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Nigeria Eyes African Leadership in Ethical AI as UNESCO Unveils Readiness Report
Nigeria Eyes African Leadership in Ethical AI as UNESCO Unveils Readiness Report
By: Michael Mike
Nigeria on Monday took a major step towards positioning itself as a continental leader in the governance of artificial intelligence (AI), as the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) unveiled the country’s Artificial Intelligence Readiness Assessment (RAM) Report and urged stakeholders to establish robust guardrails for the emerging technology.
The report, launched in Abuja, provides the first comprehensive assessment of Nigeria’s preparedness to develop, deploy and regulate AI technologies in an ethical, inclusive and human-centred manner.
Speaking at the unveiling, Officer-in-Charge of UNESCO’s Abuja Office, Dimitri Sanga, described AI as the most transformative technology of the modern era and warned that its unprecedented capabilities also posed significant challenges that require deliberate governance frameworks.
According to him, AI has become deeply embedded in virtually every aspect of human existence, reshaping governance, education, security, communication, innovation and economic activities.
“The world is witnessing the transformative impact of artificial intelligence in all spheres of our civilisation. For the first time, humanity is said to have created a tool that could challenge its own existence if not effectively regulated,” Sanga said.
He noted that while AI presents enormous opportunities for development, its deployment must remain anchored on human rights, fairness, inclusion and sustainability.
Sanga said the assessment report should not be viewed as an end in itself but as a roadmap for informed policy decisions and coordinated actions aimed at ensuring Nigeria develops a responsible and ethical AI ecosystem.
He disclosed that UNESCO, with support from the European Union, had been working with Nigeria since 2024 to strengthen digital infrastructure, policies and institutions required for ethical AI development across five critical dimensions.
The UNESCO official also revealed that the organisation had already commenced capacity-building programmes, training more than 400 civil servants across six Nigerian states using AI literacy modules designed to enhance public sector understanding of emerging technologies.
He commended Nigeria for demonstrating leadership in incorporating UNESCO’s Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence into its national digital transformation agenda.
“With the support of relevant ministries, departments and agencies, I am confident that this report will strengthen Nigeria’s leadership role in leveraging ethical AI for development in Africa,” he said.
The assessment comes at a time when governments across the world are racing to harness artificial intelligence for economic growth and public service delivery while simultaneously grappling with concerns over privacy, misinformation, job displacement, algorithmic bias and the potential misuse of advanced technologies.
In November 2021, UNESCO’s 193 member states unanimously adopted the Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence, the world’s first global normative framework designed to ensure that AI technologies are developed and deployed in ways that are human-centred, rights-based and sustainable.
Nigeria’s readiness assessment is expected to serve as a diagnostic tool to guide policymakers in building governance structures, strengthening research and innovation capacities, improving AI education and creating safeguards that would enable the country to harness the benefits of artificial intelligence while minimising associated risks.
Stakeholders at the event agreed that the successful implementation of the report’s recommendations could position Nigeria not only as one of Africa’s leading digital economies but also as a reference point for responsible AI governance on the continent.
Nigeria Eyes African Leadership in Ethical AI as UNESCO Unveils Readiness Report
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Yobe: Baba Mallam Wali will step up development if elected in 2027
Yobe: Baba Mallam Wali will step up development if elected in 2027
By: Yahaya Wakili
Muhammad Yahaya, a political observer in Yobe State, on Saturday said that he remains optimistic that after the 2027 general elections, the citizens of Yobe State will witness massive developmental projects under the leadership and administration of the incoming APC governor, Alhaji Baba Mallam Wali.
According to Home, Wali will continue from where his predecessor, Mai Mala Buni CON, stopped, stressing that Governor Buni has already put Yobe State on the list of developing states in Nigeria.
Baba Mallam Wali is a well-known, seasoned administrator who is committed to the ideals of service; he has the capacity and the experience in administration, being the longest-serving secretary to the state government in the northeastern region. Baba Mallam Wali carries the competence and temperament required to build on the legacies of governance of Governor Mai Mala Buni in the state. impact, Yobe State will witness a rapid development within the shortest time, and Yobeans will have known that the leaders of Yobe State, His Excellency Senator Ibrahim Geidam FCAE and His Excellency Governor Mai Mala Buni CON, COMN, have made them a good choice.
“Yobe State deserved a kind of leader like Senator Ibrahim Geidam, Governor Mai Mala Buni, and Alhaji Baba Mallam Wali, and therefore, what remains from the people of Yobe State is to give Baba Mallam Wali support and cooperation in order to move Yobe State forward beyond expectations. Alhaji Umar Idris, a political analyst in the state, said now the APC has done a good thing and made an excellent choice since it’s adopting a rotation formula by shifting to the Yobe North Senatorial District. “He observed
Muhammad added, “This is a welcome development, and it will unite the party members and the people of Yobe State as a whole, and definitely APC will continue ruling the state forever. According to the political analysis, the former secretary to the state government, Alhaji Baba Mallam Wali, brings to the ticket a strong record across Yobe State politics and will strengthen the state to achieve its noble goals.
He also said that Baba Mallam Wali Fcan, MNI, was chosen because of his political experience, state reach, Yobe North influence, and record in public office.
“His performance showed his acceptance among members of the public across the state. He said the wealth experience of Baba Mallam Wali qualifies him to govern the state for four to eight years, Inshallah; therefore, his emergence as an All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate was a well-deserved recognition. Baba Mallam Wali will perform better and be committed to the development of Yobe State.” He added
Yobe: Baba Mallam Wali will step up development if elected in 2027
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Plastic Crisis: NESREA Rejects Manufacturers’ Pushback, Insists New Regulations Will Transform Nigeria’s Economy
Plastic Crisis: NESREA Rejects Manufacturers’ Pushback, Insists New Regulations Will Transform Nigeria’s Economy
By: Michael Mike
The National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) has firmly rejected calls to suspend Nigeria’s newly introduced National Environmental (Plastic Waste Control) Regulations, 2026, insisting that the country can no longer afford a plastics economy that allows products to flood the market without responsibility for their recovery and disposal.
