Economy
NIRSAL Microfinance Bank Defends Lumpsum Deductions From Borrowers’ Account: COVID 19 Loan
NIRSAL Microfinance Bank Defends Lumpsum Deductions From Borrowers’ Account: COVID 19 Loan
NIRSAL Microfinance Bank defends lumpsum deductions from borrowers’ account: COVID 19 Loan. Mr Kure denied the claims that the borrowers were not informed by the bank before the deductions.
The NIRSAL Microfinance Bank has defended the aggressive method deployed to recover COVID-19 loans granted some Nigerians after beneficiaries of the government-backed stimulus scheme accused the bank of illegal deduction of lump sums of money from their accounts without prior notice.
This came after many recipients of the loan scheme launched by the Central Bank of Nigeria in 2020 to cushion the economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on small business owners cried out for help over alleged unexplained NIRSAL-initiated withdrawals from their accounts to offset their debts.
Responding to the Peoples Gazette’s inquiry on Friday, the Managing Director of NIRSAL Microfinance Bank, Abubakar Abdullahi Kure, said that the funds were loans and not grants.
He added that the means which the company chose to retrieve the debts were contained in the contract signed by the recipients during the application.
“Intervention funds were loans, not grants, and this was contained in the electronic offer letter accepted by the obligors, including right of offset via Global Standing Instruction (GSI),” Mr Kure said.
The GSI is a system designed by the CBN that allows creditor banks to automatically recover the principal and accrued interest from any other eligible bank accounts the borrower owns.

NIRSAL
Many complained about the bank’s decision to drain the debts at once as opposed to belief that the deduction would be in piecemeal like any other loans. Some also accused the NIRSAL of deducting more than the amount they borrowed while the bank refuses to update their credit statements to show clearing of the debts.
Responding further, Mr Kure denied the claims that the borrowers were not informed by the bank before the deductions.
He stated, “The loan has a schedule of repayment that was not done despite several notifications to defaulters, and hence, the right to activate repayment was activated.”
Crime
Court Jails Man for $19,400 Bitcoin Fraud In Edo
Court Jails Man for $19,400 Bitcoin Fraud In Edo
Bitcoin fraud. The Benin Zonal Directorate of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has secured the conviction and sentence of Osamudiamen Philip Ikilo for fraud.
The convict was arraigned on one -count charge of stealing before Justice W.I. Aziegbemhin of the Edo State High Court sitting in Benin City.
Upon arraignment the defendant pleaded not guilty to the charge, setting the stage for trial.
The charge reads: That you Osamudiamen Philip Ikilo (m) sometime in March 2024 within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court did steal Bitcoin worth the sum of $19,400 (Nineteen thousand, four Hundred United States Dollars) belonging to one Cynthia Imade Alile by fraudulently converting the said sum to your own use, and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 287 of the Criminal Law of Edo State Law 2022 and punishable under Section 294 of the same Law.

Bitcoin
In the course of the trial, prosecution counsel, A. S. Bala-Ribah called two witnesses and also tendered documents which were admitted by the court. On his part, the defendant called two witnesses including himself.
Delivering judgment on Monday, March 23, 2026 Justice Aziegbemhin found the defendant guilty of the charge and sentenced him to two years imprisonment without an option of fine.
Ikilo’s road to jail began when he offered to assist the petitioner convert her 0.52092582 Bitcoin worth $19,400 but failed to remit the money to the petitioner as he converted same to his personal use.
Crime
Court Admits More Evidence Against Mamman In Alleged N31b Fraud
Court Admits More Evidence Against Mamman In Alleged N31b Fraud
Court Admits more Evidence against Mamman. Justice Maryann Anineh of the Federal Capital Territory High Court, Maitama, Abuja, on Wednesday, March 25, 2026, admitted more documents in evidence against the former Minister for Power, Saleh Mamman in his prosecution by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC for alleged fraud.
Mamman and seven others are being prosecuted by the EFCC on a nine-count charge, bordering on conspiracy, obtaining by false pretence and intent to defraud to the tune of N31,070,541,349.64 (Thirty-one Billion, Seventy Million, Five Hundred and Forty-one Thousand, Three Hundred and Forty-nine Naira, Sixty-four Kobo).
At Wednesday’s proceedings, the Second Prosecution Witness, PW2, Leadu Kpandei, a female compliance officer with Guaranty Trust Bank, GTB while being led in evidence by prosecution counsel, A.O. Mohammed, disclosed that the EFCC, sometime in March 2025, requested the details of account of one of its customers, Fullest Utility Concept Ltd to which the bank responded via a letter attached with the account opening documents, certificate of identification and statement of accounts of the said company, distilled from the bank’s database. She confirmed that she and her colleague signed the documents on behalf of the bank before they were transmitted to the EFCC.
The documents, marked exhibit E1, E2, E3, E4 were tendered and admitted in evidence by the court.

Court
Earlier in the proceedings, the First Prosecution Witness PW1, Umar Abba, a compliance officer of Zenith Bank, concluded his cross-examination, where he revealed he generated the account statements of the defendants also from the bank’s database, endorsed and sent to the EFCC. “I generated the documents of the account statements from the bank’s computer, compared them with what I have, then I signed before sending them to the EFCC” he said.
Suleiman Mohammed, counsel to Mamman drew the attention of the court to a pending application on motion on notice, filed on March 9, 2026 and the judge promised to go through it.
Justice Anineh adjourned the matter till April 16, May 11 and June 4, 2026 for continuation of trial.
Economy
Executive Vice President, Upstream, NNPC Ltd Contributed To A High-Level Session Titled “Data-Rich, Infrastructure Ready
Executive Vice President, Upstream, NNPC Ltd Contributed To A High-Level Session Titled “Data-Rich, Infrastructure Ready
At the ongoing #CERAWeek, the Executive Vice President, Upstream, NNPC Limited, Mr. Udy Ntia contributed to a high-level session titled “Data-Rich, Infrastructure Ready: The Competitive Edge of Proven Super Basins”.
He described Nigeria’s growing attractiveness as a prime destination for global energy investment, citing strengthened fiscal stability, regulatory predictability, and a commercially driven governance framework as critical enablers of renewed investor confidence.
Ntia also reiterated that the convergence of robust data ecosystems, infrastructure readiness, and advanced analytics is redefining how proven basins compete globally, positioning Nigeria to fully capitalise on its extensive resource base.

Upstream, NNPC Ltd
The session, moderated by Beth Evans, Head of Regional Insight, Upstream Solutions at S&P Global, featured other distinguished panelists, including Andy Krieger, Senior Vice President, Gulf of America and Canada, BP, and Paul Madero, Senior Vice President, Production Solutions, Baker Hughes.
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