs.

At 65, Nigeria has produced brilliant minds, yet many students still face poor facilities, overcrowded classrooms, and outdated learning methods.

Students want an education that prepares us for life, not just for exams.’

A 400-Level student at Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Oshunkeye Moyinoluwa, described Nigeria’s education system as ‘a work in progress’.

‘At 65 tomorrow, I feel like our education system is still a work in progress because we have made some strides, but honestly the challenges are still plenty, from underfunding, to outdated curriculum, to strikes that keep setting students back.

‘I would say President Tinubu’s reforms are bold and needed actually, from the student loan scheme, the push for skills over certificates, and plans to reposition our schools show he’s updated and not ignorant

‘The real issue is whether these things will move from paper to reality – we’ve heard several promises before, so expectations are high,’ she said.

‘At the end of the day, education has to be the backbone of our growth. If these reforms are seen through, Nigeria’s young people can actually compete globally and build the future we all want and dream of,’ she said.

An ND2 Mass Communication student at Auchi Polytechnic, Zenab Oseni, described Nigeria’s education system as ‘a talented student juggling multiple responsibilities – resilient, yet rough around the edges!’

‘Despite challenges, our students are making do with limited resources, while educators are passionate and dedicated, often going above and beyond.

‘President Tinubu’s reforms have brought fresh air, focusing on data-driven decisions, skills development, and student support.

‘With the right investment and love we tend to do better,’ she said.

Over the years, the government has made promises such as student loans, increased funding, and better technical schools, said Ifeoluwa Adeyeye, a 300-Level Mass Communication student at Adekunle Ajasin University, Ondo State.

According to Ifeoluwa, more schools have been built, the Universal Basic Education (UBE) programme has expanded free basic education alongside the continuous campaign against reduced girl-child education, yet, the progress hasn’t reached new heights.

Ifeoluwa said: ‘Millions of children, especially in Northern Nigeria, remain out of school. Most schools are overcrowded, poorly equipped, and run by underpaid teachers.’

She recalled the challenges faced in her school: ‘Sometimes, we stand during lectures because of inadequate infrastructure. Lecture halls are shared across departments, leading to schedule clashes and, most often, cancelled classes.’

The major change Ifeoluwa expects to see in Nigeria’s educational sector is stability.

‘No more strikes, no more disrupted calendars, no more wasted years. Stability would allow students to graduate in due time, plan their lives better, and truly enjoy the value of the education they struggled for.

‘Nigeria’s education system doesn’t need more promises; it needs an environment where learning thrives to help build trust between the government, lecturers, and students,’ she said.

A 500-level student of the Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA), Joseph Busayo, said :’On paper, the reforms sound good, especially things like curriculum review and all of that. But will every school truly benefit? Even the ones in the slums.

‘I’m just choosing to be hopeful. At least I haven’t lost total confidence that education at all levels in Nigeria can still be revived.’

Raji Halimat Mopelola, a 200-Level Mass Communication student at Usmanu Danfodiyo University (UDUS), said an investment in education shouldn’t be a once-in-a-while thing but a top priority to achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 4, which aims to provide inclusive and quality education for all.

‘Celebrating 65 years of independence when some universities are on strike speaks volumes. True independence is not just political; it means giving young people the freedom to learn without interruption and the opportunity to build a better future,’ she said.

CABSA 8.0 initiative to power entrepreneurship

The eighth edition of a Career, Business and Skill Acquisition (CABSA) initiative, combining grants, exhibitions, open markets exhibition and career clinics to support entrepreneurs and professionals in the country’s largest local government, Alimosho, kicked off yesterday. The five-day empowerment programme is powered by the Calvary Bible Church.

The Founder and General Overseer of the church, Dr. Olumide Emmanuel said at the event tagged ‘CABSA 8.0: The Alimosho Exhibition and Business Summit’, participants will benefit from free business consultancy, career guidance, wholesale markets, panel sessions and business showcases, while several entrepreneurs will also receive grants worth millions of naira.

He described CABSA as a transformational initiative that has evolved beyond skills training to become a hub for business and career growth.

