Nigeria’s ports face tipping point as industry leaders push deep seaports, single window

BusinessDay Maritime Conference ‘Strengthening Nigeria’s Maritime Business: Bridging Policy Gaps and Optimising Global Competitiveness,’ on 30th September convened a who’s-who of shipowners, regulators, lawyers, port operators and freight forwarders to confront a blunt truth: Nigeria’s maritime promise is real, but the system that should turn that promise into jobs, exports and revenue is fragmented – and running out of runway.

Frank Aigbogun, Publisher/CEO of BusinessDay, set the tone in his opening: ‘Nigeria’s maritime sector is not a side note to our economy.’ He urged delegates to stop talking about potential and start converting assets into measurable economic value.

Keynote: law, policy and a hard look at implementation

Mfon Usoro, national president, Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport Nigeria, delivering the keynote address

Mfon Usoro, president, Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport (CILT) Nigeria, in her keynote address, set the tone with the masterfully crafted theme, ‘Bridging Policy Gaps and Advancing Maritime Competitiveness: A Roadmap for Nigeria’s Future.’ Her central argument: Nigeria already has many of the policies it needs; the gap is implementation.

She laid out a simple taxonomy of maritime business: ship ownership and operations at the centre, surrounded by maritime technology, seafaring manpower, ports and logistics, and supporting services (finance, law, insurance). ‘It is the crux of the matter. All the other ones around it operate around the main shipping itself,’ she said.

On indigenous shipping, she was pointed and practical. Recalling the Obasanjo government’s ill-fated fleet purchase, she warned that ‘operation of a ship profitably is not like buying a car. You have to prepare the structure, the manpower, the marketing assessment, everything before you buy the ship to ensure the sustainability of the business.’

She rejected the narrative that Nigeria lacks policy: ‘I don’t agree that we don’t have policies. We have a lot of policies,’ she said, citing the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) Act (2007) and the legal instruments that create incentives for Nigerian ownership (national-carrier status with 60% Nigerian ownership and 70% Nigerian officers, for example). Her challenge to the room: after enactment, where is the delivery?

She backed that diagnosis with market numbers: Q1 2025 merchandise trade stood at ?38.30 trillion, of which crude accounted for ?11.90 trillion – ‘there’s cargo outside of crude,’ she emphasised – and the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) recorded 4,100 seagoing vessel calls in 2021, none flying the Nigerian flag.

Goodwill messages: private sector, states, and forwarders weigh in

The conference threaded practical examples through policy prescriptions.

Representing NLNG Shipping and Marine Services (NSML), Ladu spoke for the group and for the absent managing director, Abdul Khadir Ahmed, stressing that policy must translate to technical capacity. NSML runs 13 vessels for clients and maintains a Maritime Centre of Excellence in Bonny – a model, he said, of deliberate domestic skill development: ‘With the right policy and the right skill set we can actually do it as a country.’

Anambra State’s commissioner for Transport, Patricia Igwebuike, pitched a subnational perspective. She called Onitsha River Port a priority and urged inter-agency collaboration and capacity building: ‘It’s not just that you have a river port. You must get the capacity building, the training, and the interaction with others in the sector.’

From the freight-forwarding community, Godfrey Emeka Nwosu, general secretary, National Association of Government Approved Freight Forwarders (NAGAFF), speaking for Tochukwu Ezisi, president, NAGAFF, said the sector’s future will be defined by ‘digital transformation, regulatory harmony and empowerment of local operators,’ urging professionalism, transparency and partnership between government and private operators.

The fleet gap and the cargo guarantee that never arrived

Usoro had earlier, in her keynote address, exposed the fatal flaw in Nigeria’s national-carrier policy: political promises of cargo guarantees were never operationalised. She recalled the Nigerian Fleet Committee effort (with private entrepreneurs and foreign partners ready to take minority shares) – and the dealbreakers: ‘Where is the cargo?’ potential partners asked.

The NIMASA Act’s Section 36, she said, anticipates this by guaranteeing cargo (a minimum share of federal, state and local government cargo, 50% of dry and liquid bulk, and 50% of international aid cargo) for vessels granted national-carrier status. But she cut to the core: ‘The ministry could not give this guarantee because they don’t own cargo. NIMASA does not generate cargo.’ In short, legal guarantees exist on paper; the operational plan – cross-ministerial, cross-agency cargo allocation and fiscal incentives – does not.

