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Inflation: Telecom tariff hike imminent as operators await NCC’s clearance
Inflation: Telecom tariff hike imminent as operators await NCC’s clearance
Telecommunications operators in Nigeria are preparing to increase tariffs for voice and data services to reflect the current economic conditions in the country.
Nairametrics learnt that a cost-based study conducted by KPMG, the consultant hired by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), is nearing completion.
This study aims to recommend the most appropriate pricing structure for the industry based on its findings considering the economic variables of the operating environment.
Officials from various telecom companies, speaking to Nairametrics, indicated their anticipation for the NCC’s decision based on the study’s outcomes. They expect the study to recommend an increase, citing several industry indicators that point towards the need for higher tariffs.
According to these officials, adjusting prices upwards is essential for sustaining the telecom business amidst current economic challenges, such as the high cost of diesel and the significant depreciation of the naira against the dollar, which affects equipment imports.
A matter of urgency
An official from the telecom sector, who preferred to remain anonymous, expressed to Nairametrics that the planned price increase has become critically urgent. Delaying it further, he warned, could threaten the viability of some telecom businesses.
The official highlighted that with the majority of their costs in dollars and earnings in Naira, sustainability is impossible without a tariff revision, especially as equipment importation becomes increasingly costly.
- “We are earning in Naira and about 80% of our costs are in dollars. There’s no way we can have a sustainable business without increasing our prices with the value of the Nigerian currency falling every day.
- “Already, it’s becoming very difficult to import equipment as costs continue to increase. So, increasing tariffs is no longer a matter of choice. It is a matter of urgency because a further delay will be at the detriment of the industry,” he said.
Another industry source, who also spoke in confidence with Nairametrics said:
- “You know we are a heavily regulated industry. While the increment has been due since 2022 when the cost of diesel that powers our base stations jumped to N800 per litre, we had demanded for an increment, but the regulator said no.
- “But they have also realised that the survival of the industry is at stake and that was why the cost-based study was commissioned. What we are waiting for now is the report of the study, which will give us the idea of a new floor price.”
ALTON’s call for price increment
The Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) has been advocating for a tariff hike, citing rising operational costs.
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In a recent meeting with Dr. Bosun Tijani, the Minister of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Economy, ALTON Chairman Engr. Gbenga Adebayo argued that the tariffs set by the regulator are insufficient in light of escalating operational expenses.
He pointed out that, unlike the telecom sector, other heavily regulated industries like power and insurance have seen price increases to reflect macroeconomic changes and the increased cost burden on operators.
While noting that the current price of services as pegged by the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) is unsustainable, the ALTON Chairman said:
- “Insurance prices have risen 200% with power raising prices by over 40%. Telecommunications is the only sector that has not experienced a pricing regulatory framework review raising prices notwithstanding local and global macroeconomic realities.
- “Not only has this impaired investor confidence and depleted available investible funds necessary to optimize infrastructure for improved service delivery, but it also threatens the very sustainability of our members’ operations.”
Price regulation in the telecom sector
In line with the provisions of Sections 4, 90, and 92 of the Nigerian Communications Act (NCA) 2003, which entrusts the Commission with the protection and promotion of the interests of subscribers against unfair practices including but not limited to; matters relating to tariffs and charges, regulates tariff in the telecom industry.
The Commission said it makes sure that the price regulation is guided by regular cost-based and empirical studies to determine the appropriate cost (upper and floor price) within which service providers are allowed to charge their subscribers for services delivered.”
- “The Commission ensures that any cost determined, as an outcome of such transparent studies is fair enough to enhance healthy competition among operators, provide wider choices for the subscribers as well as ensure the sustainability of the Nigerian telecoms industry,” it added.
Rising inflation
Double-digit inflation has hit virtually every product in Nigeria with consumers feeling the pinch from higher prices while a weaker naira currency has added to the costs. In January this year, Nigeria’s headline inflation rate surged to 29.90%, surpassing the previous month’s rate of 28.92%.
On a month-on-month basis, the inflation rate for January 2024 stood at 2.64%, slightly higher than December 2023’s rate of 2.29%1. These figures highlight the ongoing inflationary pressures in Nigeria.
