News
Eid-el Kabir: Traders, buyers lament high cost of goods, services in Ibadan
With Eid-el-Kabir celebrations fast approaching, some traders and buyers in Ibadan have expressed concern over high cost of rams, foodstuffs and other commodities and services.
A survey carried out by newsmen in some markets in Ibadan revealed that all the respondents were bothered by the unstable nature of prices of goods and services.
Price checks at ram markets in New Ife Road, Egbeda, Adegbayi and Alakia areas of Ibadan showed that an average-sized ram, which sold for N40,000 in 2020, now cost between N60,000 and N65,000.
It was also observed that a big-sized ram sold for between N80,000 and N120,000.
At Aleshinloye market, rams cost between N30,000 and N110,000, a price range whichAbdullahi Hashim, a ram seller, considered to be exorbitant.
According to Mr Hashim, the high price was due to the security condition in the northern part of the country as well as high cost of transportation.
Similarly, another ram seller, Mr Ibrahim Jamiu, blamed transporters bringing the rams from the north for charging exorbitant fares.
Mr Jamiu added, “even the prices of rams we rear here are high, because their feeds are costly too.
“We are only appealing to government to let its economic policies allow businesses to grow.”
A man, Abdulazeez Adeleke, who bought a ram for N63,000 at Adegbayi, lamented its high price and those of other items.
According to him, the high cost of rams, food items and other consumables might not allow many families to celebrate the Salah as they would have loved to.
Another ram buyer, AbdulRashid Jimoh, said although rams were very much available, the prices were out of reach.
He, however, said that he could not but buy for his parents, no matter the cost.
In his opinion, Mr Sanusi Hassan, a ram buyer at Aleshinloye market, linked the scarcity and high cost of the animal with the cancellation of the 2021 hajj pilgrimage by Saudi Arabian Government.
This, he said, had created room for more Muslim faithful, who would have celebrated Salah in Saudi Arabia, to be at home for the festival.
Mr Morufu Sani, an intending ram buyer at Ojo-Oba market, regrettably said he could not afford to buy a ram due to its high cost.
“A big ram of my choice is sold for N140,000.
“Where do I get such money? Any meat we see, no matter how small, my family and I will manage it,” he said.
However, a rice seller at Oja-Oba market, Alhaja Olugbade Salami, said that prices of all foodstuffs, including rice, had increased even before the onset of the festive period.
“A bag of rice that we used to sell at below N20,000 is now sold for N26,000 and it is quite unfortunate that there’s no patronage now like before,” she said.
Meanwhile, Bisola Salawu, an onion seller, said that buyers were no longer buying in bulk due to the hike in price of the item.
“Forty pieces of onion that we used sell for N2,000 before now sell for N2,500, and you will hardly see people buying in bulk as they used to,” she said.
As for tomatoes, a seller, Kawa Aminat, told NAN that a bucket of tomatoes, which sold for N800 in 2020, now sold for between N1,500 and N2,000.
“Almost all the prices of commodities brought from the North have gone up due to COVID-19 issues, transportation cost and farmers/herders’ crises.
For instance, six pieces of yam that used to sell for N4,500 now went for N6,000, resulting in reduced patronage,” she said.
Secretary of Arewa Pepper Sellers Association of Oyo State, Mallam Illiasu Bala, also said that Tatashe (Bell pepper) and Bawa (Sombo), which formerly sold at N7,000 per bag, had each increased to N20,000 per bag.
Also, Chairman of the Oyo State Onion Sellers’ Association, Alhaji Azeez Ademola, who explained that onion was not in season, said that a small bag of onions was now N20,000, while the big bag was now N30,000.
A vegetable oil seller at Ojo-Oba market, who simply identified herself as Alhaja, said she had not sold anything since she opened her shop in the morning.
“A five-litre Kings Oil that was around N3,500 before is now sold for N5,000, and there’s no market. I have been sitting down like this since morning.
“Everywhere is dry. Whether Ileya or not, customers are not coming. Many people are even living on loans,” she said.
According to reports, the prices of textile materials at Gbagi textile market remained stable, with 12 yards of locally-made Ankara fabric selling for between N3,000 and N7,000, depending on the quality.
However, a textile dealer, Mrs Aliratu Lasisi, complained of low patronage, attributing it to the poor economic situation of the country.
She observed that people were now more concerned about what to eat than what to wear.
Her submission was affirmed by operators in the fashion industry, as some tailors and fashion designers said there had been sharp decline in patronage, in spite of the Sallah that was fast approaching.
A tailor, Saliu Ojedele, said, “Gone are days when we used to hire more hands to work night shifts in order to meet up with customers’ demands.
“Ordinarily, we ought to have started doing that, but it’s quite different now,” he said.
