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FG pushes for N17.89tn new loans to finance 2026 budget

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The Federal Government plans to borrow N17.89tn in 2026 to fund a widening budget deficit as revenue projections fall sharply below expenditure needs, according to the 2026 budget framework obtained from the Budget Office of the Federation.

Official figures in the 2026 Abridged Budget Call Circular issued by the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning show that total new borrowing will jump from N10.42tn in 2025 to N17.89tn in 2026. This is an increase of N7.46tn (72 per cent) in fresh loans over one year, amid concerns over rising debt costs.

The borrowing requirement is driven by a larger fiscal deficit and a weaker revenue outlook, even though overall expenditure is projected to fall slightly compared with the current year. The framework puts the 2026 fiscal deficit at N20.12tn, up from N14.10tn approved for 2025.

This represents an increase of N6.02tn, or about 43 per cent year-on-year. Despite this jump in the nominal deficit, the deficit to gross domestic product ratio is projected to decline from 4.17 per cent in 2025 to 3.61 per cent in 2026, reflecting a higher projected GDP base. The deficit ratio is expected to ease further to 3.24 per cent in 2027 and 1.92 per cent in 2028.

Revenue figures explain why the government is resorting to much larger borrowing. The amount available for the federal budget, excluding the retained revenue of government-owned enterprises, is projected to fall from N38.02tn in 2025 to N29.35tn in 2026.

This is a drop of N8.67tn or about 23 per cent between the two years. The government expects revenue to recover modestly to N31.53tn in 2027 and N34.90tn in 2028.

That implies growth of about seven per cent between 2026 and 2027 and about 11 per cent between 2027 and 2028, but the recovery is not strong enough to remove the need for heavy borrowing in the medium term.

The PUNCH further observed that the bulk of the 2026 borrowing will come from domestic creditors. The document shows that of the planned N17.89tn new loans for 2026, N14.31tn will be raised from the domestic market, while N3.58tn will be sourced from external creditors. Domestic borrowing, therefore, accounts for 80 per cent of new loans in 2026, while foreign borrowing contributes 20 per cent.

This strong tilt towards the local market is not new. In 2025, domestic borrowing is put at N8.58tn out of total new loans of N10.42tn, which is about 82 per cent of the borrowing requirement. External borrowing of N1.84tn makes up the remaining 18 per cent.

The same pattern is projected to continue after 2026. In 2027, the Federal Government plans to borrow N21.18tn, comprising N16.94tn in domestic debt and N4.24tn in external loans.

Domestic borrowing thus remains at 80 per cent of the total, with foreign loans at 20 per cent. In 2028, planned borrowing drops to N15.84tn, but the structure remains almost unchanged, with N12.67tn expected from domestic creditors and N3.17tn from external lenders, again roughly 80 and 20 per cent respectively.

When the numbers for the three budget years are added together, the scale of reliance on debt becomes clearer. Between 2026 and 2028, the Federal Government plans to borrow N54.91tn in total. Domestic creditors are expected to provide N43.92tn of this amount, while external creditors will supply N10.98tn.

This means domestic borrowing will account for exactly 80 per cent of new loans over the three-year period, with external debts making up the remaining 20 per cent. Year-on-year analysis of borrowing after 2026 shows a continued heavy dependence on debt, even though the trend turns downward towards the end of the period.

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From 2026 to 2027, total new borrowing rises from N17.89tn to N21.18tn, an increase of about N3.29tn or roughly 18 per cent. Between 2027 and 2028, planned borrowing falls from N21.18tn to N15.84tn, a decline of about N5.34tn or roughly 25 per cent.

Debt service costs are also rising. According to the framework, debt service is projected at N13.94tn for 2025 and N15.52tn for 2026, an increase of N1.58tn, or about 11 per cent year-on-year.

The burden of these payments relative to revenue is captured in the debt service to revenue ratio. For 2025, the ratio is put at 34 per cent. In 2026, it is forecast to jump to 45 per cent, meaning nearly one naira out of every two naira of revenue available to the Federal Government will be used to pay interest and principal on existing debt.

