National News
At UN Food Summit, Nigeria Maps 10-year Youth-led Agricultural Renewal Plan
At UN Food Summit, Nigeria Maps 10-year Youth-led Agricultural Renewal Plan
** We’ve doled out $538m for SAPZs, created 785,000 jobs, says VP Shettima
By: Michael Mike
The Nigerian government has unveiled a 10-year Strategic Action Plan (2026–2035) to transform its agricultural sector, with Vice President Kashim Shettima declaring that the youth-led innovation will be central to the country’s food systems transition.
The plan is part of Nigeria’s national strategy to implement the Comprehensive Africa Agricultural Development Programme (CAADP) Kampala Declaration (2026–2036), adopted by African Heads of State to strengthen food and nutrition security across the continent.
Speaking on Tuesday at a high-level dialogue between African youth agri-food entrepreneurs and African leaders during the United Nations Food Systems Summit Stocktake (UNFSS+4) in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Vice President Shettima emphasised the importance of investing in young people to drive innovation and resilience across food systems.

“A nation that is prepared for the future is not known by the promises it makes but by the place it gives to its youth in shaping those promises. To see African youths leading the charge in this essential sector speaks more eloquently than any speech,” VP Shettima stated.
He explained that Nigeria has already inaugurated an Agricultural Sector Working Group and a Technical Committee to coordinate national implementation of the Kampala Declaration and develop the 10-Year Strategic Action Plan.
According to him, the plan will align national and subnational priorities, promote public-private partnerships, and embed strong youth engagement at every level.
The Vice President also noted that the Federal Government has recapitalised the Bank of Agriculture with ₦1.5 trillion ($1 billion) to support the Youth Agricultural Revolution in Nigeria, providing loans of up to ₦1 million to young farmers and agri-groups across the country.
“This is not charity. It is strategic inclusion. It is resilience engineered into policy,” VP Shettima said.
The Vice President listed several ongoing initiatives, including Nigeria’s collaboration with the Netherlands, CGIAR, and IITA under the Youth in Agribusiness Initiative, which is targeting 10,000 youth, with 40–50% of them women, across innovative hubs in horticulture, poultry, aquaculture, and cassava processing.

He also cited investments in mechanisation, greenhouse expansion, and irrigation systems, along with the $1.1 billion Green Imperative Project with Brazil, which is enhancing year-round agricultural productivity and value chain efficiency.
“We launched the first 2,000 tractors in a 70-million-dollar investment, targeting over 550,000 hectares of land and reaching more than 550,000 farming households. In partnership with John Deere, we are deploying 10,000 tractors over five years,” he said.
Shettima reaffirmed Nigeria’s call for increased investment in value addition and agro-processing to end the export of raw commodities and build more resilient local economies.
The forthcoming 10-Year Action Plan, he added, will prioritise training and mentorship in agro-technology and agribusiness, with a strong monitoring and evaluation framework.
“This is not a sprint. It is a generational relay that requires collective action, strategic partnerships, and an unwavering commitment to shared responsibility,” he said.
Meanwhile, Vice President Shettima also addressed the Plenary Session on Transforming Food Systems in Complex Settings, where he disclosed that Nigeria has already committed $538.05 million to the first phase of the Special Agro-Industrial Processing Zones (SAPZ) programme, a flagship initiative aimed at boosting agricultural productivity, improving rural livelihoods, and accelerating agro-industrialisation.
“The SAPZ programme in Nigeria is being implemented in partnership with the African Development Bank (AfDB), the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB), and other key development partners. The initiative is projected to attract $1 billion in total investments by 2027, reduce post-harvest losses by 80%, and has already generated over 785,000 jobs across targeted regions,” he noted.
VP Shettima added that African youths hold the key to the continent’s agri-food future and thus, no stone should be left unturned in mobilising this greatest asset.
He reiterated the Federal Government’s commitment to tackling food insecurity, noting that the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has declared a State of Emergency on Food Security, reactivated over 500,000 hectares of arable land, deployed strategic food reserves, and expanded access to seeds and extension services.
VP Shettima also emphasised the importance of security sector reforms to ensure farmers can access their lands safely and continue food production in rural communities.
In addition, he called for international collaboration to recharge the Lake Chad Basin, expand sustainable irrigation systems, and establish a national farm database.
He also advocated for anticipatory action to climate shocks, emergency school feeding programmes in conflict-affected areas, and resilience-building initiatives to secure long-term stability.
“Food security is the trust anchor of peace,” the Vice President stated.
Also speaking, United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed, decried worsening global food insecurity, noting that “over 37 million children under five who faced acute malnutrition this year are almost the entire population of Canada.”
“Short-term interventions disconnected from long-term development planning are not the solutions we are seeking. We must choose transformation over dependency,” she said.
