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  • NIGERIA
    How President Tinubu pitches Nigerian business case to the rest of Africa

    Africa Forward Summit: Tinubu calls for a reform of global financial architecture to aid Africa’s  growth

    How President Tinubu pitches Nigerian business case to the rest of Africa

    How President Tinubu pitches Nigerian business case to the rest of Africa

    Nigeria: Presidency dismisses alleged discrepancies in tax laws as fake

    Nigeria building a tax system that is globally relevant, economically competitive, socially equitable, fiscally sustainable  – Oyedele

    Germany pledges support for Nigeria, urges action on cross-border threats

    Germany reaffirms commitment to development cooperation with Nigeria

    Nigerian envoy condemns killing of two citizens in South Africa

    Nigeria-South Africa Chamber urges calm, dialogue over xenophobic unrest

    Pa Fasoranti says bright future awaits Nigeria in 2026, beyond

    Aiyedatiwa celebrates Fasoranti at 100

    Pa Fasoranti says bright future awaits Nigeria in 2026, beyond

    Pa Fasoranti a surviving pillar of wisdom, moral leadership in Nigeria – Ooni

    Nigeria:  FG launches new revenue system to eliminate leakages, boost transparency

    Nigeria: FG moves to address regional imbalances through NRDP policy document

    Nigeria: Senate confirms three nominees as non-career ambassadors, two commissioners of NERC

    Nigeria: Senate unveils plans to overhaul agricultural colleges to combat food insecurity

  • Entertainment
    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    Burna Boy, Shakira set to release FIFA World Cup song “Dai Dai”

    Mixed reactions trail Davido’s appointment as youth mobiliser for Adeleke’s re-election campaign

    Davido set for induction into Black Music Walk Of Fame

    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    NFC congratulates Funke Akindele as film ‘Behind The Scenes’ grosses over N2b at the box office

    NFVCB hails Funke Akindele on box office success of ‘Behind The Scene’

    • Life
    • Art & Culture
    • LIFE & CULTURE
  • Education
    Ecobank Nigeria confirms early repayment of $300m eurobond

    Chess in Slums Africa, Platform School emerge champions at 3rd Ecobank National Schools Team Chess Championship

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    Nigeria: SSANU, NASU resume negotiation with FG

    Nigeria: FG cancels mother tongue policy, declares English sole medium of instruction in schools

    Nigeria: Minister says NCE applicants with four credits exempted from UTME

    ASUU laments poor implementation of 2005 agreement

    ASUU laments poor implementation of 2005 agreement

    JAMB says no barring of undergraduates from UTME

    JAMB releases 2026 cut-off marks, sets deadline for admissions

    JAMB says no barring of undergraduates from UTME

    JAMB says candidates can use personal computers for UTME from 2027

    Taxing, Borrowing the Future Without Building: What has Nigeria’s fiscal authority done for the real sector?

    Nigeria: Tinubu approves N250b for construction of student hostels nationwide

    Nigeria: FG cancels mother tongue policy, declares English sole medium of instruction in schools

    Nigeria: FG approves $500m annual research fund to drive innovation

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    Nigeria: NASU, SSANU to suspend strike on Monday

  • Health
    Alternative Bank finances local pharmaceutical production to curb medicine security crisis

    Alternative Bank finances local pharmaceutical production to curb medicine security crisis

    Nigeria adopts new frameworks to strengthen accountability, financing, governance, service delivery in health sector

    Nigerian Medical Association leadership crisis deepens in Lagos

    Nigeria: FG inaugurates committee to end power outages in hospitals

    Nigeria, EU, WHO inaugurate 4.2m euros health programme

    Nigeria: Minister confirms 17% drop in maternal deaths in 172 LGAs

    Nigeria: FG confirms implementation of strategic initiatives to improve maternal, child health

    Nigeria: FG inaugurates committee to end power outages in hospitals

    Nigeria, partners moves to adopt CAR-T cell therapy for advanced healthcare

    NNPCL grows profit by 64% to ₦5.4trn in 2024, as Ojulari pledges strategic investments to sustain growth into next decade

    NNPC Foundation rehabilitates, inaugurates 3 NOHIL wards of 100-bed capacity in Lagos

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO lists 10 countries responsible for 70% of global Hepatitis B related deaths in 2024

    Russian scientists develop method to enhance effectiveness of anti-cancer medicines