In what could trigger a major policy and industry showdown, the environmental regulator defended the controversial regulations against criticisms by the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria (MAN), arguing that the new framework is not anti-industry but a necessary response to an escalating environmental crisis that has clogged waterways, worsened flooding, polluted ecosystems and created mounting public health and economic costs.
The agency said suspending the regulations would amount to delaying urgently needed reforms and would send the wrong signal to investors, recyclers, development partners and businesses already preparing for a transition to a circular economy.
Director-General and Chief Executive Officer of NESREA, Prof. Innocent Barikor, said the regulations were designed to reduce plastic pollution, promote resource efficiency, encourage recycling and create a sustainable plastics economy capable of generating jobs and attracting investment.
Barikor dismissed claims that the regulations would impose an outright ban on single-use plastics, disrupt manufacturing operations and increase dependence on imports.
According to him, the much-debated 80-micron provision under Regulation 26 applies only to specific categories of plastic bags and does not constitute a blanket prohibition on plastic packaging across sectors such as food and beverages, pharmaceuticals, agriculture and logistics.
“It is misleading to present the regulations as a wholesale ban on all plastic packaging or all single-use plastics,” the agency stated.
Rather than shutting industries down, NESREA said the regulations provide a phased implementation framework that gives manufacturers sufficient time to adapt.
The agency noted that the minimum recycled polyethylene terephthalate (PET) content requirement would not take effect immediately, beginning with a threshold of 25 per cent on January 1, 2028, and increasing to 50 per cent from January 1, 2030.
The timelines, it said, would enable manufacturers, recyclers and brand owners to make investments, strengthen supply chains and build local recycling capacity.
NESREA warned that the bigger threat to Nigeria’s economy lies in the continued mismanagement of plastic waste.
According to the agency, unchecked plastic pollution has contributed to blocked drainage systems, flooding, environmental degradation, marine litter, public health concerns and the loss of valuable recyclable materials that could otherwise support domestic industries.
The regulator maintained that the new policy framework could unlock significant economic opportunities in waste collection, sorting, recycling, packaging innovation, logistics and environmental compliance services.
It further argued that a properly implemented circular plastics economy could create thousands of green jobs across both the formal and informal sectors while stimulating investment in local recycling infrastructure and secondary raw-material production.
On concerns that compliance costs could increase the prices of consumer goods, NESREA said the country is already paying heavily for inaction through environmental remediation costs, sanitation burdens and damage caused by flooding and pollution.
The agency explained that the regulations are founded on the internationally recognised polluter-pays principle, which places responsibility on producers to participate in the recovery and environmentally sound management of products introduced into the market.
It also rejected claims that the regulations would encourage import dependence, saying they specifically promote the use of locally sourced food-grade recycled PET and are intended to boost Nigeria’s domestic recycling industry, conserve foreign exchange and strengthen local value chains.
NESREA argued that plastic pollution is not merely a waste management issue but one that must be addressed throughout the entire value chain—from product design and production to consumption, collection, recycling and final disposal.
The agency disclosed that the regulations establish mechanisms for generating reliable national data on plastic production, recovery and environmental leakage through a Central Data Collection Platform, producer reporting systems and compliance monitoring frameworks.
It maintained that the regulations are consistent with Nigeria’s existing plastic waste policies and roadmaps and provide the legal framework required to translate policy aspirations into enforceable obligations.
Significantly, NESREA declared that the country has reached a defining moment in its environmental governance journey.
“Nigeria cannot continue with a plastics system in which products are placed on the market without adequate responsibility for their recovery, recycling or environmentally sound management,” the agency stated.
It nonetheless extended an olive branch to manufacturers and other stakeholders, proposing structured engagement on implementation guidelines, compliance timelines, producer responsibility schemes and support mechanisms for industrial transition.
The regulator insisted that the objective is not to weaken manufacturing but to reposition Nigeria’s plastics sector for competitiveness in a world increasingly driven by sustainability, traceability, recycled content and producer accountability.
The emerging standoff between environmental regulators and manufacturers is expected to shape the future of Nigeria’s plastics industry and test the country’s resolve to balance industrial growth with environmental sustainability.
Plastic Crisis: NESREA Rejects Manufacturers’ Pushback, Insists New Regulations Will Transform Nigeria’s Economy
News
Police Rescue 23-Year-Old After Alleged Insecticide Ingestion in Lagos
Police Rescue 23-Year-Old After Alleged Insecticide Ingestion in Lagos
By: Zagazola Makama
Police operatives in Lagos have rescued a 23-year-old man who was found unconscious after allegedly ingesting an insecticide in Magodo area of the state.
The incident was reported at the Isheri Police Division on June 21 by Aminat Odofin, a resident of No. 24 Nojim Nije Street, Magodo.
According to the report, the woman stated that at about 0840 hours, she discovered Michael Bliss, who had been under her care since the age of seven, lying unconscious inside a room in the house.
Preliminary findings suggested that the young man may have ingested a quantity of insecticide after being confronted over an alleged theft.
Following the report, a team of detectives visited the scene and documented relevant evidence as part of ongoing investigations.
The victim was immediately evacuated to Spark View Hospital in Magodo, where he received urgent medical attention.
Police sources said the 23-year-old was responding to treatment and remained under protective custody while investigations continued.
Authorities said efforts were ongoing to establish the full circumstances surrounding the incident.
Police Rescue 23-Year-Old After Alleged Insecticide Ingestion in Lagos
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