‘Some of the exhibitors you see today came here eight years ago to learn soap-making or photography. They have now built businesses, employ others and are exhibiting their products. That’s the transformation we want to see,’ Emmanuel said.

CABSA, which began as a skills acquisition project during an Easter programme organized by the church, has grown into a multi-faceted empowerment platform. According to the wealth coach, its uniqueness this year lies in the Alimosho Exhibition, where entrepreneurs and businesses will connect directly with consumers and wholesalers.

Emmanuel explained that CABSA is not just a church project but a ‘strategic effort to put Alimosho on the global map’, noting that the community’s size and electoral influence made it central to Lagos and Nigeria’s socio-economic future.

‘Alimosho is the largest local government in the country. For 30 years I’ve told my people, we are not here by accident. We are here to say, Alimosho must be put on the global map. Together, we will change this,’ he said.

Although he could not quantify CABSA’s overall impact in monetary terms, the life coach however, stressed that the initiative had touched thousands of lives, created hundreds of entrepreneurs and strengthened businesses through grants and training.

He pointed to the church’s wider social projects, including 27 years of scholarship schemes and feeding initiatives through ‘Martha’s Kitchen’ since 2008, as proof of its long-standing commitment to community development.

‘In the business world, we measure by cost-benefit analysis. In the kingdom, it’s different. You can spend N100 million to win one soul because one soul is worth more than a $1trillion. Our focus is on transformed lives,’ Emmanuel added.

Meanwhile, exhibitors at CABSA 8.0 credited the platform with giving them visibility, confidence and direct customer engagement.

Fashion entrepreneur, Favour Ogedengbe, who recently graduated from a tertiary institution and now runs a clothing and skincare brand, said the programme had accelerated her business growth.

‘CABSA has really given me visibility. Unlike social media, here you see customers face-to-face, understand their needs, and grow your business in real terms. It has given me exposure at the right time,’ she said.

For Pertinence Group, the event was an opportunity to introduce its fintech innovation, Genius by Pettisave, designed to build saving cultures among SMEs.

‘The church has a significant role to play in society. Supporting businesses is one of the critical pillars of nation-building. This exhibition shows how the church can foster unity and enterprise development,’ the firm’s Assistant General Manager, Tolulope Oduselu said.

Food brand, Eagle Foods, also a first-time participant, said CABSA enabled them to sell healthy food products at wholesale prices, helping families cope with economic challenges.

‘CABSA is an impactful programme that builds confidence and helps businesses project themselves beyond Lagos to the world. It’s about growth, visibility, and encouraging entrepreneurs to aim higher,’ co-founder, Temitope Ayo-Joshua said.

Looking ahead, Emmanuel projected bigger grants and broader reach for future editions of CABSA.

‘When we started, we shared N20,000 grants. Today, we’re giving out millions. By CABSA 10.0, we may be talking about N20 million or N50 million in grants, with hundreds more entrepreneurs empowered and exhibiting their businesses,’ he said.

On government support, Emmanuel argued that effective institutions, not political handouts, were what the country needed. According to him, CABSA thrives on personal responsibility, partnerships, and sustainable structures rather than politics.

‘When government does its job, much of what we are doing won’t be necessary. But as long as there is a need, we will keep doing our part to transform lives,’ he stressed.

Abuja Estate dispute: Firm disowns suit by SAN

Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited has disowned a suit filed on its behalf by a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) , Anthony Aikhunegbe Malik, alleging it was done without authorisation.

In a letter to Malik, the firm stated that neither its board nor management approved the action purportedly filed by his law firm, A. A. Malik and Co, against the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA).

The company demanded the withdrawal of the suit, requesting evidence of compliance.

It warned that failure to comply would lead to petitions to law enforcement agencies, the Body of Benchers, Chief Justice of Nigeria and Legal Practitioners’ Privileges Committee.

Houses for Africa also raised concerns about the transfer of the case from Court 38 to Court 37 in Jikwoyi, and the assignment of the matter to Justice Mohammed Zubairu of the FCT High Court, despite other pending cases on the same subject.

It described the process as questionable and urged the FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, to ensure that the integrity of ministerial decisions on the River Park Estate crisis was maintained.