    Researchers discover hidden genetic process linked to cancer growth

    Nigeria: FG inaugurates committee to end power outages in hospitals

    Nigeria targets 50% reduction in malaria burden by 2030

    • Health and Fitness
  • Media
    Sahara Power Group joins Mission 300 to accelerate electricity access for 300m Africans by 2030

    Oriental News Summit: Kola Adesina to Lead Dialogue on Nigeria’s Oil Industry Decarbonisation

    MEDIA: Digital platforms reshaping consumption

    Report flags Nigeria media funding challenges

    Nigeria: Court sentences man to three years’ imprisonment in Lagos over N8b fraud

    Nigeria: Court stops NBC from punishing broadcasters for expressing opinions

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigerian press bodies urge FG, NASS to act against big tech threat to information sovereignty

    World Press Freedom Day: SERAP, NGE urge government to protect journalists, end insecurity and impunity in Nigeria

    Chief Justice of Nigeria charges judiciary to guard credibility ahead of 2027 polls

    Chief Justice of Nigeria frowns at inaccurate, sensational reporting of court proceedings

    Tinubu, Gov Adeleke  celebrate Shola Oshunkeye, award-winning journalist and publisher at 70

    Tinubu, Gov Adeleke  celebrate Shola Oshunkeye, award-winning journalist and publisher at 70

    Taxing, Borrowing the Future Without Building: What has Nigeria’s fiscal authority done for the real sector?

    SERAP urges Tinubu to withdraw NBC’s directive targeting broadcasters

    NiRA blames foreign domains for multi-billion naira capital flight

    NiRA deploys domain extensions to bolster Nigeria’s internet security

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  • News
    Nigeria: Lagos confirms drop in malaria prevalence, battles shortage of 30,000 doctors

    Nigeria: Lagos confirms drop in malaria prevalence, battles shortage of 30,000 doctors

    Sanwo-Olu hails Tunji Disu’s appointment as Acting IGP

    Nigeria: IGP Disu assures NAICOM of police help in tracking insurance frauds

    Ogun pilgrims arrive in Saudi Arabia as Gateway Airport begins Hajj operations

    Ogun pilgrims arrive in Saudi Arabia as Gateway Airport begins Hajj operations

    Nigerian Railway approves 50% train fare cut for Christmas, New Year travel

    Nigerian Railway condemns repeated attacks on trains, calls for community support

    2026 May Day: Lagos govt announces ₦50,000 salary support for workers

    2026 May Day: Lagos govt announces ₦50,000 salary support for workers

    Nigeria: Be wary of opposition elements trying to truncate democracy – Gov Sani 

    Nigeria: Be wary of opposition elements trying to truncate democracy – Gov Sani 

    • Politics
    • Opinion
  • World
    UN welcomes Strait of Hormuz reopening amid ceasefire

    Iran defines Strait of Hormuz as far larger zone

    UN welcomes Strait of Hormuz reopening amid ceasefire

    Trump dismisses Iran’s offer on Strait of Hormuz as oil prices surge

    German Chancellor says end of Iranian leadership could be matter of days

    Iran warns U.S. army against entering Strait of Hormuz

    German Chancellor says end of Iranian leadership could be matter of days

    UAE condemns attack on ADNOC-linked vessels in Strait of Hormuz

    Trump accuses Nigeria of allowing Boko Haram, Islamic State terrorists operate freely

    US puts cost of war in Iran at $25b so far

    German Chancellor says end of Iranian leadership could be matter of days

    Iran’s main airport resumes flights to 15 foreign destinations

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO lists 10 countries responsible for 70% of global Hepatitis B related deaths in 2024

    Nigeria achieves 61.58% refining capacity utilisation in October 2025

    Middle East war triggers global energy shock as prices set for biggest surge in four years

    UNICEF raises alarm over proliferation of sexualised images of youngsters by AI

    UNICEF warns that 7.5m children in Sahel need humanitarian assistance

    • Africa
    • America
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  • Sports
    Ecobank Nigeria confirms early repayment of $300m eurobond

    Chess in Slums Africa, Platform School emerge champions at 3rd Ecobank National Schools Team Chess Championship

    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    Burna Boy, Shakira set to release FIFA World Cup song “Dai Dai”