She commended leaders, including President Tinubu, who are embedding resilience in national strategies, combining global, digital and traditional knowledge to create inclusive and sustainable food systems.
“We need coordination as a people and not just bureaucracies. Bureaucracies are important; we need strong public institutions, but our efforts must translate into impact in people’s lives,” Mohammed added.
Other speakers at the summit included World Food Programme Executive Director, Cindy McCain; Deputy Prime Minister of Somalia, Salah Jama, and Moubarack Roubo from the Ministry of Agricultural Production and Industrialisation, Chad, among others.
At UN Food Summit, Nigeria Maps 10-year Youth-led Agricultural Renewal Plan
National News
ECOWAS Commissions Landmark Abuja Headquarters, Nigeria and China Renew Commitment to Regional Integration
ECOWAS Commissions Landmark Abuja Headquarters, Nigeria and China Renew Commitment to Regional Integration
By: Michael Mike
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) on Thursday inaugurated its new permanent headquarters in Abuja, with leaders describing the imposing complex as a powerful symbol of regional unity, institutional renewal and the deepening strategic partnership between West Africa and China.
The commissioning ceremony brought together senior government officials, diplomats and regional leaders, with Nigeria’s Vice President, Kashim Shettima, representing President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, while the President of the ECOWAS Commission, Dr. Omar Alieu Touray, and China’s Ambassador to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Yu Dunhai, outlined a shared vision for stronger regional integration, economic transformation and closer Africa-China cooperation.
The modern headquarters, financed by the People’s Republic of China, was described by speakers as more than an office complex. It was presented as a lasting symbol of cooperation, resilience and a renewed determination to build a peaceful, prosperous and integrated West Africa.
Touray described the inauguration as “a truly historic milestone” in the life of ECOWAS, noting that the headquarters represents the fulfilment of a vision conceived during the groundbreaking ceremony in December 2022.
He thanked Xi Jinping for China’s support, saying Beijing had once again demonstrated its commitment to West Africa by providing the regional body with a world-class headquarters.
According to him, China’s contributions to ECOWAS have gone beyond infrastructure, recalling the country’s earlier support for regional peacekeeping through the provision of strategic military equipment and vehicles for ECOWAS security operations, alongside numerous development interventions across member states.
Touray said the completion of the headquarters within about two years reflected the strength of the partnership between China and ECOWAS.
He also praised Nigeria for its unwavering support as host nation, citing the country’s role in providing land, policy support and institutional backing that made the project possible.
For decades, the ECOWAS Commission operated from offices spread across different locations in Abuja, creating operational and logistical challenges.
Touray said the new integrated complex would significantly improve coordination, efficiency and productivity by bringing Commission staff together under one roof.
He disclosed that the facility consists of a central nine-storey tower flanked by two seven-storey wings and is equipped with modern conference rooms featuring interpretation facilities, archives, kitchenettes, banking halls, restaurants, a clinic, gymnasium, shops and even a daycare centre for nursing mothers.
Despite celebrating the physical accomplishment, the ECOWAS Commission President stressed that infrastructure alone could not guarantee progress.
“Buildings do not deliver transformation; people and institutions do,” he said, urging member states to ensure that the headquarters becomes a centre of excellence that drives innovation, strengthens collaboration and delivers tangible benefits to citizens across the sub-region.
Representing President Xi Jinping, Ambassador Yu described the building as the “Eye of West Africa” and a flagship achievement under the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation.
He said the headquarters reflects China’s enduring support for African integration and demonstrates the strength of China-Africa relations.
The ambassador noted that China continues to pursue cooperation with Africa based on sincerity, mutual respect, friendship and shared development.
He recalled that during the Beijing Summit of FOCAC, China and African leaders adopted an ambitious framework for building an all-weather China-Africa community with a shared future through six major pillars and ten partnership actions.
According to Yu, China will continue to support ECOWAS in promoting regional peace, economic development and improved living standards.
He pledged that Beijing would deepen cooperation in infrastructure development, digital economy, agriculture, food security, trade and investment, while fully implementing China’s zero-tariff policy for eligible African exports to strengthen Africa’s productive capacity.
The ambassador also called for stronger cultural, educational, youth and sporting exchanges, noting that this year marks the 70th anniversary of diplomatic relations between China and Africa and has been designated the Year of China-Africa People-to-People and Cultural Exchanges.
“China remains forever a trustworthy, sincere friend and a reliable partner to ECOWAS and all West African nations,” Yu declared.
Delivering President Bola Tinubu’s message, Vice President Shettima described the commissioning as both the inauguration of a landmark building and the renewal of ECOWAS’ founding covenant of solidarity, integration and shared prosperity.
