Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Bandits in north-west Nigeria abduct villagers they invited to discuss peace talks

Armed bandits in north-west Nigeria abducted dozens of villagers whom they invited to a meeting about potential peace negotiations, authorities and residents said on Monday, highlighting the region’s worsening security.

According to local police, 39 people were seized on Sunday during a meeting in the forest near Magamin Diddi village in the Maradun municipality of north-west Zamfara state. But some residents and officials believe the number of those abducted could be as high as 50.

It is believed the victims were meeting the relatives of a bandit leader in the hope of bringing peace and easing restrictions imposed on the community.

“While the meeting was ongoing, the bandit kingpin allegedly arrived at the location with members of his gang and forcefully abducted 39 members of the group to an unknown destination,” a police spokesperson, Yazid Abubakar, said in a statement on Monday.

The chair of the Maradun local government told a local newspaper that authorities in the state were not in support of reconciliation with bandits.

According to the chair, the bandits had recently blocked all roads leading to the community market to show their anger over the persistent killing of their members by security operatives.

He questioned why the community chose to meet the aggrieved bandits, who were seeking an opportunity to retaliate.

Zamfara is at the centre of a long-running security crisis in which armed groups, locally referred to as bandits, carry out mass kidnappings, killings and village raids. The violence has disrupted farming and displaced thousands. Individual negotiations with kidnappers have occurred to gain access to farmland or secure the release of abductees despite authorities warning against it.

Security forces have deployed personnel and intelligence assets to locate the victims, the police statement said. Several individuals were reported by local people to have been released to convey the kidnappers’ ransom demands to the village.

Bashar Aliyu, a resident of Magamin Diddi, said the armed group was demanding 125m naira (£69,000) for the release of those abducted.

Abubakar said security operatives were working to rescue the captives and had assured residents that every effort was being made to ensure the victims were rescued unharmed and the perpetrators were brought to justice.

By Serena Richards, The Guardian


Gunmen kidnap 7 students from school in northwestern Nigeria

Nigeria launches coffee revival plan

 

Nigeria has reportedly launched a 10-year initiative in an effort to restore the country’s declining coffee industry, and support farmers, rural communities, and agro-processors.

According to various news reports, the Nigeria Coffee Revival Initiative (NCRI) – with the support of the federal government, farmers, state governments, research institutes, and private sector stakeholders – was unveiled at the Cocoa Research Institute of Nigeria (CRIN) in Ibadan on Thursday 28 May.

The initiative will be cast across 14 coffee-producing states, with a shared goal of rebuilding Nigeria’s coffee industry through policy reforms, improved seedlings, farmer support, value addition, and private sector investment.

Representing the Honourable Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Senator Abubakar Kyari, Engr. Adetunji, Oyo State Coordinator of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (FMAFS), framed the initiative as a strategic economic intervention.

“Revitalising Nigeria’s coffee industry is a strategic imperative for sustainable economic growth, export development and climate resilience,” says Kyari.

By Meg Kennedy, Global Coffee Report

Monday, June 8, 2026

Army frees 360 people abducted by Boko Haram in Nigeria’s Borno state

The Nigerian army says it has secured the release of 360 people abducted by the Boko Haram armed group earlier this year in the country’s northeast.

The rescue operation unfolded in a Boko Haram stronghold in the south of Borno state, the military said in a statement on Sunday. Forces descended upon the Mandara mountains where Boko Haram fighters were holding hundreds of people “under harsh conditions”, it said.

Two infants “succumbed to exhaustion occasioned by the extremely challenging mountainous terrain” and the conditions they endured during captivity, army spokesperson Haruna Sani said.

“The remaining rescued abductees were successfully evacuated to safe locations for medical care and humanitarian support, marking a major operational success and a significant setback for the terrorist group,” Sani added.

The military statement said troops had gathered intelligence and used “psychological operations” to sow “mistrust within the insurgent ranks” before “the commencement of the assault phase”.

Several Boko Haram fighters fled into the surrounding mountains, while others surrendered, though the army did not say whether it completed arrests.

A local youth leader and Borno senator confirmed the release to the AFP news agency on Saturday, but said the group included more than 400 people.

Boko Haram had demanded millions of Nigerian naira in ransom for the captives.


Growing insecurity

Borno state is the epicentre for armed groups, bandits and separatists driving northeastern Nigeria’s security crisis, which accelerated in 2009 when Boko Haram began its bloody attacks.

The group regularly carries out kidnappings and raised about $1.66m in ransom payments between July 2024 and June 2025, according to Lagos-based consultancy SBM Intelligence.

In response, the Nigerian military has ramped up efforts to confront Boko Haram and its breakaway group, the ISIL affiliate in West Africa Province (ISWAP).

Nigeria said a joint operation with the United States had killed 175 ISWAP fighters last month.

In mid-May, the Nigerian and US presidents announced the killing of Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, described as ISIL’s second-in-command.

The fight led by Boko Haram and various armed groups has killed tens of thousands of people and forcibly displaced at least two million from their homes.