    Saka’s goal sends Arsenal to Champions League final

    Saka’s goal sends Arsenal to Champions League final

    SPORTS: Great leap with high budget

    Nigeria targets sports economy growth through intellectual property

    Nigerian Copyright Commission unveils new corporate logo

    NCC boss warns that digital piracy, intellectual property infringement threaten sustainability, investments in sports

    Tinubu congratulates Nigerian-American basketball star Ejimofor Anosike on historic achievements in China

    Tinubu congratulates Nigerian-American basketball star Ejimofor Anosike on historic achievements in China

    NELFUND Interview: Disburses N116b for students’ fees, upkeeps

    NIS partners NELFUND to boost sports education, workforce development

    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    SuperSport promises  to broadcast all 104 matches of expanded FIFA World Cup

    SPORTS: Great leap with high budget

    SPORTS: Great leap with high budget

  • Business
    Lagos unveils comprehensive cybersecurity guidelines to strengthen digital safety

    Lagos targets global investors at Invest Lagos 3.0 Summit in June

    Nestle Nigeria still in the wood despite N105b profit in 2025

    Nestle Nigeria: Strong cost dynamics to anchor earnings resilience – WorldStage Analysis

    CIoD Abuja Zone strengthens governance collaboration with Head of Service

    CIoD Abuja Zone strengthens governance collaboration with Head of Service

    NEPZA seeks 10-year tax exemption for SEZ operators

    Nigeria: NEPZA, NAFDAC strengthen oversight in free trade zones

    43 delegates from 30 British companies complete first trade and investment mission to Nigeria

    NBCC, stakeholders urge innovation, investment to tackle food insecurity

    Nigeria: Alliance urges FG to adopt GTCO successful enterprise-driven growth models for inclusive economic transformation

    Nigeria: Alliance urges FG to adopt GTCO successful enterprise-driven growth models for inclusive economic transformation

    Access Bank to host Africa Trade Conference 2026

    Post-recapitalisation: Access Holdings shareholders’ fund hits N4.33trn, PBT spikes

    Africa Prudential unveils Sabivest to deepen digital investment access

    Africa Prudential unveils Sabivest to deepen digital investment access

    Nigeria: CBN gov says FG’s economic reforms crucial to sustainable repositioning of national economy

    Cardoso charges directors to boost confidence in banking sector

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  • Home
  • NIGERIA
    How President Tinubu pitches Nigerian business case to the rest of Africa

    Africa Forward Summit: Tinubu calls for a reform of global financial architecture to aid Africa’s  growth

    How President Tinubu pitches Nigerian business case to the rest of Africa

    How President Tinubu pitches Nigerian business case to the rest of Africa

    Nigeria: Presidency dismisses alleged discrepancies in tax laws as fake

    Nigeria building a tax system that is globally relevant, economically competitive, socially equitable, fiscally sustainable  – Oyedele

    Germany pledges support for Nigeria, urges action on cross-border threats

    Germany reaffirms commitment to development cooperation with Nigeria

    Nigerian envoy condemns killing of two citizens in South Africa

    Nigeria-South Africa Chamber urges calm, dialogue over xenophobic unrest

    Pa Fasoranti says bright future awaits Nigeria in 2026, beyond

    Aiyedatiwa celebrates Fasoranti at 100

    Pa Fasoranti says bright future awaits Nigeria in 2026, beyond

    Pa Fasoranti a surviving pillar of wisdom, moral leadership in Nigeria – Ooni

    Nigeria:  FG launches new revenue system to eliminate leakages, boost transparency

    Nigeria: FG moves to address regional imbalances through NRDP policy document

    Nigeria: Senate confirms three nominees as non-career ambassadors, two commissioners of NERC

    Nigeria: Senate unveils plans to overhaul agricultural colleges to combat food insecurity

  • Entertainment
    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    Burna Boy, Shakira set to release FIFA World Cup song “Dai Dai”

    Mixed reactions trail Davido’s appointment as youth mobiliser for Adeleke’s re-election campaign

    Davido set for induction into Black Music Walk Of Fame

    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    CREATIVE SECTOR: Strong tech-driven growth

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    Deejays disown report of Burna Boy’s music ban

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    David Offor, famous actor as Clarus in 1970s New Masquerade tv home series, passes away 

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Spotify streams fetch Nigerian artistes N60b in 2025