Inflation: Telecom tariff hike imminent as operators await NCC’s clearance
Nairametrics
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US Publishes Photos of 110 Nigerians Facing Deportation
US Publishes Photos of 110 Nigerians Facing Deportation
The United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has publicly released the names and photographs of 355 West African nationals facing deportation, including 110 Nigerians, as part of an intensified immigration enforcement campaign under the Trump administration. The list, published on the DHS website under a section labeled the “Worst of the Worst” criminal register, identifies individuals from 16 West African countries who have been convicted of serious crimes or violated U.S. immigration laws. The DHS stated that all listed individuals are subject to ongoing immigration enforcement proceedings, though specific crimes and deportation timelines have not been disclosed for each person.
Among West African nations, Nigeria leads the list with 110 nationals, followed by Liberia with 94, Ghana with 30, Senegal with 19, Ivory Coast with 14, Gambia with 14, Cameroon with 15, Mauritania with 12, Cape Verde with 11, Burkina Faso with 9, Niger with 8, Guinea with 6, Togo with 6, Mali with 5, Benin with 1, and Guinea-Bissau with 1. The number of Nigerians on the list has fluctuated in recent months, rising from 79 in February to 130 in March before being revised down to the current figure of 110.
According to DHS officials, individuals on the “Worst of the Worst” register have been flagged for visa overstays and unlawful entry into the U.S., criminal convictions including fraud, identity theft, smuggling, drug trafficking, and violent crimes, as well as failure to meet residency or asylum requirements. The DHS noted that the list includes individuals convicted of offenses ranging from wire fraud to aggravated assault. The department said in a statement: “Under DHS leadership, the hardworking men and women of DHS and ICE are fulfilling President Trump’s promise and carrying out mass deportations, starting with the worst of the worst.”
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The deportation process has involved logistical coordination with several African nations. While Nigeria has resisted U.S. requests to accept third-party nationals (non-Nigerians whom the U.S. wants to deport via Nigeria), other countries have stepped in. Ghana has served as a logistical hub for West African removals, using ECOWAS free movement protocols. Sierra Leone agreed to a third-country agreement and received nine deportees on May 20, 2026, including nationals from Nigeria, Ghana, Guinea, and Senegal. The Sierra Leonean government, supported by a $1.5 million U.S. grant, will house deportees for up to 90 days before they return to their home countries. Reports indicated some deportees were “traumatised due to months in chains during detention in the US.”
Unlike Sierra Leone and Ghana, Nigeria’s government has publicly resisted American pressure to accept third-party nationals, citing domestic economic and security challenges. However, Nigerian nationals convicted of crimes in the U.S. remain subject to direct deportation to Nigeria. The diplomatic friction is unlikely to ease already strained U.S.-Nigeria relations.
The DHS launched the “Worst of the Worst” website on December 8, 2025, to publicize the identities of criminal illegal aliens arrested by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) across all 50 states. As of June 2026, over 35,000 individuals have been named on the list, with more being added regularly. Recent additions from West Africa included individuals convicted of wire fraud, mail fraud, and identity theft.
The DHS has not provided a specific timeline for the deportations of the 355 West African nationals. However, officials have confirmed that removal proceedings will be carried out in accordance with U.S. immigration law, with ICE coordinating with home countries where diplomatic agreements exist.
US Publishes Photos of 110 Nigerians Facing Deportation
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Poor Nigerians Are Primary Beneficiaries of Tinubu’s Reforms — Presidential Aide
Poor Nigerians Are Primary Beneficiaries of Tinubu’s Reforms — Presidential Aide
Special Adviser to President Bola Tinubu on Media and Public Communication, Daniel Bwala, has said that the poor are the primary beneficiaries of the policies introduced by the Tinubu administration. Bwala made the assertion on Tuesday during an interview on Arise Television’s ‘Prime Time’ programme, where he highlighted several government initiatives aimed at improving the lives of ordinary Nigerians.
According to him, the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) has provided opportunities for more than one million students from low-income families to pursue higher education. “We talk about over one million beneficiaries of NELFUND. These are not children of the rich. These are children of the poor who, without the intervention, may not be able to achieve their dreams. That is a direct impact on the poor person,” he said.
The presidential aide also pointed to the administration’s Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) initiative, describing it as a programme that has brought relief to many Nigerians through reduced transportation costs. “When we talk about transportation and what the CNG initiative has done, you need to go to the streets and see for yourself. We went to the streets and talked to people, and all they are asking is that there should be more investments in that field,” he added.