The ratio is projected to rise further to 53 per cent in 2027 before easing to 47 per cent in 2028. Total federal expenditure is expected to edge down from N54.99tn in 2025 to N54.46tn in 2026, but the composition of spending continues to tilt towards recurrent items and debt service.

Recurrent non-debt expenditure is projected to rise from N13.59tn in 2025 to N15.27tn in 2026. Within this, personnel costs for ministries and departments will take N8.36tn, while pensions, gratuities, and retirees’ benefits will cost N1.38tn. Other service-wide votes, including key national programmes, will rise from N1.06tn in 2025 to N1.85tn in 2026.

Capital expenditure is set to fall from N26.19tn in 2025 to N22.37tn in 2026. The reduction is linked to a policy decision that ministries and agencies will roll over 70 per cent of their 2025 capital allocations into 2026 rather than seek fresh approvals for the same projects.

Capital spending is projected to recover slightly to N23.28tn in 2027 and then ease to N21.26tn in 2028. Even with this sizeable capital envelope, the combination of recurrent spending and debt service still dominates the budget and squeezes the room for new infrastructure.

Other financing items are relatively small when compared with the borrowing figures. Privatisation proceeds are projected at N312.33bn in 2025 and are expected to fall to N189.16bn in 2026. They are then forecast to rise modestly to N197.23bn in 2027 and jump to N486.54bn in 2028.

Even at that peak level, privatisation receipts would still amount to less than three per cent of total financing. Project-tied loans from multilateral and bilateral partners are also expected to decline from N3.36tn in 2025 to N2.05tn in 2026, then to N1.17tn in 2027, and N556.66bn in 2028.

Speaking earlier in separate interviews with The PUNCH, experts said the deficit, which represents more than one-third of the proposed N54.43tn spending envelope, raises fresh questions about debt sustainability, fiscal discipline, and the government’s ability to manage inflationary and exchange rate pressures in 2026.

The Chief Executive Officer of the Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, said Nigeria must be cautious not to destroy the fragile stability achieved in recent months.

He warned that high deficits and rising debt levels pose a serious threat. Yusuf said he was worried about what he described as the risk of a debt trap, stating that “we need to worry about debt sustainability” because “high levels of deficits and high levels of debt… can choke the fiscal space and lead to a kind of vicious circle of debt.”

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He explained that Nigeria has only recently regained some macroeconomic footing and that any disruption could quickly worsen inflation and exchange rate pressures.

According to him, “we already have a reasonable level of macroeconomic stability” and “once we lose that recovery… it will create even more problems because that is where the problem of inflationary pressure will come and that is where the pressure on the exchange rate will come.”

Yusuf said the government had claimed that revenue performance was improving and urged it to take advantage of the gains to cut the deficit rather than expand it. He argued that Nigeria must “leverage on the improved revenue situation to moderate the level of deficit and the level of debt exposure so that we don’t put at risk the macroeconomic stability that we have achieved.”

He added that the systemic effects of macro instability would be severe and urged the government to handle deficit planning with extreme caution.

Also, the National President of the Nigerian Economic Society, Professor Adeola Adenikinju, warned that borrowing heavily from domestic markets would crowd out the private sector and raise interest rates.

He said, “If you borrow from the public… interest rates will go up” because government borrowing increases demand for credit and banks may prefer to lend to the government rather than to businesses. He said this would slow investment and worsen economic hardship.

Adenikinju also questioned the quality of government spending. He said debt was not necessarily bad if it funded productive projects, but Nigeria’s capital releases often come too late to deliver meaningful development outcomes.

Experts at a national debt dialogue in Abuja on Tuesday warned that Nigeria is accumulating liabilities that future generations will inherit without seeing the development that borrowing is supposed to bring.

“At the end of the day, all of these debts, our children will have to inherit them,” the Programme Manager of the Sustainable Nigeria Programme at Heinrich Böll Stiftung, Mr Ikenna Ofoegbu, told participants.

The National Stakeholder Convening on Debt Sustainability and Climate Finance was hosted by the Centre for Inclusive Social Development with support from Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung.

Ofoegbu said decisions taken today were shaping the future of young Nigerians. “My children will have to contend with whatever that child becomes. And it would be in their interest that that child becomes responsible,” he said.