Logistics performance and the ‘whole-of-government’ fix

Usoro weaponised data to press the point. Nigeria ranks 88th of 139 on the World Bank Logistics Performance Index (LPI), with low scores across customs efficiency (2.6), infrastructure (2.4), international shipments (2.5), logistics competence (2.3), tracking (2.7) and only relative strength in timeliness (3.1). ‘Isn’t that a shame?’ she asked.

Her prescription: a whole-of-government approach. The Ministry of Marine and Blue Economy cannot run the show alone. ‘The silo approach does not work. It has to be a Nigerian project, not a NIMASA project,’ she said – demanding ministerial coordination, integrated budgets and enforceable implementation committees that include finance, works, ports, customs, immigration and state and local governments.

Regulation, taxes and enforcement: a legal voice

The keynote-author and legal veteran returned to practical fixes: cut the number of agencies operating in ports (more than the eight authorised is a routine violation), reduce punitive taxes on shipowners and replicate aviation’s spare-parts exemptions for shipping: ‘It is not rocket science. shipping deserves the same treatment – zero importation tax,’ she insisted. ‘We must reduce the number of agencies at the ports and enforce discipline.’

Panel 1 – policy and infrastructure: the central diagnosis

Moderated by Kenneth Jukpo, managing director, JUKKEN Consults Limited, the first plenary brought together environmental, legal and operational lenses.

Speakers decried that many planned Inland Container Depots (ICDs) remain dormant. The Dala ICD, in Kano State, for example, ‘could produce a capacity twice the size of Apapa’ but customs have refused to resume operations there. ‘Who is Customs to say they will not resume in Dala?’ the speaker demanded – another illustration that policy without enforcement is paper.

On funding, a panellist noted successful precedents: Seychelles’ blue bond quickly mobilised capital and accelerated its blue economy; and the Lagos-Calabar coastal road financing showed that when political will, institutional support and a clear infrastructure objective align, external funding follows. The ask: shift from drafting more policy to unlocking capital via coordinated, bankable project packaging – blue bonds, Multilateral Development Banks (MDB) financing, bonds for ports and port-linked infrastructure – and empower agencies to raise finance with Ministry of Finance buy-in.

Sustainability and carbon opportunity

Felicia C. Mogo, president, African Marine Environment Sustainability Initiative (AFMESI), stressed that environmental, social, governance (ESG) is no longer optional: ‘ESG – environment, social and governance – is now what is ruling the world.’ She urged pollution controls, community inclusion, and marine-habitat protection (mangroves, seagrass, peatlands). Absent environmental integrity, she warned, grants and green finance will not flow.

On decarbonisation, the panel argued Nigeria is well placed – its crude is relatively low-sulfur – but ports must be upgraded to handle low-sulfur fuels, provide scrubber waste management, and adopt standards for vessel fuel use. One panellist who had participated in International Maritime Organisation (IMO) efforts urged Nigeria to explore carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) and emissions trading pathways: ‘We can capture carbon, utilise what is useful, and then safely store the rest in abandoned oil wells and geological formations across the country,’ he said. He also flagged mangroves – Nigeria’s mangrove forests are a global asset and a potential source of nature-based credits and debt-for-nature swaps.

Panel 2 – the single window, port community systems and digital hygiene

The second plenary, moderated by Samuel Dayo Ebidunmi (MICS), Chartered Shipbroker and Maritime/Supply Chain consultant, turned from bricks and mangroves to bytes and Application Programming Interface (APIs).

‘If you deploy technology on an inefficient system, you simply amplify inefficiency,’ Gbotolorun Babatunde Ayodele, GM, ICT, Nigerian Ports Authority, said, and added a crucial caveat: technology is an enabler, not a cure.

NPA’s current information communication technology (ICT) projects include gated access and closed-circuit television (CCTV) pilots at truck transit parks; vessel tracking and plans for Vessel Traffic Services (VTS); an electronic berth allocation system; and revenue transparency tools.

But the big game-changer, he said, is the National Single Window (NSW) – a federal platform to streamline document exchange – and the NPA’s Port Community System (PCS), which will give stakeholders shared visibility over cargo flows.

‘Information sharing and integration are key. Stakeholder resistance must be broken,’ he said, listing constraints: budget, power supply, training and legal recognition of electronic documents. His operational approach: build NPA’s internal infrastructure first, then scale integrations and system-to-system APIs rather than manual portal-by-portal access.