A customer, Mr Abdullahi Wasiu, however, said that he was more particular about getting his children clothes to make them happy and comfortable in the midst of their peers and extended family members.
“For adults, you can wear whatever you have, especially if there are no means of buying new dresses. Aside that, getting ram is more important than buying new dresses,” he said.
Contrarily, a jeweler, Miss Nkechi Emeka, said that the soaring prices of consumer goods and services had not dampened people’s morale towards shopping.
“I will not say people are not buying like before. Yes, the percentage of those who usually visit markets during festive periods has reduced, but sellers are also not able to meet the demands.
“This is because of the increase in dollar rate and some of us did not have enough money to stock up before this week.
“Some sellers have even run out of goods because they didn’t get enough money to buy before this period,” she said.
Corroborating, Emeka, a clothe vendor, described the rising prices of goods as an unfavourable trend for both buyers and small business owners.
“What some of us did to prepare for the demands of this season was to form groups. We contributed money to buy in bulk; we then split the goods for sale.
“However, the amount that we used to spend on purchasing 10 cartons is now what we use to buy one or two cartons.
“The prices are even unstable. What you buy today at N50,000 may go up to N55,000 within a week.
“The economy is really biting hard and the unstable prices have forced some of our colleagues to shut down,” she said.
A buyer, Mojo Daramola, who was at the market to shop for the festive period, lamented what she described as “outrageous prices”.
Mrs Daramola, who appealed to government to urgently intervene in driving down the prices of goods and services, said she was left with the option of buying fewer items, which mostly included her children’s clothes.
NAN
News
Storm at NSITF as ₦297bn Workers’ Fund Allegations Trail MD/CEO Oluwaseun Mayomi Faleye
Fresh allegations of large-scale financial irregularities, abuse of office, and governance breakdown have engulfed the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF), following a series of petitions by the Arewa Revival Project, a civic accountability and good-governance advocacy group, calling for urgent investigations into the activities of the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Oluwaseun Mayomi Faleye.
The group has formally written to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation, the Federal Ministry of Finance under the Whistleblower Policy, the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment, the NSITF Management Board, as well as organised labour bodies, including the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Trade Union Congress (TUC).
At the centre of the controversy are allegations involving the management of approximately ₦297,019,145,288.60 in workers’ funds collected under the Employees’ Compensation Act (ECA) between January 2 and October 9, 2025.
Workers’ Funds, Not Government Revenue
The Employees’ Compensation Scheme is funded through compulsory employer contributions of one per cent of payroll, designed to provide compensation to Nigerian workers who suffer injury, disability, or death in the course of employment.
According to multiple senior NSITF officials cited in investigative reports, the funds administered by NSITF are not government revenue, but trust funds belonging exclusively to Nigerian workers.
“This is not government money. This is workers’ money, contributed mandatorily under the law,” one senior official was quoted as saying. “Every kobo is supposed to be protected by layers of checks and balances.”
₦243.2bn Allegedly Spent Without Board Approval
Documents reviewed by investigators indicate that out of the total inflow of ₦297,019,145,288.60, expenditures amounting to ₦243,203,518,621.17 were recorded within the same period.
Multiple sources allege that a significant portion of this expenditure was carried out without the approval of the NSITF Management Board, in violation of the NSITF Act and existing federal financial regulations.
Officials familiar with the records described the development as a “complete collapse of safeguards” meant to protect workers’ funds.
‘No Approval Limit’ Resolution Raises Alarm
Central to the allegations is an internal document dated March 4, 2025, reportedly extracted from the minutes of the 46th Executive Committee (EXCO) meeting of NSITF, chaired by Mr. Faleye.
According to the document, financial approval limits were set as follows:
- Other General Managers: ₦25,000
- General Manager (Finance): ₦50,000
- Other Executive Directors: ₦750,000
- Executive Director (Finance and Investment): ₦1,000,000
However, under the same resolution, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer allegedly approved “no limit” for his own spending authority.
Sources allege that this effectively granted Mr. Faleye unrestricted powers to approve payments of any amount without recourse to the Board or external oversight.
“He simply wrote and signed a document granting himself ‘No Approval Limit’,” a senior official disclosed. “There is absolutely no legal basis for this in the NSITF Act or federal financial regulations.”
Under existing federal thresholds, Managing Directors of government parastatals are reportedly capped at ₦30 million for works and ₦10 million for goods and services, subject to board oversight.
Over 100 Bank Accounts Linked to One BVN
Perhaps the most startling allegation involves the operation of over 100 bank accounts allegedly linked to a single Bank Verification Number (BVN) belonging to Mr. Faleye.