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Grammys 2026: South Africa’s Tyla edges Nigerian artistes with Best African Music Performance

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    Actors Guild of Nigeria lifts suspension of  Nollywood actress Halima Abubakar

    NFC congratulates Funke Akindele as film ‘Behind The Scenes’ grosses over N2b at the box office

    NFVCB hails Funke Akindele on box office success of ‘Behind The Scene’

    • Life
    • Art & Culture
    • LIFE & CULTURE
  • Education
    Ecobank Nigeria confirms early repayment of $300m eurobond

    Chess in Slums Africa, Platform School emerge champions at 3rd Ecobank National Schools Team Chess Championship

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    Nigeria: SSANU, NASU resume negotiation with FG

    Nigeria: FG cancels mother tongue policy, declares English sole medium of instruction in schools

    Nigeria: Minister says NCE applicants with four credits exempted from UTME

    ASUU laments poor implementation of 2005 agreement

    ASUU laments poor implementation of 2005 agreement

    JAMB says no barring of undergraduates from UTME

    JAMB releases 2026 cut-off marks, sets deadline for admissions

    JAMB says no barring of undergraduates from UTME

    JAMB says candidates can use personal computers for UTME from 2027

    Taxing, Borrowing the Future Without Building: What has Nigeria’s fiscal authority done for the real sector?

    Nigeria: Tinubu approves N250b for construction of student hostels nationwide

    Nigeria: FG cancels mother tongue policy, declares English sole medium of instruction in schools

    Nigeria: FG approves $500m annual research fund to drive innovation

    Nigeria: FG moves to establish Armed Forces Medical College

    Nigeria: NASU, SSANU to suspend strike on Monday

  • Health
    Alternative Bank finances local pharmaceutical production to curb medicine security crisis

    Alternative Bank finances local pharmaceutical production to curb medicine security crisis

    Nigeria adopts new frameworks to strengthen accountability, financing, governance, service delivery in health sector

    Nigerian Medical Association leadership crisis deepens in Lagos

    Nigeria: FG inaugurates committee to end power outages in hospitals

    Nigeria, EU, WHO inaugurate 4.2m euros health programme

    Nigeria: Minister confirms 17% drop in maternal deaths in 172 LGAs

    Nigeria: FG confirms implementation of strategic initiatives to improve maternal, child health

    Nigeria: FG inaugurates committee to end power outages in hospitals

    Nigeria, partners moves to adopt CAR-T cell therapy for advanced healthcare

    NNPCL grows profit by 64% to ₦5.4trn in 2024, as Ojulari pledges strategic investments to sustain growth into next decade

    NNPC Foundation rehabilitates, inaugurates 3 NOHIL wards of 100-bed capacity in Lagos

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO lists 10 countries responsible for 70% of global Hepatitis B related deaths in 2024

    Russian scientists develop method to enhance effectiveness of anti-cancer medicines

    Researchers discover hidden genetic process linked to cancer growth

    Nigeria: FG inaugurates committee to end power outages in hospitals

    Nigeria targets 50% reduction in malaria burden by 2030

    • Health and Fitness
  • Media
    Sahara Power Group joins Mission 300 to accelerate electricity access for 300m Africans by 2030

    Oriental News Summit: Kola Adesina to Lead Dialogue on Nigeria’s Oil Industry Decarbonisation

    MEDIA: Digital platforms reshaping consumption

    Report flags Nigeria media funding challenges

    Nigeria: Court sentences man to three years’ imprisonment in Lagos over N8b fraud

    Nigeria: Court stops NBC from punishing broadcasters for expressing opinions

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigeria commits to lead global fight against Fake  news

    Nigerian press bodies urge FG, NASS to act against big tech threat to information sovereignty

    World Press Freedom Day: SERAP, NGE urge government to protect journalists, end insecurity and impunity in Nigeria

    Chief Justice of Nigeria charges judiciary to guard credibility ahead of 2027 polls

    Chief Justice of Nigeria frowns at inaccurate, sensational reporting of court proceedings

    Tinubu, Gov Adeleke  celebrate Shola Oshunkeye, award-winning journalist and publisher at 70

    Tinubu, Gov Adeleke  celebrate Shola Oshunkeye, award-winning journalist and publisher at 70

    Taxing, Borrowing the Future Without Building: What has Nigeria’s fiscal authority done for the real sector?