Unlocking private capital for renewable energy future

Sir: Nigeria’s energy deficit is quite evident; over 84 million Nigerians live without access to electricity, while countless others rely daily on diesel and petrol generators due to unreliable electricity supply and grid instability. While the cost of powering these generators annually is quite significant, they also pollute the environment and pose threat to human health, stifling productivity. Yet, the country is blessed with abundant renewable resources (especially solar) that stand as a viable means to addressing Nigeria’s energy crisis but remain under-utilized. The missing link is financing.

Estimates suggest that Nigeria needs around $9 to $10 billion dollars annually until 2030 to achieve universal electricity access under its Energy Transition Plan. Clearly, public funds and donor contributions alone cannot meet this need. The key lies in unlocking private capital from commercial banks, institutional investors, and other financiers. To attract this much needed investment, several priorities stand out.

First, it is important to de-risk the renewable energy sector. Investors are naturally cautious and in Nigeria, there are concerns about currency volatility, unclear regulations, and repayment challenges. Innovative measures such as guarantees, blended finance, and insurance products can help share risks, giving investors greater confidence to participate.

Second, there is the need to bring forward more bankable projects. Many renewable energy ideas stall because they lack solid financial structures, credible customers, or regulatory backing. Renewable energy project developers must be supported to prepare projects in ways that meet investor requirements and ensure long-term viability.

Third, we have to design tailored financial tools for Nigeria’s market. Renewable energy projects are not like conventional businesses in that they usually require patient capital which means longer repayment periods and flexible structures. Local financial institutions should also create products such as ‘pay-as-you-go’ or ‘lease-to-own’ models that reflect how renewable energy projects actually generate income.

In addition, we need stronger policy and regulatory frameworks. Streamlined approvals, enforceable contracts, predictable tariffs, and better coordination among regulators can make Nigeria a far more attractive destination for private investment.

Finally, leverage climate finance. Instruments such as green bonds, sukuks, and carbon markets represent an untapped pool of funding. When combined with private capital, these tools can significantly accelerate renewable energy expansion.

The future of Nigeria’s renewable energy sector depends not only on technology but also on finance. By reducing risks, strengthening policies, and being innovative in our financial design, the country can unlock billions in private investment. The prize is enormous; we will have affordable and reliable energy for households and businesses, reduced dependence on fossil fuels, and a cleaner, more sustainable economy. The path forward is clear, if we will take it.

Don urges old students to embrace unity

A senior lecturer at Imo State University(IMSU) Prof. Fabian Ukozor has urged old students to be united to further strengthen their developmental strides and impact.

Ukozor spoke at the sixth anniversary of the old students of Township Comprehensive Secondary School, Amaifeke (TCSSA), Orlu, Imo State.

The ceremony, which was held in Lagos ,attracted guests from across Nigeria as well as South Africa and Swaziland.

The don, who was chairman of the occasion reminisced on how the TCSSA was established at a temporary site in 1980 after which it was moved to the present location in 1984, while highlighting how the graduates have impacted learning, business and philanthropy in Nigeria and around the world.

Ukozor enjoined the old students to embrace unity as a tool to impact more on the school for the coming generations.

Among the dignitaries that attended the annual event are Chairman of Orlu Local Government, Pastor Chris Mbarie; a Lagos businessman, Chief CY Utah; and Eze Aneche 1 of Amaifeke, Chief Emmanuel Ohajimadu.

Highlights of the event included a video narration of the state of TCSSA needing rehabilitation by the Chairman, Planning Committee Coalition of the school, Pastor Victor Mcdonald, a N150 million appeal fund for the rehabilitation, presentation of gifts to special guests and the launch of the old students’ magazine.

Research announces explainable AI tool for financial analysis

A new wave of innovation is sweeping through the financial technology sector.

A pioneering study published in the International Journal of Advanced Artificial Intelligence Research, authored by Olabayoji Oluwatofunmi Oladepo and Opeyemi Eebru Alao of Swansea University, has unveiled a user-friendly machine learning tool that promises to transform how traders analyse and forecast stock market trends.

The study addresses a long-standing challenge in stock trading: the complexity of technical analysis.