Documents reportedly show that the BVN, registered on June 10, 2015, with Guaranty Trust Bank, Ajose Adeogun Branch, is associated with numerous accounts, some of which allegedly received funds traceable to NSITF operations.
“The scale is staggering,” one insider said. “You don’t run over 100 accounts accidentally. This points to systematic structuring.”
$7.3m and Hundreds of Millions of Naira Traced
In a separate document obtained by investigators, alleged inflows of millions of dollars and hundreds of millions of naira were traced to accounts linked to Mr. Faleye and entities reportedly associated with him.
The transactions listed include:
- Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank USD Account 0111206422 – $336,917.00
- Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank USD Account 0004754113 – $6,743,421.00
- Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank NGN Account 0004754096 – ₦291,182,605.00
- Fides & Fiducia Client Account, Access Bank NGN Account 0718896883 – ₦584,950,000.00
- Fides & Fiducia, Access Bank USD Account 0690403396 – $626,279.00
- Fides & Fiducia, Zenith Bank NGN Account 1013806407 – ₦93,757,500.00
- Pluschess Limited, Zenith Bank USD Account 071315271 – $20,000.00
- Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank USD Account 3001101016 – $75,558.00
The total dollar inflow alone is estimated at over $7.3 million, excluding naira-denominated transactions.
“These are not small transfers,” a source familiar with the documents said. “The volume, frequency, and structuring suggest deliberate efforts to move and possibly conceal funds.”
₦5.53bn Commission Payments Questioned
Further allegations relate to commission payments totalling ₦5,533,517,486.90, allegedly approved and paid without the consent of the NSITF Management Board or the supervising Ministry.
The payments reportedly include:
- ₦1,379,186,010.00 – Assurance Services ST ADBA Ltd (09/10/2025)
- ₦865,000,000.00 – TAGG Global Resources Ltd (18/03/2025)
- ₦683,777,666.40 – Rate Seal Support & Project Ltd (17/09/2025)
- ₦659,303,810.50 – Rate Seal Support & Project Ltd (16/05/2025)
- ₦648,750,000.00 – Rate Gold Solution Nig Ltd (16/05/2025)
- ₦648,750,000.00 – Gold Solution Nig Ltd (01/08/2025)
- ₦648,750,000.00 – TAGG Global Resources Ltd (01/08/2025)
Sources allege that the commissions ranged between 15 per cent and 20 per cent, and were paid without lawful authority.
Board Absence and Governance Vacuum
Mr. Faleye was appointed Managing Director in July 2023, while the NSITF Management Board was reportedly not constituted until around January 2025, creating a governance gap of over one year.
“The Act expressly forbids Executive Management from spending funds without board approval,” a top official explained. “If there is no board, spending should not take place.”
Arewa Revival Project Condemns Alleged Acts
Reacting to the allegations, the Arewa Revival Project, under the leadership of Hon. Muttakka Ahmed Ibrahim, condemned the alleged acts, describing them as a grave betrayal of public trust if proven.
The group called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, as well as all relevant anti-corruption and regulatory authorities, to urgently investigate the allegations to protect workers’ funds and restore confidence in public institutions.
Responses from Officials
When contacted, Mr. Faleye reportedly stated that he was not aware of the allegations. However, when questioned about the dollar accounts and alleged inflows of over $7.3 million, he reportedly ended the call abruptly.
The Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Labour, Mr. Salihu Usman, reportedly denied prior knowledge of the alleged transactions, while the Chairman of the NSITF Board, Mr. Shola Olofin, requested time to verify the claims.
Presumption of Innocence
All allegations remain unproven and subject to investigation. Analysts note that the unfolding developments represent a major test of Nigeria’s public finance accountability framework, particularly in institutions entrusted with workers’ welfare.
As investigations commence, millions of Nigerian workers await answers over the safety of funds meant to protect them in times of injury, disability, and loss.
Headlines
Adamawa Business School Hosts Workshop on New Tax Reform Law
Adamawa Business School Hosts Workshop on New Tax Reform Law
By Ibrahim Abubakar Jimeta
The Adamawa Business School (ABS) has organised a high-level training and sensitisation workshop on the New Tax Reform Law in Nigeria, aimed at enhancing understanding of recent fiscal reforms and strengthening public sector administration in Adamawa State.
The workshop, held in collaboration with the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of Adamawa State and supported by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), brought together Permanent Secretaries, senior public servants, tax officials, and policy experts to examine the implications of the new tax framework for governance and fiscal sustainability.
Speaking during the opening session, the Co-Founder of Adamawa Business School, Mallam Jamilu Yusuf, described the workshop as a strategic intervention designed to bridge knowledge gaps and improve policy implementation within Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs).