Video - Teachers protest schoolchildren kidnappings in Nigeria

Friday, June 5, 2026

Nigeria Ranks 5th Among Africa's Best-Performing Nations in 2026

Nigeria has emerged as the fifth-best performing country on the continent in the 2026 edition of the Africa Performance Index. Compiled jointly by Jeune Afrique and The Africa Report, the ranking reflects the country's growing economic influence, robust innovation capacity, and regional importance, even as it navigates ongoing governance challenges.

The annual ranking, now in its second edition, evaluates African nations using a proprietary methodology that extends far beyond traditional economic indicators like Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Instead, it measures trajectories across three key pillars—governance, influence, and innovation—offering a broader, forward-looking assessment of how countries are positioning themselves for long-term growth and competitiveness.

The Continental Leaderboard

  • South Africa retained its position at the top of the index, maintaining a comfortable lead over its peers. The report attributed its first-place ranking to exceptional performances in the influence and innovation dimensions, supported by its strong academic and scientific ecosystem, deep diplomatic reach, entrepreneurial activity, and global platform membership in the BRICS bloc and the G20.

  • Mauritius moved into second place on the back of sustained institutional stability, an attractive business environment, and successful economic diversification.

  • Namibia emerged as the index's biggest riser, jumping from 15th place all the way to third. The southern African nation was rewarded for significant improvements in governance, infrastructure development, financial market performance, and tax collection.

  • Morocco ranked fourth, consolidating gains from years of targeted investments in infrastructure, manufacturing, renewable energy, and sports development.

The Outlook for Nigeria

Similar to South Africa, Nigeria’s overall score was weighed down by domestic governance challenges, a falling GDP per capita over the reference period, and high debt levels. Despite these pressures, Nigeria locked in the number five spot because it remains an undisputed continental heavyweight. Its rank was heavily driven by the massive scale of its domestic market, its widespread cultural and diplomatic influence, and its high capacity for tech innovation.

The top ten is rounded out by Egypt in sixth, followed by Rwanda (7th), Ghana (8th), Côte d'Ivoire (9th), and Kenya (10th).

Ultimately, the 2026 data highlights a highly dynamic West African corridor. Fueled by the economic rivalry between Accra and Abidjan, alongside the sheer market scale of Nigeria, the sub-region is steadily cementing its status as one of the continent's most competitive and vital economic zones.

Business Day

Dangote refinery raises throughput above nameplate capacity to 700,000bpd ahead of IPO

Nigeria's Dangote Petroleum Refinery has increased crude processing capacity to 700,000 barrels per day (bpd), exceeding its official nameplate capacity of 650,000 bpd, according to company executives.

The refinery, Africa’s largest, said on Thursday (June 4) the achievement was confirmed during a performance test conducted by its process licensors, marking a milestone for the facility, which is also the world's largest single-train refinery.

Anthony Chiejina, head of corporate communications at Dangote Petroleum Refinery, said in a statement cied by state news agency NAN that the higher throughput demonstrated the strength of the refinery's engineering design and operational efficiency.

Speaking on the development, Devakumar Edwin, vice president for oil and gas at parent company Dangote Industries, confirmed plans to expand processing capacity to 1.4mn bpd within the next 30 months. This is part of a broader $40bn industrial expansion by the parent company spanning refining, fertiliser production and associated industries.

"The objective is to position the refinery among the largest refining complexes in the world," Edwin said is quoted as saying, adding that the expansion would enhance Nigeria's energy security, reduce dependence on imported fuels and strengthen the country’s role as an exporter of refined petroleum products. The plant this spring sharply increased exports across Africa after reaching full capacity, including cargoes to Tanzania, Ghana, Cameroon and Togo.

Owned by Nigerian businessman Aliko Dangote, the refinery commenced fuel production in 2024 and has steadily increased output of petrol, diesel, jet fuel and other petroleum products. The facility currently supplies the domestic market and exports refined products across Africa and to international destinations including the United Kingdom, France, Spain, Italy and the Netherlands.

Edwin said the Nigeria refinery has also supplied gasoline cargoes to the United States and jet fuel to Saudi Arabia, helping establish its presence in international fuel markets.

According to Dangote, the rising production has also attracted growing interest from international crude suppliers and commodity traders, with feedstock sourced from both domestic and foreign producers.

The refinery's petrochemicals operations are also expected to support downstream manufacturing through supplies of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), polypropylene and other industrial feedstocks. Future plans include production of linear alkylbenzene (LAB), a key raw material used in detergent manufacturing.

Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals FZE, owner of the refinery in Lagos, plans to list shares in the third quarter of 2026 at a valuation of between $40bn and $50bn, with the company proposing to sell a 5%-10% stake in the business. The company is considering a multi-exchange structure that would include the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) and other African bourses.

Meanwhile, founder Aliko Dangote has said he is considering Kenya as the preferred location for a proposed 650,000 bpd refinery in East Africa, shifting focus away from an earlier plan centred on Tanzania.

He said the potential East African refinery would process crude from Uganda and other international suppliers, reducing regional dependence on imported refined petroleum products, adding that crude could be delivered by sea rather than relying solely on the planned East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) linking Ugandan oilfields to Tanzania’s port of Tanga.

That planned 1,443-km export pipeline being developed by a consortium including TotalEnergies (EPA: TTE), China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) and the governments of Uganda and Tanzania. It is designed to transport crude from Uganda’s Lake Albert oilfields to Tanzania’s port of Tanga for export.