    SERAP urges Tinubu to withdraw NBC’s directive targeting broadcasters

    NiRA blames foreign domains for multi-billion naira capital flight

    NiRA deploys domain extensions to bolster Nigeria’s internet security

    • CSR
    • Jobs
    • Labour
    • Law
  • News
    Nigeria: Lagos confirms drop in malaria prevalence, battles shortage of 30,000 doctors

    Nigeria: Lagos confirms drop in malaria prevalence, battles shortage of 30,000 doctors

    Sanwo-Olu hails Tunji Disu’s appointment as Acting IGP

    Nigeria: IGP Disu assures NAICOM of police help in tracking insurance frauds

    Ogun pilgrims arrive in Saudi Arabia as Gateway Airport begins Hajj operations

    Ogun pilgrims arrive in Saudi Arabia as Gateway Airport begins Hajj operations

    Nigerian Railway approves 50% train fare cut for Christmas, New Year travel

    Nigerian Railway condemns repeated attacks on trains, calls for community support

    2026 May Day: Lagos govt announces ₦50,000 salary support for workers

    2026 May Day: Lagos govt announces ₦50,000 salary support for workers

    Nigeria: Be wary of opposition elements trying to truncate democracy – Gov Sani 

    Nigeria: Be wary of opposition elements trying to truncate democracy – Gov Sani 

    • Politics
    • Opinion
  • World
    UN welcomes Strait of Hormuz reopening amid ceasefire

    Iran defines Strait of Hormuz as far larger zone

    UN welcomes Strait of Hormuz reopening amid ceasefire

    Trump dismisses Iran’s offer on Strait of Hormuz as oil prices surge

    German Chancellor says end of Iranian leadership could be matter of days

    Iran warns U.S. army against entering Strait of Hormuz

    German Chancellor says end of Iranian leadership could be matter of days

    UAE condemns attack on ADNOC-linked vessels in Strait of Hormuz

    Trump accuses Nigeria of allowing Boko Haram, Islamic State terrorists operate freely

    US puts cost of war in Iran at $25b so far

    German Chancellor says end of Iranian leadership could be matter of days

    Iran’s main airport resumes flights to 15 foreign destinations

    WHO confirms 88% drop in measles deaths as vaccination averts 58.7m deaths globally

    WHO lists 10 countries responsible for 70% of global Hepatitis B related deaths in 2024

    Nigeria achieves 61.58% refining capacity utilisation in October 2025

    Middle East war triggers global energy shock as prices set for biggest surge in four years

    UNICEF raises alarm over proliferation of sexualised images of youngsters by AI

    UNICEF warns that 7.5m children in Sahel need humanitarian assistance

    • Africa
    • America
    • Asia
    • Europe
  • Sports
    Ecobank Nigeria confirms early repayment of $300m eurobond

    Chess in Slums Africa, Platform School emerge champions at 3rd Ecobank National Schools Team Chess Championship

    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    Burna Boy, Shakira set to release FIFA World Cup song “Dai Dai”

    Saka’s goal sends Arsenal to Champions League final

    Saka’s goal sends Arsenal to Champions League final

    SPORTS: Great leap with high budget

    Nigeria targets sports economy growth through intellectual property

    Nigerian Copyright Commission unveils new corporate logo

    NCC boss warns that digital piracy, intellectual property infringement threaten sustainability, investments in sports

    Tinubu congratulates Nigerian-American basketball star Ejimofor Anosike on historic achievements in China

    Tinubu congratulates Nigerian-American basketball star Ejimofor Anosike on historic achievements in China

    NELFUND Interview: Disburses N116b for students’ fees, upkeeps

    NIS partners NELFUND to boost sports education, workforce development

    Nigeria–Congo World Cup dispute: Fresh speculation as DR Congo omits two controversial players

    SuperSport promises  to broadcast all 104 matches of expanded FIFA World Cup

    SPORTS: Great leap with high budget

    SPORTS: Great leap with high budget

  • Business
    Lagos unveils comprehensive cybersecurity guidelines to strengthen digital safety

    Lagos targets global investors at Invest Lagos 3.0 Summit in June

    Nestle Nigeria still in the wood despite N105b profit in 2025

    Nestle Nigeria: Strong cost dynamics to anchor earnings resilience – WorldStage Analysis