Yusuf explained that the engagement was organised under the school’s Public Policy Support Initiative, a non-profit platform that provides research, training, and capacity development support to government institutions. He noted that Nigeria’s evolving tax landscape, driven by Finance Acts, administrative reforms, and digital innovations, requires senior public officials to be well-informed in order to translate policy into effective practice.
According to him, Permanent Secretaries and top civil servants play a crucial role in ensuring compliance and successful implementation of tax reforms at the sub-national level, stressing that inadequate understanding of tax laws often creates implementation challenges that negatively affect citizens and institutions.
He reaffirmed Adamawa Business School’s commitment to supporting the state government through policy-focused learning, dialogue, and partnerships that promote transparency, fiscal sustainability, and improved service delivery.
In his remarks, the Head of the Adamawa State Civil Service, Isa Shehu Ardo, mni, emphasised the importance of equipping senior public servants with a clear understanding of the new tax laws. He noted that Permanent Secretaries, as the most senior career officers in the public service, must fully comprehend the reforms in order to guide implementation and avoid difficulties that often arise from poor information and limited awareness.
Delivering the welcome address on behalf of the Office of the Head of Civil Service, the Permanent Secretary, Establishment and Training, Fabian S. Wambai, commended Adamawa Business School for organising the workshop as part of its corporate social responsibility.
Wambai described the new national tax law as a major reform with far-reaching implications for public finance, compliance, and economic stability. He said the workshop provided a valuable opportunity for Permanent Secretaries, as accounting officers and senior administrators, to deepen their understanding of the law and its impact on government operations and engagements with the private sector.
He urged participants to actively engage in discussions, interact with resource persons, and leverage the knowledge gained to strengthen institutional compliance, improve advisory roles to political leadership, and promote transparent and accountable governance.
The workshop featured sessions led by experienced tax professionals, focusing on the provisions of the new tax reform law, its implications for public financial management, and strategies for effective collaboration between federal and state institutions.
Participants expressed optimism that the training would enhance policy implementation, reduce administrative challenges, and contribute to a more efficient and fiscally informed public service in Adamawa State.
Headlines
Noble Ladies Champion Women’s Financial Independence at Grand Inauguration in Abuja
Women from diverse backgrounds across Nigeria and beyond gathered at the Art and Culture Auditorium, Abuja, for the inauguration and convention of the Noble Ladies Association. The event, led by the association’s Founder and “visionary and polished Queen Mother,” Mrs. Margaret Chigozie Mkpuma, was a colourful display of feminine elegance, empowerment, and ambition.
The highly anticipated gathering, attended by over 700 members and counting, reflected the association’s mission to help women realise their potential while shifting mindsets away from dependency and over-glamorization of the ‘white collar job.’ According to the group, progress can be better achieved through innovation and creativity. “When a woman is able to earn and blossom on her own she has no reason to look at herself as a second fiddle,” the association stated.
One of the association’s standout initiatives is its women-only investment platform, which currently offers a minimum entry of ₦100,000 with a return of ₦130,000 over 30 days—an interest rate of 30 percent. Some members invest as much as ₦1 million, enjoying the same return rate. Mrs. Mkpuma explained that the scheme focuses on women because “women bear the greater brunt of poverty” and the platform seeks “to offer equity in the absence of economic equality.”
Education is also central to the Noble Ladies’ mission, regardless of age. Their mantra, “start again from where you stopped,” encourages women to return to school or upgrade their skills at any stage in life. The association believes that financial stability is vital in protecting women from cultural practices that dispossess widows of their late husbands’ assets, while also enabling them to raise morally and socially grounded families.
Founded on the vision of enhancing women’s skills and achieving financial stability, the association rests on a value system that discourages pity and promotes purpose. “You have a purpose and you build on that purpose to achieve great potentials and emancipation,” Mrs. Mkpuma said.
A criminologist by training and entrepreneur by practice, she cautions against idleness while waiting for formal employment. “There are billions in the informal and non-formal sectors waiting to be made,” she said, rejecting the “new normal of begging” and urging people to “be more introspective to find their purpose in life and hold on to it.”
Mrs. Mkpuma’s management style keeps members actively engaged, focusing on vocational skills and training to prepare them for competitive markets. She is exploring “innovative integration of uncommon technologies” and is already in talks with international franchises to invest in Nigeria, with Noble Ladies as first beneficiaries.
The association’s core values include mutual respect, innovation, forward-thinking, equal opportunity, and financial emancipation. With plans underway to establish a secretariat in the heart of Abuja, the group aims to expand its impact.
The event drew high-profile guests, including former Inspector General of Police, Mike Okiro, and a host of VIPs, marking a significant milestone in the association’s drive for women’s empowerment.
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