Port state control, security and data

Richard Olabi (speaking for Sunday Umoren, secretary general, Abuja MoU on Ports State Control) linked safety, security, environment and crew welfare. ‘Without ships, there can be no ports,’ he said. He argued that security threats across West and Central Africa have pushed up freight rates and underlined the need to harmonise port state control. He pointed to NIMASA’s C4I system at Kirikiri – integrating Automatic Identification System (AIS) for real-time maritime domain awareness – and urged alignment with NPA’s Vessel Traffic Service (VTS) for secure navigation and inspection workflows.

Freight forwarders: the single window is existential

Kingsley Igwe, registrar/CEO, Council for Regulation of Freight Forwarding (CRFFN) in Nigeria, made the clearest business case for digitalisation: ‘Everything that goes wrong in the supply chain translates directly into cost. It affects the price of goods in the market, and ultimately every Nigerian citizen.’ He positioned the national single window as Nigeria’s must-do reform: it reduces human interfaces, blocks illegal charges and enables importers/exporters to transact with regulators from a single entry point. He invited stakeholders to nationwide sensitisation events (noting an October session) and pushed for integration between NSW and the Port Community System (PCS).

Igwe also argued for professionalisation: licensing freight forwarders, haulage firms, warehouse operators and customs brokers to remove unqualified actors from the system. ‘Freight forwarding is a professional service,’ he said. CRFFN plans enforcement of licensing provisions ‘in the coming weeks.’

B’Odogwu vs Single Window – clearing up a live technical question

During QandA, a delegate asked about the practical difference between B’Odogwu (the customs electronic declaration platform) and the National Single Window. Kingsley clarified: B’Odogwu is customs-specific (harmonised system (HS) classification, duty calculation) and accessible to licensed customs brokers; the National Single Window is broader – it centralises permits and certificates from Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), CRFFN and other agencies, and will eventually embed B’Odogwu functions so a trader can process all approvals from a single login.

Real problems, practical solutions

Speakers underlined a handful of concrete priorities:

Rail and inland logistics – ports like Apapa and Tincan are river ports hemmed in by urbanisation; only Apapa currently has meaningful rail; hinterland rail and ICDs (Inland Container Depots) must be revived to decongest terminals.

Modal balance – revive barge operations and integrate them with road and rail (Ports and Terminal Multiservices Limited’s (PTML) barge movements to Mile-2 were cited as a positive experiment).

Deep seaports – dredging Apapa to ever-deeper drafts is a losing game; the panel urged investment in naturally deep drafts (16m+) at sites such as Abia and Akwa Ibom to attract mega vessels and economies of scale: ‘If we want mega vessels that offer economies of scale, we cannot continue with ports whose drafts are capped at 13 metres.’

Legal and fiscal fixes – standardise customs procedures across ports, remove punitive taxes on shipowners, adopt stabilisation clauses in public-private partnerships (PPPs) and ensure community consultation and compensation frameworks.

Data and statistics – create a single source of truth for throughput, vessel calls, detention statistics, and cargo flows to support planning and enforcement: ‘If you don’t have the information, you cannot make the right decisions.’

Voices from the floor: inclusion, licensing and rolling out change management

Freight forwarders in the audience raised a practical and political point: they are routinely excluded from policy design despite being the operators who execute trade flows. ‘Nobody has considered how to empower the freight forwarder,’ one delegate said, calling for targeted funding and training so small- and medium-sized forwarders can buy the laptops, software and connectivity NSW will require.

Another delegate urged maximising inland waterways: ‘Let us use what we have to get what we want – jetty-to-jetty water movements can relieve roads today.’

A final practical exchange cut through to what matters: the NSW is near completion (panellists said ˜60% integrated), pilots are expected in the coming months, and legal recognition for e-documents (e-manifests, e-invoices, electronic bills of lading) must be fast-tracked. Kingsley estimated that the broad adoption of electronic documents could reduce logistics costs by up to 40%.

Closing: the ask is simple – execute, integrate, regulate

The conference closed on a procedural but symbolic note – a group photograph and a call to action from BusinessDay’s trade correspondent, Bethl Ujabi: the ‘most important part of today is the action that begins after now.’

Across plenaries, the prescriptions converged:

Stop treating maritime as a ministry project. Make it a national project with ministerial key performance indicators (KPIs) and cross-cutting budgets. ‘Whole-of-government’ was the conference watchword.

Fast-track the National Single Window and Port Community System – with legal recognition of e-documents, strong cybersecurity rules and an integration roadmap that prioritises API-to-API communication (not manual portals).