On healthcare, Bwala cited government interventions such as free caesarean section services and a 50 per cent subsidy on dialysis treatment, arguing that such measures are targeted at vulnerable Nigerians. “When we talk about healthcare and the caesarean section programme, I was here the other time and talked about the 50 per cent subsidy on dialysis. These are poor people because rich people do not need that. As a matter of fact, most of the rich are abroad,” he said. Bwala maintained that every major policy introduced by the current administration has been designed to directly benefit low-income Nigerians.
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Beyond the figures cited by Bwala, official data from the Federal Government shows that the Nigerian Education Loan Fund has recorded over 1.7 million applications as of March 2026, with more than 1.1 million students confirmed as beneficiaries. Total disbursements have reached ₦206.29 billion, comprising approximately ₦128.84 billion paid directly to institutions for tuition and ₦77.45 billion paid to students as upkeep allowances. The Minister of Education, Dr Tunji Alausa, has described NELFUND as a transformative intervention in the education sector, noting that the scheme has cost the Federal Government over ₦1.1 billion, while over 160,000 youths have also been trained in digital skills. The Acting Vice Chancellor of the Federal University of Technology, Ilaro, Dr Mikhail Akinde, confirmed that his institution had received about ₦32 million to support approximately 233 students through the programme.
The Presidential Initiative on Compressed Natural Gas and Electric Vehicles (Pi-CNG & EV) has been rolled out across more than 28 states, with the Federal Government launching the Northern Corridor of the programme in Kano State on May 14, 2026. Vice President Kashim Shettima, represented at the launch by Senator Ibrahim Hassan Hadejia, stated that the transition to CNG and electric mobility is not only an energy policy but also an economic strategy aimed at reducing costs and supporting long-term development. “Transportation costs affect everything — food prices, manufacturing, logistics and the lives of ordinary Nigerians. The President understood that Nigeria could not continue depending entirely on expensive traditional fuel systems while sitting on over 200 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves,” Shettima said. The Executive Chairman of the initiative, Ismaeel Ahmed, disclosed that over $2 billion in investment commitments had been attracted under the programme, with more than 58 refuelling stations supported, thousands of CNG buses and tricycles deployed, and over 7,000 Nigerians trained. Over 300 conversion partners have been onboarded nationwide, including 41 centres in Kano State alone.
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President Tinubu had earlier approved a reduction in the cost of kidney dialysis from ₦50,000 to ₦12,000 per session in federal hospitals across the country. The subsidy is already being implemented in major federal hospitals across the six geopolitical zones, including the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan; Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Lagos; University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), Benin; and the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital (UMTH), Maiduguri, among others. According to a report by Radio Nigeria, the subsidised dialysis programme and the Comprehensive Emergency Obstetrics and Newborn Care (CEmONC) , which provides free emergency caesarean sections, have been yielding fruitful results. At the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University Teaching Hospital (ATBUTH) in Bauchi, the Obstetrics and Gynaecology Department conducted 755 Caesarean sections paid for by the federal government between January and June 2025. One beneficiary of the free caesarean section service, Asma’u Ibrahim, described the federal government’s initiative as a “lifesaver,” noting that affording a theatre fee of over ₦100,000 had been a major challenge given the country’s economic situation. Kidney failure patients interviewed at the ATBUTH Renal Centre also expressed gratitude for the subsidy, with one patient, Musa Abdullahi Jingir, stating that he now prefers to spend ₦17,000 on transport to access the subsidised service in Bauchi rather than pay ₦50,000 per session in Jos.
Beyond the initiatives highlighted by Bwala, the Federal Government has also expanded its social protection programmes under the Household Prosperity and Empowerment Cash Transfer Programme (HOPE-CT) . The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Dr Bernard Doro, disclosed in a press conference that over 9.2 million households across the nation’s six geopolitical zones have benefited from the initiative, with approximately ₦688 billion disbursed between November 2023 and February 2026. Beneficiaries receive ₦75,000 distributed over three tranches, with the government now targeting an expansion to 15 million vulnerable Nigerians. Notably, 5.3 million women, representing 58.7 per cent of beneficiaries, have so far benefited from the initiative, a move described as a deliberate policy to empower women and improve household well-being.
While defending the administration’s policies, Bwala acknowledged that many Nigerians are yet to feel the full impact of the economic reforms due to the country’s large population and limited resources. He described the process as “slow, steady, and consistent” and urged citizens to manage their expectations. “The answer is simply population and resources. The population is over 230 million. The resources we have, however, the increased revenue is not enough. Growth will have to be slow. But it will be slow, steady, and consistent. That is what we take pride in,” Bwala said. He added that the effect of increased government revenue is already being experienced through increased allocations to states, which has resulted in state-level implementations impacting local communities. “There are states you can point at tangible results dealing with hunger by the provision of food and agricultural materials,” he noted.