    CIoD Abuja Zone strengthens governance collaboration with Head of Service

    CIoD Abuja Zone strengthens governance collaboration with Head of Service

    NEPZA seeks 10-year tax exemption for SEZ operators

    Nigeria: NEPZA, NAFDAC strengthen oversight in free trade zones

    43 delegates from 30 British companies complete first trade and investment mission to Nigeria

    NBCC, stakeholders urge innovation, investment to tackle food insecurity

    Nigeria: Alliance urges FG to adopt GTCO successful enterprise-driven growth models for inclusive economic transformation

    Nigeria: Alliance urges FG to adopt GTCO successful enterprise-driven growth models for inclusive economic transformation

    Access Bank to host Africa Trade Conference 2026

    Post-recapitalisation: Access Holdings shareholders’ fund hits N4.33trn, PBT spikes

    Africa Prudential unveils Sabivest to deepen digital investment access

    Africa Prudential unveils Sabivest to deepen digital investment access

    Nigeria: CBN gov says FG’s economic reforms crucial to sustainable repositioning of national economy

    Cardoso charges directors to boost confidence in banking sector

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Home Opinion

Trapped between Nigeria’s failure and South Africa’s xenophobic violence

by Blaise Udunze
May 13, 2026
in Opinion
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Trapped between Nigeria’s failure and South Africa’s xenophobic violence
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By Blaise Udunze

When the word “xenophobic” is talked about, most affected African countries tend to focus on the pains being experienced by their citizens in South Africa. For a moment, it calls for Nigeria and the rest of the African continent to pause and ask, how did we get here?

The recent happenings across the streets of Johannesburg, Pretoria, and Durban, a painful pattern continues to unfold with frightening and fearful regularity, as Nigerian-owned businesses are looted, migrants hunted, families displaced, and African nationals reduced to targets of rage. If asked, the majority would chorus that the recurring images of xenophobic violence in South Africa are disturbing enough, and no doubt, yes, but the deeper tragedy is beyond the flames and bloodshed. It lies in the silent failures back home that forced many Nigerians into vulnerable exile in the first place.

The reality, as a matter of fact, is that to understand the suffering of Nigerians in South Africa, one must first confront the uncomfortable truth that xenophobia is not merely a South African problem. It is also a Nigerian governance problem exported abroad.

Nigeria, often celebrated as the “Giant of Africa,” has now become the “Mama Africa” who has failed to nurture her many children, with the fact that behind every Nigerian fleeing hardship for survival, known as the “japa” syndrome, in another African country is a story shaped by economic frustration, failed institutions, poor leadership, unemployment, and a financial system disconnected from the realities of ordinary citizens.

One apt way to confirm these inimical factors, the South African president, Cyril Ramaphosa, recently acknowledged this uncomfortable reality when he urged African leaders to address the domestic failures driving mass migration across the continent. Speaking amid renewed anti-foreigner tensions, Ramaphosa identified “misgovernance” as one of the factors forcing Africans to seek refuge in countries like South Africa. Of a truth, his comments may have generated debate, and some “patriotic Nigerians” may also want to prove him wrong, but they reflected a painful reality many African governments would rather avoid.

Nigeria, despite its vast human and natural resources, has increasingly become a country where millions no longer see a future at home. This is a critical irony and the height of it all because a nation blessed with oil wealth and entrepreneurial energy and one of the youngest populations in the world is yet burdened by systemic corruption, policy inconsistency, infrastructural collapse, and a leadership class that has often prioritised politics over productivity, especially with the imminence of an election.

It is so detestable and at the same time fearful that the result is a generation of young Nigerians trapped between hopelessness and migration.

One regrettable experience that has continued to haunt the country for decades, is that successive governments have squandered opportunities that could have transformed Nigeria into an industrial and economic powerhouse. Public resources that should have been invested in power, roads, healthcare, manufacturing, education and enterprise development have either disappeared into private pockets or become trapped in wasteful bureaucratic structures.

Reports indicating that over $214 billion in public funds may have been lost, diverted, or trapped in opaque fiscal systems over the last decade capture the scale of Nigeria’s accountability crisis. Whether exact or conservative, such figures reveal a country losing resources or funds rapidly from severe bleeding that could have changed millions of lives.

Looking intently at these developments, one would know that the tragedy is not merely corruption itself but the opportunities corruption destroyed.