Traditionally, traders rely on intricate charts and indicators to identify market patterns, but interpreting these visuals can be daunting, especially for beginners.

Most existing trading platforms either lack predictive capabilities or function as opaque ‘black-box’ systems, leaving users in the dark about how decisions are made.

At the heart of the tool among many others is a Random Forest machine learning model, chosen for its robust performance and ability to highlight which features most impact predictions.

The researchers engineered a range of financial indicators into the model, and used advanced techniques like SMOTE to address class imbalances in market data.

The model’s predictions are presented alongside clear visualisations of feature importance, allowing users to see exactly which factors drive the results.

To evaluate the tool’s effectiveness, the researchers conducted a virtual workshop with 14 participants of varying trading experience.

This research marks a significant step toward making financial trading more approachable and trustworthy.

Revolution is not cooking spice

Revolution isn’t cooking spice. It is not something you purchase in small nylon sachets on a busy streets. Yet, folk sell it like spices, summoning its aroma in flavoured words, promising to make everything taste new.

The sellers shout and the crowd leans in, clutching their coins and heady fantasies. But Nigeria is not a kitchen stall; it is an ecology of households and habits, of private demons and public horrors.

If Nigeria is to mark 65 years of independence with anything resembling true rebirth, let that rebirth be a deliberate, internal jihad. It’s about time we shunned the fireworks of rage and mob grandeur frequently broadcast by conflict profiteers and romanticised by the disillusioned.

Revolutions that do not tend to the seedbed of civic character result in anarchy. The consequences are better imagined: ethnic cleansing, random murders, rampant rape, burning markets, crushed neighbourhoods, displaced families and orphaned children.

We must reject the rage-fuelled template. History and recent memory establish that uprisings, especially in a fragile polity, can be a match that sets dry tinder aflame; and the fire rarely knows the difference between palaces and boondocks. The so-called Arab Spring began as an earnest cry against corruption and tyranny; in places it yielded openings, but elsewhere it snowballed into protracted internecine wars, destructive vacuums and authoritarian relapse. Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria and Yemen, among others, show how revolutionary fervor without robust institutions or measured stewardship can produce catastrophe as often as it produces reform.

The lesson is not that people must never act, but that action divorced from civic preparation and a plan for long-term governance risks annihilation of the very goods people seek: safety, livelihoods and dignity. Those who romanticise a fast, thunderous overthrow: demagogues, disgruntled election losers, and entrepreneurial rabble-rousers who dress ambition as moral crusade are desperate actors, who are less interested in the public good than in the power and patronage that follow breakdown.

Others, sometimes foreign actors or ideologues, exploit youthful anger and digital fervour to accelerate outcomes that suit external agendas. Movements started online can be genuine, righteous and necessary; they can also be manipulated, redirected and weaponised. The #EndSARS movement of 2020, for example, began as a clarion call against police brutality and produced powerful civic energy and urgent reforms. But like most mass uprisings, its narrative was complex: genuine grassroots anger, social media amplification, and contested claims of outside manipulation and incendiary messaging all coexisted. The movement’s tragic collapse is a reminder that popular protest can be a force for accountability and also a prism through which external interests and local secessionist tensions play out, often leaving scars between communities.

Nations do not emerge fully formed from constitutions or borderlines. Nations are neither remade nor redeemed by violent uprisings, but by the character of the citizenry. And the latter, in turn, are shaped by their most intimate institution: the family. The family is the receptacle in which the values of a nation are first kindled or corrupted. It is where character and social conscience are either nurtured or strangled in the cradle. The integrity of our public life, therefore, depends on the morality of our private lives.

Family is key. From this sacred unit, a people’s sense of self, place, and purpose begins. If the family is compromised, then society itself becomes a ghost town of ethics: full of laws but lacking justice and compassion; rich in rhetoric but bankrupt of vision. Societal growth, therefore, cannot be engineered solely by policies or economic indices. It must be cultivated through the slow, careful evolution of the human spirit.

Our collective persona as a nation is reflected in the governor who once stole $4.2 million from his state’s coffers and stashed it to fund his vanities abroad, not minding what good such loot could do in resolving the educational, healthcare, and infrastructure woes of his state. It is reflected in the shenanigans of the former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor who currently seeks a plea bargain to escape punishment for fraud running into billions of naira, among others.

