Connect with us

Economy

FG Fixes Deadline For Civil Servants’ Identity Verification

Published

on

Tinubu

FG Fixes Deadline For Civil Servants’ Identity Verification

FG fixes deadline for civil servants’ identity verification. The Federal Government has issued a final deadline of February 17, 2025, for civil servants to complete their identity verification, as part of efforts to eliminate ghost workers from the payroll system.

In a memo from the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation (OAGF), civil servants were instructed to verify their identities through the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) portal. Failure to comply could lead to salary suspension and other penalties.

The verification process requires civil servants to provide their Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN), IPPIS number, and salary account number. Due to the urgency of meeting the deadline, many civil servants have been rushing to obtain their TINs.

The government emphasized that this is the final extension of the payroll validation process, which was previously extended in August 2024. The OAGF urged all affected employees to complete the process via the official website (www.oagf.gov.ng) before midnight on February 17, 2025.

Civil Servants

Civil Servants

Failure to comply may result in suspension from the payroll, and accounting officers, finance directors, and internal audit units have been directed to ensure strict compliance.

This move aligns with President Bola Tinubu’s directive in 2024, which ordered civil servants drawing salaries while residing abroad to refund the money. The President also called for disciplinary actions against supervisors and department heads found complicit in payroll fraud.

Akwa Ibom

How Governor Umo Eno Creating Cities Out Of A City

Published

on

By

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

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.

Continue Reading

Crime

EFCC Arraigns Chinese Zhang Wen Hao For Cheating

Published

on

By

EFCC

EFCC Arraigns Chinese Zhang Wen Hao For Cheating

EFCC arraigns Chinese Zhang Wen Hao for cheating. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission EFCC Abuja Zonal Directorate has arraigned a Chinese, Zhang Wen Hao, before Justice Ibrahim Shekarau of the Nasarawa High Court sitting in Mararaba

He was arraigned on a one count charge bordering on cheating.

The count reads “That you, Zhang Wen Hao sometime in March 2023 at Suleja within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court did intentionally induce Paul Yichol with One Thousand Naira only to open account number 1715754475 in his name with Access Bank PLC for the purpose of using same for unlawful activity and thereby committed an offence contrary to Section 320 of the Penal Code Law of Northern Nigeria and punishable under Section 322 of the same Law.”

EFCC

EFCC

He pleaded not guilty, prompting the prosecution counsel Taiwo Aromolaran to ask the judge for a date to commence trial. Meanwhile, counsel to the defendant Michael Ukatu made an oral application for bail

Justice Shekarau adjourned the matter till March 12, 2026 for hearing of the bail application and ordered that the defendant be remanded in the custody of the EFCC.

Continue Reading

Abuja

Residents Appeal For Immediate Resumption Of Road Project In Abuja Community

Published

on

By

Abuja Community

Residents Appeal For Immediate Resumption Of Road Project In Abuja Community

Residents appeal for immediate resumption of road project in Abuja community. Residents of the Mpape community in the Bwari council have appealed for the immediate resumption of work on the abandoned Mpape Road project.

News Agency of Nigeria • March 6, 2026
Road under construction used to illustrate this story (Credit: X)
Road under construction used to illustrate this story (Credit: X)
Residents of the Mpape community in the Bwari council have appealed for the immediate resumption of work on the abandoned Mpape Road project.

The residents made the appeal on Friday in a letter addressed to FCT minister Nyesom Wike, describing the road as the only major access route into Mpape District.

“It is also a critical link to other parts of the FCT,” the residents said in the letter.

Donatus Shekwolo, who signed the letter on behalf of the Mpape residents, commended the ongoing infrastructure reforms across the territory and urged the minister not to forget the area.

“The suspension of the Mpape Road project has continued to inflict hardship on residents and commuters.

“The road’s deplorable condition has led to daily gridlock, prolonged travel time and frequent vehicle breakdowns. Transportation costs have risen, while safety risks increase during the rainy season.

“Mpape hosts an estimated 500,000 residents, including civil servants, artisans and traders contributing to Abuja’s economy,” Mr Shekwolo said in the letter.

Mr Shekwolo noted that the area accommodates the Julius Berger Nigeria Plc quarry site, which supports construction activities across Abuja.

“The presence of heavy-duty trucks, alongside commercial and private vehicles, places enormous pressure on the damaged road,” said Mr Shekwolo.

He said, on behalf of the residents, that constant interaction between trucks and smaller vehicles has worsened the road’s deterioration and heightened accident risks.

Abuja Community

Road projects

 

“Several houses and businesses were demolished to pave the way for the project, and many families remain displaced, while portions of land were left exposed and unsafe.

“Completing the road will enhance mobility, economic activities, security and emergency response services. The minister should intervene and ensure the immediate resumption and timely completion of this project,” the letter stated.

Continue Reading

Trending