He said nations and regional communities endure because their people refuse to abandon the ties that bind them together, insisting that the new headquarters stands as a reminder of the vision of ECOWAS’ founding fathers more than five decades ago.
The Vice President commended the ECOWAS Commission for delivering the ambitious project and expressed appreciation to China for financing the complex, describing Beijing as a dependable development partner whose own economic transformation offers valuable lessons for Africa.
While acknowledging ECOWAS’ achievements in peacebuilding, democratic governance, economic cooperation and the free movement of people and goods, Shettima warned that the region still faces daunting challenges, including terrorism, violent extremism, food insecurity, climate change, economic vulnerability, public health threats and rising unemployment among young people.
He argued that regional integration must now move beyond facilitating trade to building productive economies capable of creating jobs and sustaining growth.
“The hour has come to transform our regional market into a regional production base,” he said.
“We must deepen industrialisation, strengthen regional value chains, expand intra-regional trade and unlock innovation, manufacturing and investment opportunities for our young people.”
According to him, West Africa cannot continue to depend on imported goods if it hopes to achieve genuine economic independence.
“Our integration must increasingly be driven by what we produce rather than by what we consume because a community that consumes what it does not make will forever remain at the mercy of the goodwill of others,” he said.
Shettima also urged member states to strengthen political cooperation and collective security while keeping the door open to countries that have withdrawn from ECOWAS, stressing that regional integration has become indispensable to peace, stability and sustainable development.
He expressed confidence that the headquarters would become a centre for visionary leadership, innovation and collective decision-making capable of advancing the welfare of West Africans.
Together, the three speeches reflected a common theme: that while the new headquarters is an important physical achievement, its true significance will depend on the decisions taken within its walls.
For ECOWAS, the building represents not only a new administrative home but also a renewed commitment to regional integration at a time when West Africa is confronting complex political, economic and security challenges.
For China, it reinforces an expanding strategic partnership with West Africa built around infrastructure, trade and development cooperation.
And for Nigeria, as host nation, the commissioning underscores its continued central role in the affairs of ECOWAS and its determination to support the bloc’s pursuit of peace, stability and economic prosperity across the region.
ECOWAS Commissions Landmark Abuja Headquarters, Nigeria and China Renew Commitment to Regional Integration
National News
Interior Minister Seeks Stronger Federal-State Partnership on Security, Governance
Interior Minister Seeks Stronger Federal-State Partnership on Security, Governance
By: Michael Mike
The Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, has reaffirmed the Federal Government’s commitment to strengthening collaboration with state legislatures to drive reforms in internal security, governance and public service delivery across the country.
Tunji-Ojo gave the assurance on Thursday while receiving members of the Conference of Speakers of State Legislatures of Nigeria, led by its Chairman and Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly, Emomotimi Guwor, during a courtesy visit to the Ministry of Interior headquarters in Abuja.
The minister commended the Conference for seeking closer institutional cooperation, describing state legislatures as indispensable partners in the country’s governance architecture. He said stronger collaboration between federal and sub-national institutions was essential to achieving lasting reforms in internal security and civic administration.
According to him, the ministry remains committed to building productive relationships with state legislatures and will give due consideration to proposals presented by the Conference within the framework of existing government policies and national priorities.
Tunji-Ojo stressed that the Ministry of Interior would continue to implement people-focused reforms aimed at improving national security, enhancing border management and strengthening the integrity of Nigeria’s internal governance systems.
Earlier, Guwor congratulated the minister on what he described as his reform-driven leadership, saying the initiatives introduced under his stewardship reflected the confidence reposed in him by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
He noted that the Conference of Speakers, as representatives of state legislatures closest to the grassroots, occupies a strategic position in supporting policies and reforms that directly affect citizens.
Guwor called for deeper collaboration between the Conference and the Ministry of Interior in areas that would promote national unity, reinforce Nigeria’s security architecture and improve the delivery of public services.
He also pledged the readiness of State Houses of Assembly across the country to provide the legislative backing required to advance the Federal Government’s Renewed Hope Agenda.
Both parties reaffirmed their commitment to sustained engagement and strategic cooperation, expressing confidence that stronger federal-state partnerships would contribute to improved governance, enhanced internal security and better service delivery for Nigerians.
Interior Minister Seeks Stronger Federal-State Partnership on Security, Governance
National News
VP Shettima Commisions Nigeria’s Largest Lithium Processing Plant InU Nasarawa
VP Shettima Commisions Nigeria’s Largest Lithium Processing Plant InU Nasarawa
Says Solid Minerals Sector Strategic To Nation’s Economic Agenda
By: Our Reporter
The Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, has affirmed Nigeria’s readiness to create jobs, build skills, and expand its productive base through active participation in the global minerals economy.