Come to think of this fact that with proper governance and strategic economic planning, Nigeria could have developed a thriving SME ecosystem capable of employing millions of citizens. Instead, unemployment and underemployment have become defining realities of national life. The World Economic Forum recently identified unemployment and lack of economic opportunity as Nigeria’s greatest economic threat, yet the country continues to struggle with coherent employment data and long-term economic direction.

This economic suffocation explains why migration has become less of a choice and more of a survival strategy for many Nigerians.

At the centre of this crisis is another troubling contradiction, which is that Nigeria’s banking sector appears increasingly profitable while the real economy continues to deteriorate.

Ordinarily, banks in developing economies are expected to function as engines of growth by financing productive sectors, supporting innovation, and empowering small businesses. Across the world, SMEs are recognised as the backbone of grassroots economic development, and the tangible result is that they create jobs, stimulate local production, and expand economic participation.

In Nigeria, SMEs account for over 70 per cent of registered businesses, contribute nearly half of the country’s GDP and generate between 84 to 90 per cent of employment. Yet, despite their enormous economic importance, SMEs receive barely between 0.5 per cent and one per cent of total commercial bank lending.

This is not just a policy failure; it is an economic tragedy. Rather than financing entrepreneurs and productive enterprises, Nigerian banks have increasingly found comfort in investing heavily in government treasury securities. In 2025 alone, major Nigerian banks reportedly generated N6.68 trillion from total investment securities and treasury bills, benefiting from high-yield government debt instruments instead of supporting businesses capable of creating jobs.

The banking sector’s recapitalisation exercise, which successfully raised N4.56 trillion, was celebrated as a regulatory achievement. But the critical question remains. The recapitalisation is for what purpose?

If stronger banks continue to avoid the productive economy while SMEs remain starved of affordable credit, recapitalisation merely strengthens financial institutions without strengthening national development.

Today, private sector credit in Nigeria remains significantly low compared to many African economies. High interest rates, excessive collateral demands, weak credit infrastructure and risk-averse banking practices have created an environment where small businesses struggle to survive, and these implications are devastating.

Every denied SME loan is a denied employment opportunity. Every failed business is another frustrated entrepreneur. Every frustrated entrepreneur is another Nigerian considering migration.

This is how economic dysfunction transforms into human displacement. In a situation like this, it is noteworthy to state that South Africa naturally becomes an attractive destination because of its relatively advanced infrastructure and larger economy. Today, this has informed Nigerians and other African countries alike to migrate there, not because they hate their country but because they are searching for dignity through work and enterprise.

Yet, in a cruel twist, many become targets of xenophobic violence. Foreign nationals are accused of “taking jobs,” dominating businesses, and contributing to crime. Shops are attacked. Businesses are burned. Lives are lost.

It is not a surprise anymore that the disturbing rhetoric surrounding xenophobia has become increasingly normalised and perceived as fighting against saboteurs. Another major concern is that social media posts celebrating violence against Nigerians reveal a frightening and fearful dehumanisation of fellow Africans. This has continued to be heralded unaddressed, as some extremist anti-migrant groups now openly mobilise hostility against foreign nationals under the guise of economic nationalism.

Yet, as opposition leader Julius Malema rightly asked during one of the recent xenophobic debates. “After attacking foreigners and shutting down their businesses, how many jobs have actually been created?” If you are smart enough to know, it is glaring that this is a question that cuts through the emotional manipulation surrounding xenophobia, which also reflects the fact that destroying a Nigerian-owned shop does not solve unemployment, nor does killing migrants create prosperity. Violence against fellow Africans does not fix structural inequality.

Malema’s argument was blunt but accurate in revealing that xenophobia is not an economic strategy. It must be perceived with the right perspective as the symptom of deeper failures, poverty, inequality, weak governance, and political frustration.

Historically, just like other colonised African countries, South Africa itself carries deep old wounds. The legacy of apartheid left enduring economic inequalities, spatial segregation, unemployment, and psychological scars, but this should not continue to shape social tensions today. What is of concern is that the same people, like other African countries, experienced, were expected to remain forward-looking and forge ahead rather than dwell in the past.

It is even more pathetic that decades after the fall of apartheid, millions of Black South Africans remain trapped in poverty and exclusion; perhaps they are not to be blamed for their failures as they claimed, but the foreigners who didn’t stop them from exerting their skills become the scapegoats.

