Tuesday, March 3, 2026

‘Nigeria records one suicide every 33 seconds’

An anti-suicide advocacy group, Suicide Is No Solution, yesterday, raised the alarm over Nigeria’s escalating suicide crisis, highlighting that a death occurs every 33 seconds and an estimated 15,000 to 16,000 Nigerians die by suicide annually.

The group warned that the issue required serious attention and should not be trivialised.

Project Coordinator of the group, Mr Toye Arulogun, in a statement, said the figures are part of a wider global concern, with over 95,000 deaths by suicide recorded worldwide in just the first two months of this year.

He said this underlined the urgent need for public awareness and responsible content creation.
Arulogun said: “We have noticed in the last couple of weeks an upswing of reckless and insensitive online content by Nigerian content creators promoting deaths by suicide.

“Most of the content also mentions and displays some brands as suicide tools or agents, thereby pointing anyone with suicide ideation or contemplation to what to use; bringing the name, image and reputation of such brands into disrepute.

“What our content creators should be doing is to come up with skits dissuading Nigerians from killing themselves, no matter the situation, rather than the current wave of self-harm promotion.”

By Adeola Badru, Vanguard

Monday, March 2, 2026

Nigeria loses billions annually to employee fraud report finds



A new report warned that employee fraud costs Nigerian small businesses nearly $7 billion annually. Analysts say internal theft and financial manipulation threaten the stability of MSMEs, which play a critical role in job creation and economic development.

Dangote Cement posts record profit of over $700m, targets expansion in South Africa, Ethiopia, and other markets



Nigeria’s Dangote Cement, Africa’s largest cement maker, delivered a historic financial performance in 2025 with profit after tax more than doubling to approximately ₦1.01 trillion naira, or about $743 million at prevailing exchange rates.

This result, released in its audited financials for the year ended 31 December 2025, marks the first time the company has crossed the trillion naira profit milestone, underscoring strong operational performance amid ongoing capacity expansions.

Group revenue climbed more than 20 per cent to ₦4.31 trillion (roughly $3.17 billion), driven by resilient demand across key markets and proactive cost management. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortisation expanded by more than 40 per cent to ₦1.98 trillion, about $1.45 billion, lifting the company’s EBITDA margin to 46 per cent.

In its home market of Nigeria, EBITDA jumped over 60 per cent to about 1.76 trillion naira, or $1.29 billion, with a margin close to 60 per cent.

The board has proposed a 50 per cent increase in the dividend to ₦45 per share, a move that reflects both confidence in the company’s cash generation and returns to investors. Dangote Cement’s performance comes even as total production volumes edged down marginally to 27.5 million tonnes.

Export volumes, however, rose significantly with Nigerian cement and clinker shipments up nearly 19 per cent to 1.4 million tonnes, including 34 sea shipments to destinations such as Ghana and Cameroon.

Chief Executive Officer Arvind Pathak described 2025 as a “landmark year” for the business, highlighting the strength of the company’s strategic model in the face of modest volume declines.

“Profit after tax crossed the ₦1tn milestone for the first time in our history, more than doubling 2024 performance,” he said, noting that disciplined margin focus and operational efficiency were key drivers.

Pathak also pointed to strategic infrastructure projects that are beginning to pay off. In the third quarter of 2025, Dangote Cement commissioned a three‑million‑tonne‑per‑annum grinding plant in the Ivory Coast, which is part of a broader network that expands the group’s annual capacity to 55 million tonnes.

This facility will boost production capabilities in West Africa and position the group to better meet regional demand through an integrated supply chain.

The company’s export terminals at Apapa and Onne in Nigeria have emerged as strategic assets, underpinning its ambition to reach a combined export target of 10 million tonnes by 2030.

Pathak said progress on logistics efficiency, particularly the adoption of compressed natural gas technology in the company’s transport fleet, is enhancing cost leadership.

The addition of more than 3,000 CNG trucks has reduced fuel costs by more than 60 per cent compared with diesel, embedding structural advantages into the cost base and supporting margin expansion.
Dangote Cement Targets More African Markets

Looking ahead, Dangote Cement plans further capacity roll‑outs and geographical expansion. The company is advancing the 6 million tonnes per annum Itori plant while progressing projects in Ethiopia, Cameroon, South Africa, Zambia, and Senegal.