Invest in hinterlands and deep seaports rather than endlessly dredging shallow river channels.

Professionalise the supply chain through licensing, training and a freight-forwarder support fund so local operators can adopt digital freight models.

Make sustainability a funding lever – protect mangroves, pursue CCUS pilots and position Nigeria to capture nature-based credits and green finance.

Bottom line

The conversation at BusinessDay’s maritime conference was less about new ideas than about discipline: Nigeria is not short of plans or policies; what it lacks is coordinated execution, line-ministry ownership of outcomes, predictable finance and the digital plumbing to make the whole system visible and accountable.

If ministers, regulators and private investors can align, the payoff is tangible: more Nigerian ships in international trade, lower logistics costs, jobs in ship management and seafaring, and export-ready supply chains. If they don’t, the country will continue to watch foreign flags carry Nigerian trade and foreign ports reap the productivity gains.

As Mogo put it in a moment that cut through the policy layers to a political charge: ‘We have policy – now we must show the will to implement it.’ The rest, the delegates warned, will be earned – or lost – in the months after the conference.

7 richest Indian business giants in Africa and the companies behind them in 2025

Indian businesses have established a strong presence across Africa, with investments spanning telecommunications, energy, real estate, retail, and manufacturing. The continent’s growing markets have attracted long-term commitments from Indian entrepreneurs who now play a vital role in job creation, infrastructure development, and cross-border trade.

In 2025, several Indian business giants stand out for both their personal fortunes and the companies they have built. These firms are not only central to India’s global economic footprint but also integral to Africa’s growth story, influencing industries that touch millions of lives.

This report identifies seven of the richest Indian business giants in Africa, their latest estimated net worth, and the companies underpinning their wealth.

Prateek Suri – Maser Group and MDR Investments

Prateek Suri, born in 1988, is recognised as the youngest and richest Indian businessman in Africa in 2025, with an estimated net worth of $1.9 billion. He founded Maser Group in 2012, focusing on affordable smart televisions and electronics. By 2024, Maser had sold over 800,000 units across Africa and reached a valuation of $5 billion before being acquired by SCG Asia.

Following this success, Suri launched MDR Investments, a venture capital firm investing in infrastructure, mining, and emerging technologies across Africa. Through the Maser Foundation, he also partners with governments and NGOs to support development in underserved regions.

Anil Agarwal – Vedanta Resources

Anil Agarwal, founder and chairman of Vedanta Resources, is one of the most influential Indian billionaires with major operations in Africa. Born in 1954 in Patna, India, Agarwal built his metals and mining empire into a global powerhouse.

In Africa, Vedanta is a key player in Zambia’s copper industry through its 80% ownership of Konkola Copper Mines, employing thousands and contributing significantly to the local economy. As of 2025, Agarwal’s fortune is estimated at $1.6 billion, and Vedanta continues to expand its footprint in natural resources across the continent.

Savitri Jindal and Family – O.P. Jindal Group

Savitri Jindal, India’s richest woman, and her family oversee the O.P. Jindal Group, valued globally at around $12 billion, with a strong African presence through Jindal Africa, headquartered in Johannesburg.

The group runs major mining and energy projects including the Kiepersol Colliery in South Africa, the Chirodzi coal mine in Mozambique, and the Mmamabula Energy Project in Botswana, with further interests in Namibia, Cameroon, Zambia, and Tanzania. These ventures cement the Jindals as one of the most influential business families shaping Africa’s steel, mining, and energy sectors.

Sunil Vaswani – Stallion Group

Sunil Vaswani, chairman of Stallion Group, leads one of the largest Indian-owned conglomerates in Sub-Saharan Africa. Founded in 1969 and headquartered in Dubai, Stallion Group operates across 18 countries, employing more than 285,000 people.

Its businesses span automobile assembly, food processing, commodities, steel, real estate, logistics, and shipping. In Nigeria, Stallion revived local auto assembly, rolling out Nissan, Hyundai, and Volkswagen models. The group also dominates in rice milling and FMCG distribution.

Forbes estimated Vaswani’s fortune at $1.6 billion in 2020, while the Sunday Times Rich List placed it at £1.159bn in 2021. Today, Stallion generates an estimated $4 billion in annual revenue, much of it from Africa.

Sudhir Ruparelia – Ruparelia Group

Ugandan billionaire Sudhir Ruparelia is the founder of the Ruparelia Group, Uganda’s largest private conglomerate. His empire spans real estate, hospitality, finance, insurance, education, and floriculture.