That frustration often seeks an outlet, and immigrants become easy scapegoats. This, however, does not excuse the brutality.

The stories emerging from xenophobic attacks are horrifying and very dastardly and humiliating, as African migrants have reportedly been beaten, burned alive, stoned, and hunted in communities where they once sought refuge, as two Nigerian citizens were said to have been beaten and burnt to death. To say the least, the pain becomes even more ironic when viewed against history.

Because Nigeria played a major role in supporting South Africa’s anti-apartheid struggle, ranging from financial assistance to diplomatic pressure, scholarships, activism, and cultural solidarity, Nigerians stood firmly with Black South Africans during some of apartheid’s darkest years, which was enough to prevent such ugly events. Nigeria did so much to the point that Nigerian students contributed financially to anti-apartheid campaigns. Nigerian musicians used music to mobilise continental resistance. Successive governments invested enormous diplomatic and material resources into the liberation struggle.

The children and grandchildren of those who made such sacrifices are now among those facing hostility in South Africa today.

History makes the tragedy even heavier. Yet, Nigeria must also confront its own failures honestly. The truth is, if Nigeria had invested half the energy it spent supporting external liberation struggles into building a functional domestic economy, perhaps millions of Nigerians would not be fleeing abroad in search of economic survival today.

The painful reality is that many Nigerians abroad are not economic adventurers; they are economic exiles.

The ugliest side of it all is that they are exiled by unemployment, exiled by corruption, and exiled by policy failures. Again, they are exiled by a system that has repeatedly failed to convert national wealth into shared prosperity but into embezzlement that still finds its resting place in a foreign account.

This is why solving xenophobia requires more than diplomatic protests or emotional outrage as exuded in the National Assembly by some members like Adams Oshiomhole and others. This calls for the political actors and those in the financial space to fix the conditions that force Nigerians into vulnerable migration in the first place.

One undeniable fact is that, as a country, Nigeria must fundamentally rethink governance and economic management as it takes into consideration the following solutions.

First, public accountability must become non-negotiable and should not be compromised anywhere. Corruption and resource mismanagement are critical and have robbed generations of opportunities, and these are the major traits fueling the exile. Infrastructure, industrial development, education, and healthcare must become genuine priorities rather than campaign slogans, as all these must become a reality, not a feeble promise.

Second, the banking sector must reconnect with the real economy. Financial institutions cannot continue generating enormous profits from government securities while productive sectors collapse. The government should hold a roundtable discussion with banks, which must be incentivized and, where necessary, compelled to increase lending to SMEs and productive industries capable of generating employment.

Third, there must be deliberate and conscious investment in skills, innovation, and entrepreneurship. Young Nigerians should not have to leave their homeland merely to survive because it is an aberration for a country that is enormously rich but still has some of its best hands eloping from the country.

Finally, African governments must reject the politics of division and scapegoating. This contradiction is at its height because Africa cannot claim to pursue continental unity while Africans are hunted in other African countries.

In all of the deliberation, the truth remains the same, in the sense that the story of Nigerians suffering xenophobic violence in South Africa is ultimately a story about failed systems on both sides, one on the side of economic failures pushing migrants out and the social failures turning migrants into enemies.

Until these structural realities are confronted with honesty and urgency, the cycle will continue. More young Nigerians will leave. More migrants will become vulnerable. More African societies will turn inward against each other.

But this trajectory is not irreversible. One gift that can’t be taken away from Nigerians is that Nigeria still possesses the talent, entrepreneurial energy, and human capital necessary to build a prosperous economy that gives its citizens reasons to stay rather than flee. The truth is that what has been lacking is not potential but responsible leadership and economic vision.

The true solution to xenophobia may therefore begin far away from the streets of Johannesburg or Durban. It may begin in Abuja, with governance that works, institutions that serve, banks that invest in people, and leadership that finally understands that national dignity is measured not by speeches but by whether citizens can build meaningful lives at home.

Until then, the “japa” flag will keep flying, as many Nigerians will remain exiled, not merely by borders, but by the failures of the country they still desperately want to believe in.

Blaise, a journalist and PR professional, writes from Lagos and can be reached via: blaise.udunze@gmail.com

Tags: NigeriaSouth Africa
Blaise Udunze

Blaise Udunze

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