Pathak described a confident growth trajectory, buoyed by stable macroeconomic conditions, structural reforms, and the operational benefits of the African Continental Free Trade Area.

He said the focus on excellence, margin improvement, and export scaling will sustain performance and value creation for stakeholders.

This strong set of results comes at a time when Nigeria’s broader economic indicators show signs of stabilisation, including easing inflation and relatively steady foreign exchange markets, themes that executives say support the cement maker’s long‑term growth outlook.

By Segun Adeyemi, Business Insider Africa

Nigerian oil magnate Muhammadu Indimi ordered to pay daughters $43.51 million in dividend feud

Twin sisters Ameena and Zara Indimi have won a $43.51 million court ruling against their father after a long-running fight over unpaid dividends, a decision that has now pushed one of Nigeria’s most influential business families into the spotlight.

The Africa Report reports that a Federal High Court ordered Oriental Energy to pay the full amount to the pair, marking a major setback for billionaire oil magnate Mohammed Indimi and escalating a feud that has been simmering for years behind closed doors.

The dispute began when the twins said they were shut out of a huge dividend pool reportedly worth around $435 million. They argued they jointly held 10% of the company, giving them a right to part of the payout.

But they claimed their shareholdings were cut sharply without their agreement. Court filings show they believed those changes blocked them from receiving millions linked to the firm’s earnings from its offshore operations.


A private battle becomes very public

The court victory has turned what was once an internal family argument into public news, partly because of the sums involved and partly because of the businessman at the centre of it.

His company has long been a major private player in the country’s oil sector, and the family has often tried to keep business matters out of the public eye. But the ruling has deepened interest in the story and raised wider questions about how family-run firms manage ownership and decision-making.

Reports also suggest the disagreement has spread beyond the twins. Other relatives are said to be involved in ongoing arguments about which holdings belong to whom, and whether earlier payments to family members should count as gifts or buyouts that settle dividend rights.


A rare look inside a private empire

The case has shone a light on how little is publicly known about private companies in the country, where ownership decisions are often taken quietly and financial details are rarely shared.

The exact calculation behind the $43.51 million figure and the timeline for payment has not been fully detailed. But the order shows the judge found that money was owed, giving the sisters a stronger position as the dispute enters its next stage.

An appeal or enforcement fight could run for months. But the ruling has already changed the balance inside the family and inside the company. A disagreement that began over missing dividends has now become one of the most closely watched business disputes in the country.

By Ayodeji Adegboyega, Business Insider Africa

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Nigeria to start exporting new crude grade in March, further boosting output

Nigeria's state oil firm NNPC will begin exporting a new light, sweet crude grade called Cawthorne from March, an NNPC spokesperson said, adding to a recent recovery in output from Africa’s top exporter.

The launch is part of Nigeria's broader push to lift production, long constrained by unrest and crude theft, and follows the introduction of two other new grades since 2024. Nigeria, already pumping close to its OPEC quota, is among the countries seeking a higher target within the producer group.

Cawthorne crude, which is due to be exported in the third week of March according to a source familiar with the matter, has an API gravity of 36.4, making it similar in quality to Nigeria's Bonny Light, valued for its high yields of gasoline and diesel.

NNPC last week issued a tender for the grade for March 24-25, a trader said.

The grade is expected to be exported through the Floating Storage and Offloading vessel Cawthorne, analysts at Kpler said in a note, which has a capacity of 2.2 million barrels and aims to boost crude oil transportation and production from Oil Mining Lease 18 and surrounding assets in the country's Eastern Niger Delta.

Based on the vessel's storage constraints, Cawthorne could lift Nigeria’s crude and condensate supply from roughly 1.65 million barrels per day currently to around 1.7 million bpd for the rest of the year, Kpler said.

Nigeria's OPEC+ crude output quota is 1.5 million bpd and the country pumped 1.48 million bpd in January, based on OPEC data.

Other grades Nigeria has launched in recent years include Obodo in 2025 and Utapate in 2024.

By Seher Dareen and Isaac Anyaogu, Reuters