Born in Kabatoro in 1956, Ruparelia became Uganda’s first billionaire in 2014. His flagship properties include the Speke Resort Convention Centre, which hosted the Non-Aligned Movement and G-77 summits in 2024, and Arie Towers, a commercial complex in Kampala.

As of November 2023, his net worth was estimated at $1.2 billion, cementing his position as East Africa’s richest Indian entrepreneur.

Bhimji Depar Shah – Bidco Africa

Bhimji Depar Shah, born in Mombasa in 1931, is the founder of Bidco Africa, East Africa’s largest consumer goods manufacturer.

Bidco produces more than 40 household brands in edible oils, fats, detergents, hygiene products, and beverages. Popular brands like Kimbo and Elianto remain household staples in Kenya and beyond.

With operations in 17 African countries and over 25,000 employees, Bidco Africa continues to dominate the FMCG sector. As of 2025, Bhimji Depar Shah’s family is worth an estimated $700 million.

Manu Chandaria – Comcraft Group

Manu Chandaria, chairman of Comcraft Group, is one of Kenya’s most respected industrialists. Founded in Nairobi in the 1960s, Comcraft has grown into a multinational with operations in 40 countries, specialising in steel, aluminium, and plastics manufacturing.

The group records revenues of over $2 billion annually and employs more than 30,000 people. Chandaria, also renowned for his philanthropy through the Chandaria Foundation, supports education, healthcare, and community development across Africa.

Judge backs manager fired on allegations of witchcraft, awards Sh3m

The Employment and Labour Relations Court has nullified the sacking of a company manager on allegations of practising witchcraft and failing to respond to text messages from her supervisor, ruling the dismissal violated statutory procedures.

While voiding the termination, the court cited the employer’s failure to produce written termination charges, proof of disciplinary hearing notices, and verification of witchcraft claims.

Retirees seek StanChart parent regulator’s help in pension row

A group of former Standard Chartered Bank Kenya (SCBK) employees have asked the UK’s financial services regulator to compel the lender’s British parent to act on their claims for past undervalued pensions, citing frustration in their engagement with the Kenyan subsidiary.

The group numbering 325 is seeking pension on the same terms as the 629 former workers who recently won a Supreme Court case affirming a Retirement Benefits Appeals Tribunal (RBAT) award against the lender for their dues estimated at about Sh7 billion.

Rajeev Pant: Prime Bank CEO on why the lender bets on small firms

For many banks, lending to small businesses is always seen as a risky affair. But Prime Bank, now with three decades of betting on small businesses, explains how it finds the sweet spot in an area where many large banks have struggled.

Prime Bank CEO Rajeev Pant spoke to Business Daily about the power of consistency, specialisation, staying close to customers and avoiding risky bets, and how this has offered a formula to keep loan default rates at below three percent against the banking sector’s over 17 percent.

Kenya in early redemption of Sh129bn Eurobond

Kenya has launched a buyback of the $1 billion (Sh129.23 billion), 10-year Eurobond that is due to mature in February 2028, looking to avoid the pain of a bullet payment on the debt.

This will be the third early repayment of a Eurobond by the government in the last two years, which is part of the Treasury’s debt management strategy of directly refinancing large upcoming maturities with new bonds of longer tenor.

James Vaulkhard comes home, where Tigoni tea hills paint vivid memories

For Kenyan-born British artist James Vaulkhard, art has always been the essence of his existence. He grew up in the rolling hills and tea plantations of Tigoni, a place whose lush landscapes now take centre stage in his maiden exhibition in Nairobi.

James studied art history at Leeds University in the UK before pursuing classical training at Charles Cecil Studios and Studio Della Statua in Florence, Italy. There, he immersed himself in an Italian system of portraiture and figurative painting that valued rigour and discipline.

He recalls months of intensive classes where students would spend a full year working in one medium, on live models, sometimes nude, while learning to master proportions, form, light and shadow. He also taught younger artists during this period. However, James felt the pull to take a different path, one where his own voice would be the muse, the ruse and the fleeting inspiration of his work.

‘I never wanted to be a classically societal portrait artist,’ he says. ‘I envisioned Florence as a foundation. When I moved to the UK, I used that experience to bend and break rules and to develop my own style. Portraits brought in money, but my dream was always to create and sell work that spoke in my own language.’ Exhibiting frequently in London, he worked to ‘deprogramme’ himself from his classical heritage, which, though invaluable, risked becoming a creative cage.

