News
Electoral Act 2022: Akpabio Cautions Against Hasty Conclusion On Electoral Reforms
Electoral Act 2022: Akpabio Cautions Against Hasty Conclusion On Electoral Reforms
Electoral Act 2022: Akpabio cautions against hasty conclusion on electoral reforms. Says Electoral Act Amendment Bill Work in Progress.
The President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio said at the weekend that the amendment being carried out to the Electoral Act 2022 is yet work in progress and appealed to people not draw hasty conclusions as to the electoral reform process.
Akpabio spoke in Abuja at the launching of a book titled: “The Burden of Legislators in Nigeria,” written by Senator Effiong Bob who represented Akwa Ibom North East Senatorial District between 2003 and 2011.
The Senate President observed rather negative commentaries in the media particularly on the Senate on the contents of the Electoral Reform Bill which he said had not been concluded until the Votes and Proceedings were passed by the Senate and the Conference Committee of the Senate and House of Representatives decided on the Bill.
Akpabio said it was inappropriate by the commentators to judge the Senate by something that is “inchoate.”
Akpabio said: “Electoral Act amendment Bill is incomplete. We have not completed it, but they are already on television. You see all sort of panels. Because they don’t understand lawmaking. They don’t even know that even the one in the Senate is not completed until we look at the votes and proceedings.

Akpabio
“So when we bring out the votes and proceedings, any senator has a right to rise up and say, on clause three, this was what we agreed upon. And if those who are recording through the verbatim recorder disagree or agree, we amend it before we approve the votes and proceedings. That is the only time you can now talk about what the Senate has done or what the Senate has not done.
“But already people are on television abusing the Senate, talking about the Senate, even when what we did has not yet been approved by the same Senate. It’s incomplete.
“If this chamber passes this and the other one passes that, then you now join these two together and take one. It’s only whe
Economy
Court Dismisses Abebe, Co-Defendant’s No-Case Submission In Alleged N120m Fraud
Court Dismisses Abebe, Co-Defendant’s No-Case Submission In Alleged N120m Fraud
Court dismisses Abebe, Co-defendant’s No-Case Submission in alleged N120m fraud. Justice Olubunmi Abike-Fadipe of the Special Offences Court sitting in Ikeja, Lagos, on Thursday, March 5, 2026, dismissed the no-case submission filed by Dr. John Abebe and his company, Inducon Nig. Ltd, who are standing trial over an alleged N120m fraud.
The defendants were arraigned on September 19, 2022 on a six-count charge bordering on conspiracy to steal, stealing, conspiracy to obtain by false pretence, obtaining by false pretence and obtaining execution of security by false pretence to the tune of N120m.
One of the counts reads:
“That you, Dr. John Abebe and Kamoru Alade Oladimeji, on or about the 4th day of June 2013 in Lagos, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, conspired amongst yourselves to commit felony to wit: stealing the sum of N120 million, property of Arsenal Technologies Limited.”
Another count reads: “That you, Dr. John Abebe and Kamoru Alade Oladimeji, on or about the 4th day of June 2013 in Lagos, within the jurisdiction of this Honourable Court, conspired amongst yourselves to commit felony to wit: obtaining by false pretence the sum of N120 million, property of Arsenal Technologies Limited, under the pretence that your property lying, being and situate at 9, Magbon Close, Ikoyi, Lagos State, which you pledged as security to Arsenal Technologies Limited, was unencumbered, a representation you knew to be false.”
The defendants pleaded “not guilty” to the charges preferred against them, thereby leading to their full trial.
During the trial, which commenced in 2022, the prosecution called four witnesses and closed its case on May 15, 2025.
Following the closure of the prosecution’s case, the first and third defendants filed a no-case submission on October 14, 2025, arguing that the prosecution failed to establish a prima facie case linking them to the alleged offences.
Ruling on the application on Thursday, Justice Fadipe held that the court, at the stage of a no-case submission, only determines whether the prosecution has produced legally admissible evidence linking the defendants to the offences charged, and not whether the evidence is sufficient for conviction.

Court
The judge ruled that evidence led by the prosecution indicated that the defendants allegedly obtained about N120 million from the complainant, Arsenal Technologies Limited, by pledging property as security that had earlier been pledged to a bank.