He underscored the importance of solid minerals in a tech-driven era, saying they are the enduring backbone of every economy since no technology rises without them.
Senator Shettima stated this on Thursday whiile commissioning Diamond New Energy Projects, one of Africa’s lithium processig plant and mining company in Nasarawa State, on behalf of President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
He identified what he described as the stark choices confronting Nigeria, noting that the nation must either maximise its industrial advantage and turn its endowments into engines of prosperity, or spend years manufacturing excuses for the nation’s lack of innovation.

VP Shettima observed that while the soil does not apologise for the failures of its occupants or congratulate them for their potential, it instead waits for a people serious enough to redeem it.
“That is why this occasion matters. The commissioning of Diamond New Energy Projects here in Nasarawa State represents confidence in Nigeria, in Nasarawa State, and in the revolutionary reforms set in place by this administration.
“It represents confidence that Nigeria is ready to participate in the global minerals economy on terms that create jobs, build skills, strengthen local enterprises and expand our productive base,” he declared.
Acknowledging that the national conversation in Nigeria had been “dominated by what lies beneath our soil,” including gold, lithium, tin, iron ore, bitumen, coal and other rare earth elements, Senator Shettima said discussing them with justifiable pride without deploying them to transform the lives of young Nigerians is futile.
“What changes a nation is the deliberate movement from extraction to processing, from potential to production, from raw materials to value-added goods, and from isolated investments to integrated industrial ecosystems,” he added.
The Vice President maintained that no nation can correct deep economic distortions without courage, just as “no economy has moved from dependency to productivity without building lasting ground for investment, productivity and growth, so that serious investors can plan for the long term, local entrepreneurs can compete, young people can find work, and the wealth of the nation begins to serve the people of the nation.
“This is why the solid minerals sector occupies a strategic place in our economic agenda,” the VP noted, pointing out that evolving technology is not only disrupting the world “but has restated the inevitability of solid minerals development.”
He attributed the success of building the mining firm to the resolve and vision of Governor Abdullahi Sule “to make Nasarawa a template for the promise of extractive industry development.”
VP Shettima commended the management of Diamond New Energy, describing the mining investment as timely, strategic and important “at the very moment Nigeria is repositioning itself.”
Earlier, the Governor of Nasarawa State, Engr. Sule, commended investors for choosing the state as the destination for one of Africa’s largest lithiumu processing plants.
He urged both local and foreign investors to take advantage of the state’s abundant solid mineral deposits and strategic proximity to the Federal Capital Territory.
Governor Sule said the state remains one of Nigeria’s most resource-rich investment destinations, with vast untapped mineral resources capable of driving industrialisation and economic growth.
On his part, the Minister of Solid Minerals Development, Dr. Dele Alake, said Nigeria has successfully redirected global investment attention to its solid minerals sector through deliberate reforms initiated by the Federal Government.
He described the establishment of the lithium processing plant as a product of the Nasarawa State Government’s commitment to improving the welfare of its people through industrial development and value addition.
He expressed optimism that the mining sector would soon emerge as one of the key drivers of Nigeria’s economic transformation and poverty reduction efforts.
For his part, the Senator representing Nasarawa West Senatorial District, Senator Ahmed Wadada, commended the Federal Government, the Nasarawa State Government and all stakeholders for their roles in attracting the investment.
He specifically praised Diamond New Energy Company for establishing the processing plant and urged the management to take the next step by manufacturing lithium batteries in Nigeria to ensure greater value addition, increased employment and maximum benefits for the host community and the nation.
For his part, the Chairman of Nasarawa Local Government Area, Alhaji Mohammed Ahmed, described the commissioning of the processing plant as the fulfilment of a long-held aspiration for the host community.
He said the facility will create employment opportunities for residents, boost internally generated revenue and stimulate economic activities in the area, assuring investors of the community’s commitment to maintaining peace and protecting the investment.
The Nasarawa State Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resources, Princess Margaret Elayo, described the project as a testament to the visionary leadership of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and Governor Abdullahi Sule.
Also, the Ambassador of Jiuling and Canmax, Mr. Yu Chongqiang, said the companies selected Nasarawa State because of the investment-friendly policies of the state government.
He noted that the current investment marked only the beginning of the companies’ long-term commitment to Nigeria, revealing plans to further expand operations to meet the growing global demand for lithium products.
On behalf of the Nasarawa State Council of Chiefs, the Emir of Keffi, Shehu Chindo Yamusa III, congratulated the Federal Government for attracting the landmark investment to Nigeria.
He said the processing plant would reposition the country in mineral exploration, processing and value addition, while assuring the investors of the continued support and peaceful coexistence of the host communities
VP Shettima Commisions Nigeria’s Largest Lithium Processing Plant InU Nasarawa
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