That transformation required grit.

‘When I applied for school in Florence, I was warned about getting sucked into a tradition and discipline that had stood for centuries,’ he recalls. ‘I knew I wanted the foundation, but I also knew I would constantly experiment from the very beginning. I was, however, doing a few classical portraits and commissions over time just to stay afloat as a young artist.’

London gave him opportunities to push his boundaries. Then came the Covid-19 lockdowns, which provided uninterrupted time to paint. ‘I became maniacal with my work,’ he says. ‘By the time sanity returned to the world, my own style had started to take shape.’

His Nairobi exhibition marks a return to Tigoni, where his childhood among rolling tea plantations continues to inspire him. The landscapes, he explains, are challenging to capture. ‘I have always wanted to paint these tea farms, but their surreal nature makes them hard to translate onto canvas. The luminous greens lie flat like a carpet, almost like an ocean or desert. It can be difficult to make them work as a painting.’

In this series, James combines representational and abstract approaches. Tigoni’s hills are the main subject, but he also paints landscapes of Lake Naivasha and Msambweni, places that he enjoys revisiting. His layering of colours, sometimes deliberately unnatural, creates depth and vibrancy. Patterns emerge across the surfaces, suggesting both vastness and intimacy. Viewers sense open plains, light-filled horizons, and a quiet catharsis.

The portraits are inspired by Kenya, but in composition, James was also looking at the San Francisco Bay Area school of painters, including Richard Diebenkorn, Clifford Still and Joseph Amber, whose bold treatment of colour influences his work.

James’s connection to art began early. At the age of seven, his parents were already framing his watercolours, many of which still hang in their home. His skill was unquestionable, and over time, his work has grown to embrace narrative and historical elements. In his latest paintings, though narrative recedes, African landscapes remain central, an ode to place and memory.

The biggest lesson across his journey, he says, has been faith. ‘Art is not easy, not even as a hobby. It can be frustrating. But having the courage to take risks, even when things do not go as planned, always leads somewhere.’ James has seen every side of the artist’s life. At 18, he sold his first painting – a mural of a Pokot herdswoman – for about Sh17,000. Nearly two decades later, he sold his most expensive painting for Sh3.3 million. His exhibition at the One Off Art Gallery features works priced in the range of Sh232,000 and Sh1.1million.

Though his career has taken him from Florence to London and now back to Nairobi, his practice remains a balance between experimentation and discipline, freedom and foundation. He continues to push his style forward, layering colours and patterns in search of both harmony and disruption, abstraction and representation.

His return to Tigoni, he says, feels inevitable. ‘The landscapes have always been calling. I think I needed the years of training, experimentation and failure before I could even attempt them.’

What stands out in James’s story is not only the technical evolution of his work but also his determination to live by his own vision. He has resisted the pull of purely commercial art, choosing instead to forge a style that is personal and resonant. His art bridges two worlds – the classical discipline of Florence and the luminous freedom of the Kenyan landscape – each shaping the other.

It is this tension that makes his current exhibition compelling. The works are not just portraits of place but explorations of memory, colour and self-discovery. They carry the discipline of tradition while embracing the freedom of experimentation.

James is quick to emphasise that the process is ongoing.

His Nairobi exhibition is not a culmination but another step in his evolution as an artist. Each canvas reflects both his roots and his restlessness, his grounding in technique and his refusal to be confined by it. In his own words: ‘It does not always go to plan, but it always leads to something.’

The exhibition runs until the end of October.

MPs raise dominance fears over Dar tycoon in Portland stake bid

Parliament has questioned Tanzanian tycoon Edhah Abdallah Munif’s bid to purchase an additional 29.2 percent stake in East Africa Portland Cement (EAPC) amid concerns that he would dominate the board of the firm and share trade secrets with a rival company.

The Committee on Trade, Industry, and Cooperatives raised concerns that Mr Munif, through his investment vehicle, Kalahari Cement Limited, may dominate EAPC voting rights and strategic direction with his increased 41.75 percent stake.

Stakeholders clash over freshly reintroduced sugar price levy

Sugar sector stakeholders have given a parliamentary committee mixed submissions on the newly reintroduced Sugar Development Levy, with some demanding the tax rate be lowered to one percent while others suggested higher rates of up to 10 percent.

The Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM) informed the Senate Committee on Agriculture that industrial sugar, also known as Icumsa 45, is an essential raw material for manufacturing and that the levy on it should be reduced or eliminated.