The administration’s supporters argue that the reforms were necessary to address long-standing economic problems and place the country on a stronger financial footing. Official data shows that Nigeria’s net foreign-exchange reserves have risen significantly, while the stock market has recorded a nearly fivefold rise. Capital inflows rose by almost 90 per cent in 2025, with foreign portfolio investment carrying much of the increase. As debates over the state of the economy continue, the Presidency maintains that its policies are beginning to produce positive results and that ordinary Nigerians are already benefiting from key intervention programmes. The administration is expected to continue highlighting programmes such as NELFUND, healthcare subsidies, CNG transportation initiatives, cash transfers, and affordable housing as evidence of its commitment to improving the lives of Nigerians, particularly those in lower-income communities.
Poor Nigerians Are Primary Beneficiaries of Tinubu’s Reforms — Presidential Aide
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Group Urges Osogbo Residents to Ignore ‘Uncertain’ Governorship Promises
Group Urges Osogbo Residents to Ignore ‘Uncertain’ Governorship Promises
OSOGBO – A socio-political group, the Osogbo Progressive Youth Movement, has cautioned indigenes of Osogbo against supporting political ambitions based on what it described as uncertain future promises, urging residents to prioritize performance, accountability, and strategic political interests in making electoral decisions.
In an open letter addressed to Osogbo indigenes at home and in the diaspora, the group’s leader, Comrade Jimoh Oyekola Ajayi, warned against what he termed “political deception” and attempts to persuade the people of Osogbo to support Governor Ademola Adeleke’s second-term ambition on the premise that Osogbo would subsequently have the opportunity to produce the next governor of Osun State.
Ajayi described such arguments as speculative and lacking any concrete guarantee, stressing that political realities could change significantly before the end of another four-year tenure.
According to him, those promoting the narrative have failed to answer a critical question regarding who can guarantee that political power would eventually rotate to Osogbo after the current administration.
He argued that politics is driven by changing circumstances and competing interests, noting that other zones and senatorial districts within the state are likely to pursue their own governorship ambitions when the time comes.
“Politics does not operate on assumptions. No one can predict with certainty what political realities will exist after another four years,” he stated, adding that asking Osogbo people to make political sacrifices today based on future arrangements that are not guaranteed would amount to a risky gamble.
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The youth leader further noted that governorship rotation is not backed by any constitutional provision, explaining that while political balancing may influence power-sharing discussions, there is no law compelling any political zone to relinquish its ambitions in favour of another.
He therefore urged residents of the state capital to assess political parties and leaders based on their performance, track records, and ability to fulfill promises rather than relying on projected future benefits.
Ajayi pointed to previous political promises relating to representation at the National Assembly level, including senatorial and House of Representatives positions, which he said were fulfilled and therefore offered a more reliable basis for political confidence than speculative future calculations.
The open letter also highlighted what he described as the importance of political relevance and strategic alliances in securing development opportunities for Osogbo.
According to him, the influence of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, former Osun State governor Bisi Akande, and former governor Gboyega Oyetola remains significant within Nigeria’s political structure.
He maintained that political influence often translates into access to federal opportunities, developmental projects, appointments, and other benefits capable of advancing the interests of a community.
Ajayi also argued that political strategy should not be condemned when employed to protect the interests of Osogbo people, noting that Governor Adeleke himself maintains cordial relations with President Tinubu despite belonging to a different political platform.
“Politics is not driven by sentiments alone; it is driven by interests and long-term planning,” he stated.
The youth activist accused some political actors of asking Osogbo residents to exchange certainty for uncertainty by promoting future governorship aspirations without any binding assurances.
He consequently called on sons and daughters of Osogbo worldwide to remain politically conscious, ask critical questions, demand accountability from political leaders, and resist attempts to influence their decisions through promises that cannot be guaranteed.
“Our loyalty should first and foremost be to the growth, development, and political advancement of Osogbo,” Ajayi said.
He emphasized that the future of Osogbo should be built on strategic thinking, unity of purpose, political awareness, and leadership capable of delivering on commitments.
The open letter concluded with a call for wisdom and foresight in protecting the political future of Osogbo, while praying for continued peace and progress in Osun State and Nigeria.
Group Urges Osogbo Residents to Ignore ‘Uncertain’ Governorship Promises
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