It is reflected in the former female Minister of Petroleum, who aggravated fuel scarcity and economic recession through reckless looting of public fund. Yet she fights to walk free.

Our collective personae flourishes in the antics of youths feverishly flying ethnic flags in defense of their ‘brother’ and ‘sister’ lawmaker, governor, minister, and ex-CBN governor irrespective of the atrocities committed by them and the criminal charges levelled against them.

Our public offices aid and abett dubious citizenship. They legitimise our culture of being, which enables and justifies a public officer’s immediate descent into a basement of opportunism right after emerging as an elected representative. The latter locks himself or herself in that amoral cellar and embarks on a quest of inordinate acquisition, counting his spoils in material possessions.

Such characters are, however, mere fragments of our bigger cultural dilemma. They are our decadence; our disease.

Yet even as we have rightly identified their emergence as an affliction of the eye and disease of the mind, our chances at healing are hindered by chinks in our surgical armour: the fissures of ethnoreligious bias, illiteracy, willful degeneracy, greed, poverty, savage ego, and sheer malevolence.

Nigeria’s geographic, religious and ethnic fault lines make reckless upheaval especially dangerous. Where social trust is thin, identities are layered and historical grievances fester unhealed, the romanticised revolt too often degenerates into intercommunal violence.

We must therefore be honest: to overthrow a corrupt structure is not the same as constructing a just polity. Too often the poor pay the heaviest price for our experiments in instant remaking. Thus, must teach a new civic grammar: that the right to revolt is philosophically bound to responsibility and respect for rule of law.

President Bola Tinubu’s administration,on his part, must build institutions that make governance responsive, humane and honorable. His government must measure policy success by lives improved, not by patronage expanded. The incumbent ruling class must avoid financial recklessness and obscenities while urging the citizenry to tighten their belts.

The youth on their part must be sceptical of leaders who promise instant catharsis. They must look beyond what their rhetoric destroys to see what it builds. Those who live by humiliation, intimidation and petty cruelty will never make a humane state.

The revolution Nigeria needs must be borne of patience. It will not photograph as readily as a burning barricade, but its fruits are durable: trust, predictable markets, better schools, safer streets, and a political class kept honest by a public unwilling to tolerate theft.

If Nigeria is to become a decisive actor in Africa’s future, economically, culturally and politically, it must first become a more decent assembly of persons. Nations rarely thrive by grand treaties and trade deals; they are made by how neighbours treat each other, how families rear children and citizens stand for truth. Every country’s reach in the world is directly proportional to the nature of its civic interior.

It’s about time we renounced our easy romance of rage. We must stop inciting our youths to equate destruction with virtue and instead cultivate a different heroism: the courage to be honest when it costs us convenience and the patience to build institutions that outlast us. That is the revolution we must espouse; the type that moulds citizens into caretakers of our common destiny and Nigeria into an inheritance worth passing on.

’Abuja Airport becoming comfort zone for traffickers’

The Director-General, National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), Binta Adamu Bello, has said the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, is becoming a comfort zone for human traffickers.

She stated this yesterday when she led an operation to the airport, which led to the rescue of 24 victims of human trafficking and arrest of five suspected trafficking agents.

The victims whose ages range from 15 to 26 years, were recruited from Kano, Kastina, Oyo, Ondo and Rivers states, and were heading to Iraq, Sudan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Afghanistan.

According to a statement in Abuja by the Press Officer of NAPTIP, Vincent Adekoye, one of the suspected human traffickers, was a retired senior law enforcement officer.

The suspect is alleged to be a prominent member of the trafficking syndicate operating within the Southwest.

On how the raid was carried out, the agency stated: ‘The latest raid followed a tip-off from concerned stakeholders and partners who alerted us to an influx of suspected human trafficking victims at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, and the unwholesome activities of some suspected traffickers.

‘At the end of nearly six hours of operation, the human trafficking were disrupted, leading to the arrest of five suspected traffickers and rescue of 24 suspected victims.