Monday, March 30, 2026

146 deaths recorded, 38 health workers infected as Lassa fever spreads in Nigeria

Nigeria has reported 146 deaths from Lassa fever between January and mid-March, as infections continue to spread across the country.

The Nigeria Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (NCDC) disclosed this in its latest situation report for Epidemiological week 11, spanning 9 to 15 March.

The infectious disease agency said 38 health workers have also been infected so far this year, highlighting ongoing risks within healthcare settings.

The report shows that the case fatality rate (CFR) stands at 25.1 per cent, significantly higher than the 18.7 per cent recorded during the same period in 2025.

During the reporting week, confirmed cases rose from 40 in week 10 to 66, with new infections recorded in Bauchi, Ondo, Taraba, Plateau, Edo, Benue, Kogi, Gombe and Niger states.

Cumulatively, 21 states and 82 local government areas have recorded at least one confirmed case in 2026.

According to the NCDC, five states —Bauchi, Ondo, Taraba, Benue, and Edo—account for 85 per cent of all confirmed cases.

Bauchi leads with 28 per cent of infections, followed by Ondo (21 per cent), Taraba (20 per cent), while Benue and Edo each account for eight per cent. The remaining 15 per cent of cases are distributed across 16 other states.


More details

NCDC noted that young adults aged 21 to 30 years remain the most affected group, although cases have been recorded across a wide age range, from 1 to 90 years.

Despite the rise in weekly cases, the NCDC said no new infections among health workers were recorded in week 11.

However, the cumulative figure of 38 infections among frontline workers highlights the persistent gaps in infection prevention and control measures.

Infections among health workers have consistently been attributed to inadequate use of personal protective equipment (PPE), low suspicion for Lassa fever during early patient contact, and weak infection control practices in some facilities.


Contributing factors

The report also indicates that while the number of suspected and confirmed cases is lower compared to the same period in 2025, the proportion of deaths remains high, suggesting continued challenges with late presentation and case management.

To strengthen response efforts, the NCDC said the national multi-partner, multi-sectoral Incident Management System has been activated to coordinate interventions across affected states.

However, several challenges continue to hinder effective control of the outbreak. These include poor health-seeking behaviour driven by the high cost of treatment, low awareness in high-burden communities, and poor environmental sanitation, which contributes to the spread of the virus.

The agency urged state governments to intensify community engagement and prevention efforts year-round, particularly in high-risk areas.

It also advised healthcare workers to maintain a high index of suspicion for Lassa fever, ensure early diagnosis and referral, and strictly adhere to infection prevention and control protocols.


About Lassa Fever

Lassa fever is a viral haemorrhagic disease transmitted primarily through contact with food or household items contaminated by the urine or faeces of infected rodents.

Human-to-human transmission can also occur through contact with bodily fluids.

Symptoms typically begin with fever, weakness and headache but can progress to severe complications, including bleeding, respiratory distress and organ failure if not treated early.

By Mariam Ileyemi, Premium Times

Giant oil refinery in Nigeria fails to prevent record gasoline prices

Fuel prices in oil-producing Nigeria have reached record-high levels, industry figures show, as maximum output from the giant Dangote Petroleum Refinery has failed to shield ​the country from the energy market impact of war in the Middle East.

The 650,000 barrels-per-day refinery, Africa's largest, became fully operational early this year. It was designed to ‌transform Nigeria into a major exporter of refined products after decades of inadequate refinery capacity. In the past, that repeatedly led to fuel shortages but government subsidies kept pump prices low.

President Bola Tinubu removed this buffer when he took office in 2023, promising reforms that earned plaudits from international investors.

Now Nigerians face the shock of a 65% price spike - the largest among major African economies as the impact of the new refinery has been blunted by the need to import ​large volumes of expensive crude from abroad, even though Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil producer.


INTERNATIONAL OIL MAJORS TAKE THEIR SHARE

The constraint stems from Nigeria’s financing model: state oil firm the ​Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited’s joint‑venture crude is tied to oil-backed loans and pre‑export deals.

That means much of Nigeria's roughly 1.5 million barrels-per-day of production goes ⁠to paying debts to international oil majors, banks and traders. The NNPC does not disclose its obligations, but analysts estimate they amount to about 400,000 bpd.

David Bird, managing director at Dangote, told local ​TV that the company can only source about five crude cargoes a month locally, far short of the 13–15 required. It has to import the rest at prices dictated by the impact of the Middle ​Eastern war. For Nigeria the size of a cargo is typically around a million barrels.

The difficulty is compounded because Nigeria does not have a strategic fuel reserve and the government has yet to begin action to set one up.

"A strategic reserve would have shielded Nigeria somewhat from the inflationary effects of price spikes and keep refineries supplied during prolonged disruptions," Mikolaj Judson, an analyst at advisory company Control Risks, said.


IRAN WAR CAUSES UNPRECEDENTED SUPPLY DISRUPTION

The energy supply disruptions ​that have followed U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran, which began at the end of February, are unprecedented. As a result of the conflict, shipment through the Strait of Hormuz, a route for about one-fifth of ​global energy supplies, is effectively closed for commercial shipping.

International oil prices have leapt to well above $100 a barrel, roughly 50% higher than before the war began, boosting the profits of many energy majors, while governments and ordinary ‌consumers grapple with ⁠the risk of a surge in inflation.