The judge also held that the evidence, if believed, required an explanation from the defendants.
Consequently, the judge dismissed the no-case submission and ordered the defendants to enter their defence.
The case was adjourned till May28, and June 3, 4, 24 and 25, 2026 for the defendants to open their defence.
Akwa Ibom
How Governor Umo Eno Creating Cities Out Of A City
How Governor Umo Eno Creating Cities Out Of A City
How Governor Umo Eno creating cities out of a city. On Dominic Utuk Avenue in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital, where a menacing erosion gully once swallowed land, livelihoods and hope, a new geography has emerged.
It is not merely a construction project; it is an audacious reimagining of space and the recreation of the biblical “City Made of Gold”. The ARISE Palm Resort standing on the space today is a proof that vision, when matched with execution, can convert ecological scars into economic signatures.
Before bulldozers progressively arrived the site, the 70–71 hectares were a troubled landscape—deep ravines, criminal hideouts, and advancing erosion threatening nearby public and private infrastructure. What could have remained an environmental liability has instead become an engineered ecosystem, courtesy of the visionary leadership of the Akwa Ibom State Governor, Pastor Umo Eno.
At the construction site of the “City” which unarguably is the first of its kind in Nigeria, ten to twelve metres of unstable earth have been excavated and replaced. A massive drainage control tunnel—about 3.5 metres high and 6 metres wide—now channels water responsibly. This is not beautification; it is environmental surgery, and the narrative shift from danger zone to economic citadel sends a powerful development message: decay is not destiny.
At the center of the resort is a cynosure of a Palm tree, which is both symbolic and instructive. This, perhaps, explains why Palm forms part of the name. In local culture, the palm tree represents resourcefulness—every part productive, every yield valuable. In similar fashion, the resort has been structured so that each facility—sports, hospitality, retail, conferencing, entertainment—becomes a revenue stream.
The foregoing implies that the ARISE Palm Resort is not an isolated beautification effort. It is a coordinated strategy aligning erosion control, tourism development, employment generation, renewable energy adoption and revenue expansion within a single framework. Few public projects attempt such multi-layered integration.
To understand the scale, one must see the resort not as a leisure park but as a multi-sector economic city. At its heart lies a nine-hole golf course built across hills, slopes and a bridge that spans a water channel—challenging terrain that meets international sporting standards.
Around it radiate villas, apartments, banquet halls, exhibition galleries, sports complexes, retail spaces and waterfront attractions. This is urban planning within a single perimeter.
Additionally, the economic projections are striking. When fully operational, the resort is expected to generate between ₦22 and ₦27 billion annually in internally generated revenue. In an era where subnational governments struggle with fiscal sustainability, this single development could significantly strengthen the state’s revenue base and foreign exchange inflows through tourism and events.
But macroeconomics often hides the human pulse. During construction alone, about 2,000 direct jobs were created, with an estimated 10,000 indirect engagements across supply chains. If each worker supports an average family of four, the livelihood impact extends to tens of thousands. Bricklayers, welders, ICT experts, gardeners, food vendors, POS operators—an entire micro-economy found oxygen.
Expressing her excitement about the all-in-one project, Grace Etim, a food vendor at the site confided thus: “I used to worry about feeding my children,” . “Now, lunch hour feels like harvest time.” Another artisan admitted candidly that steady site work kept many young men away from destructive paths. Development, in this sense, became a social stabiliser.
Significantly, the execution leaned heavily on local content. No expatriates dominated the workforce. Nigerian professionals—about 75 percent from Akwa Ibom—interpreted, developed and delivered the governor’s vision. It is infrastructure built by indigenous competence, reinforcing confidence in local capacity.
At the resort, power is not an issue as energy sustainability forms another pillar that makes the center unique and distinctively different. A 1.5-megawatt solar farm powers the complex, complemented by a dedicated public electricity line and standby generators. This layered power architecture reduces vulnerability and aligns with global hospitality standards where uninterrupted service is non-negotiable.
Again, security and institutional presence further reinforce investor confidence. With a police post, fire service station, clinic, pharmacy, bank, and 24/7 CCTV control room, the resort functions like a self-contained municipality. It is leisure fused with governance infrastructure—order embedded within recreation.