In Nigeria, pump prices have risen by 65%, more than elsewhere in the region, where government price controls have limited the rise.

Between March 2 and March 21, fuel prices rose by about 10–17% in Ghana, were unchanged in Kenya due to price controls, and increased by around 1% in South Africa, according to industry and regulatory pricing data.


INFLATION IS REIGNITED AFTER IT HAD BEGUN TO COOL

In Nigeria, inflation had begun to ease after reaching a record high last year, but since the start of the war, the cost of transport and some food items has doubled.

“We are already feeling it ​in Nigeria,” said Salau Sodiq, a 25‑year‑old frozen-food-seller ​in Lagos. "The prices of fish and chicken have ⁠doubled, customers are complaining, sales are falling, and it’s becoming harder for us to buy the volumes we need."

Ride‑hailing drivers in Lagos last week staged protests.

Nigeria's unreliable grid means many others are also exposed to expensive refined products as businesses and households rely on gasoline and diesel to power generators.


INCREASED VOLUMES DOMESTICALLY ​AND ALSO ABROAD

Dangote has raised gasoline supplies to Nigeria’s domestic market this month, even as it met growing demand from across Africa.

It sets its fuel ​prices in line with international ⁠fuel and crude benchmarks, factoring in freight and insurance costs.

The result was it raised its wholesale price by about 61% between early and late March, meaning customers are paying around 1,400 naira ($1.02) per litre in Lagos and Abuja, the highest Nigerians have ever paid.

After meeting Tinubu last week, Aliko Dangote, president of Dangote Group, said the conflict in the Middle East would worsen economic hardship across Africa unless it was urgently resolved.

Businesses and ⁠labour unions have ​called on the government for emergency relief, including tax incentives for refiners, more naira‑based crude supply and temporary cushioning measures, ​while accelerating longer‑term energy reforms.

In southern Oyo State, the governor approved a 10,000‑naira transportation allowance for state government workers, to run for three months from April, to help offset rising fuel prices.

But Wale Edun, Nigeria's finance minister, said the government will not ​interfere with an "orderly market pricing system", preferring instead to focus on ways of helping people to adapt.
($1 = 1,377.8300 naira)

By Isaac Anyaogu, Reuters

Gunmen kill at least 20 in nighttime attack in Nigeria

A night attack on a community in Nigeria ’s north-central region left at least 20 people dead, residents and authorities said.

The attack occurred on Sunday night in Gari Ya Waye community in the Jos North area of Plateau state, Joyce Lohya Ramnap, the state commissioner for information, said in a statement. She did not give the number of casualties, but said there was “loss of lives” and injured.

The state government imposed a 48-hour curfew to prevent further attacks, Ramnap said.

No group has claimed responsibility but residents told The Associated Press that many gunmen on bikes shot sporadically into the community.

Ibukun Falodun, a resident, said that 20 people were confirmed dead.

Attacks in Plateau State are part of a long-running cycle of violence in north-central Nigeria, where disputes over land and grazing between mostly Muslim Fulani herders and largely Christian farming communities frequently escalate into deadly clashes. Criminal gangs are also active.

Friday, March 27, 2026

Semiconductor shortages reshape tech use in Nigeria



Global demand for AI is straining semiconductor supplies, driving up prices for smartphones, laptops, and smart devices. In Nigeria, this is already altering how people buy and use mobile technology.

Middle East war drives more buyers to seek Nigeria’s liquefied natural gas exports

Nigeria is experiencing rising demand for its liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes as disruptions from the Middle East conflict create new commercial opportunities for the West African producer.

Buyers are increasingly turning to Nigeria due to its proximity to major consuming markets and the scale of its gas reserves, according to NNPC Executive Vice President Olalekan Ogunleye.

Nigeria LNG (NLNG), in which NNPC is the largest shareholder, has an export capacity of up to 22 million metric tons per year and is currently building a seventh production train expected to be completed in 2027, Reuters reported.

“We are right in the middle of the market. We are 10 sailing days from Europe, close to the Atlantic Basin and close to Asia,” Ogunleye said. “We see commercial opportunities, especially given that we have the largest gas reserves in Africa.”

Ogunleye noted that global demand for natural gas remains resilient and is unlikely to be derailed by ongoing geopolitical tensions.

He added that NNPC has begun discussions on adding two new LNG trains and is also advancing a 12 million metric tons per annum (mtpa) LNG project, alongside gas-based industrial hubs, to unlock more than 200 trillion cubic feet of reserves in Nigeria.


Global Shift Drives Interest in African Gas

Martin Houston, an LNG developer and consultant, said the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran has intensified the need for buyers to diversify supply sources.

He noted that countries in Africa and South America with proven gas reserves but limited market access could benefit from the growing interest in new LNG supply, including floating LNG solutions.

This trend is already playing out across Africa. Business Insider Africa earlier reported that Italy is seeking to increase gas imports from Algeria—Africa’s largest gas producer and exporter—after both countries agreed to deepen energy cooperation.

Spain is also considering boosting pipeline imports from Algeria as it looks to shore up supplies amid rising prices driven by the war in the Middle East.

By Adekunle Agbetiloye, Business Insider Africa