The artificial lake, stretching about 2.6 kilometres in its expanded design, introduces aquatic tourism—floating bars, canoe rides and planned electric boats. Waterfront dining and landscaped walkways extend over 1.5 kilometres, encouraging family recreation and wellness culture. It is environment curated as experience.
Sports tourism is another strategic layer. Beyond golf, other sporting activities that will take place at the resort include football, tennis, basketball, volleyball, badminton, squash, bowling, gymnastics and yoga. With a 1,500-capacity banquet hall expandable toward 2,000 seats and six breakout rooms, the resort positions Uyo as a conference and events destination capable of hosting national and international gatherings.
Quite commendable is the proximity of the resort to the Victor Attah International Airport. Delegates can land and arrive at a world-class leisure and conference environment within minutes. In tourism economics, accessibility determines viability. Here, geography cooperates with vision.
The residential component—20 luxury apartments (15 two-bedroom and five three-bedroom units) with smart-room features and curated services—signals long-stay hospitality potential. The Phase Two’s additional villas further amplify revenue streams and property value appreciation within the axis.
Critics may call it ambitious. Supporters may call it transformative. But its structural logic is undeniable: creating an attraction that multiplies value across sectors—agriculture (through food supply), transport, retail, entertainment, real estate and professional services. The multiplier effect is already visible in surrounding communities.
Importantly, the resort rebrands Uyo psychologically. Cities grow not only by population but by perception. A destination city attracts conferences, destination weddings, sporting tournaments and cultural festivals. Each event translates into hotel bookings, restaurant bills and transport fares.

How Governor Umo Eno Creating Cities Out Of A City
For Governor Umo Eno, this is more than bricks and landscaping. It is governance as place-making. By reclaiming a threatened terrain and converting it into a revenue-yielding asset, he demonstrates how leadership can create cities within cities—self-sustaining enclaves that relieve pressure on government finances while uplifting citizens.
Ultimately, the ARISE Palm Resort is a statement that development need not be incremental; it can be catalytic. From ravine to revenue hub, from erosion site to economic citadel, the transformation challenges conventional limits of subnational ambition.
In the final analysis, the ARISE Palm Resort is less about luxury and more about leverage. It leverages reclaimed land into revenue, recreation into employment, and vision into measurable economic value.
In doing so, it offers a template for how bold subnational leadership can indeed create cities out of a city—transforming geography into growth and aspiration into architecture. This is what the Arise Agenda of Governor Umo Eno represents- leadership with a human face.
Venerable Richard Peters is a Public Relations manager and writes from Uyo.
International
NAF Strengthens Helicopter Maintenance Capacity Through A109 Trekker Type Training In Italy
NAF Strengthens Helicopter Maintenance Capacity Through A109 Trekker Type Training In Italy
NAF strengthens helicopter maintenance capacity through A109 Trekker type training in Italy. In line with its commitment to strengthening technical expertise and sustaining operational readiness, the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) trained four of its personnel on the Airframe Maintenance Type Training Course for the A109 Trekker Helicopter at the Leonardo Helicopter Division Facility in Sesto Calende, Italy, from 12 January to 20 February 2026.
The comprehensive training programme featured rigorous theoretical and practical phases, during which participants were instructed on the identification of AW109S Trekker helicopter systems and subsystems, their modes of operation, as well as critical procedures for effective maintenance and troubleshooting required to keep the aircraft in an airworthy condition. The course also emphasised the proper interpretation and application of maintenance manuals, which are essential for ensuring safe, efficient and standardised maintenance practices.
This initiative aligns with the command philosophy of the Chief of the Air Staff, Air Marshal Sunday Kelvin Aneke, which places strong emphasis on deliberate capacity development, technical excellence and continuous professional advancement of personnel to enhance mission effectiveness.

NAF
By investing in specialised training with original equipment manufacturers and globally recognised aviation institutions, the NAF continues to build a highly skilled workforce capable of sustaining its modern fleet and supporting ongoing air operations.
At the conclusion of the programme, the participating personnel were awarded certificates in recognition of their successful completion of the course.
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