He said debt figures that appear in the news as abstract numbers have real implications. “As of this morning, when I checked, Nigeria’s debt profile is about N152.4bn. In the US dollar, that’s about $99.66bn,” he said.

He said the question citizens should ask was not only how much was being borrowed, but what was being achieved. “We started asking ourselves, what is the true cost of debt? When we borrow money, what exactly are we paying back?” he asked.

Ofoegbu linked the debt issue to climate disasters. “Those floods affected more than 33 states in Nigeria. Road infrastructures were gone. Farmlands were gone. Food was gone. And the cost of that particular flood was about $9.12bn,” he said. “Climate change has a way of destroying infrastructures. And at the end of the day, who pays? The future generation.”

He also warned about the high cost of borrowing in the economy. According to him, revenue is being swallowed by debt payments. “Our debt servicing is about 60 per cent to 70 per cent. It has come down from about 80 per cent to 90 per cent. So now we’re about 60 per cent to 70 per cent,” he said.

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He criticised the lack of transparency. “Unfortunately, we’re not dealing with the kind of leaders that we can trust whatever they say or their intentions. We cannot trust the system. We cannot trust our politicians,” he said. “I don’t know the last time we saw all these reports publicly.”

Ofoegbu added that capital spending was unclear. “Many of us may not know, but there’s no capital budget to begin with. I think the only person that seems to be working in my own eye view is Wike,” he said.

He urged citizens to take responsibility. “Nobody is coming to save Nigeria except us. This is where we belong. This is our home. And we’re going to fix Nigeria by repair or whatever means,” he said.

In his welcome address, the Executive Director of CISD, Mr Folahan Johnson, said the human impact of debt should not be ignored. “The true cost of debts is the out-of-school child, the out-of-school girl,” he said. “The true cost of debts is that a woman who has to do business loses her life because of lack of access to basic maternal health care.”

Johnson said those present represented the group that could influence change. “We are here today because we are the new elite. Everybody in this room is the hope that the vulnerable Nigerian has,” he said. He recalled seeing a boy begging and asked, “What does the future hold for this little boy? Does he even know the consequences of the decisions that are being made today?”

BudgIT’s Acting Country Director, Mr Joseph Amenaghawon, said borrowing was not translating into development. “The result is debt without development. The cycle where the burden grows but the benefits do not,” he said.

He argued that loans were being used for recurrent spending rather than transformative projects. “Borrowing should build infrastructures at rising rates, systems of high use, climate resilient communities, and a diversified and productive economy,” he said.

He warned that young people were being left behind. “A generation borrowed but not invested in,” he told participants. “For every loan that remains unaccounted for, a potential generation of youth is left behind.”

He cited the 1980s Lagos Metro Line as an example of how debt failed to deliver. “My question would then be to myself, did I eventually become part of those who paid that debt by actually being a resident of Lagos State? And my parents also paid taxes,” he said.

Amenaghawon said the issue was deeper than debt alone. “What we face today is not simply a debt problem but a structural development crisis. A crisis of priorities, a crisis of governance, a crisis of vision,” he said.

He said borrowing could be useful if properly managed. “Debt is not in itself a sin. Borrowing can and should be a tool for transformation,” he said. “Borrowing can become a boiling point for future generations while the coming benefits remain elusive.”

He urged strict monitoring of projects. “Each loan must be traceable, each project verifiable, each outcome measurable, and accessible to the community,” he said. He closed by calling for reform. “We can make debt a bridge to Nigeria’s future, not a burden. It is time for transparency, accountability, ambition, and justice,” he said.

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Inside details of arms, ammunition, cars recovered from suspected coup plotters

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PREMIUM TIMES has obtained exclusive details of arms, ammunition, vehicles and cash recovered from military officers and civilians suspected of plotting to overthrow President Bola Tinubu’s government last year.

An inter-agency probe panel, constituted by the government and led by the Chief of Defence Intelligence, Emmanuel Undiandeye, a lieutenant general, has concluded its investigation into the failed coup attempt. Its findings revealed an elaborate scheme and persons involved in reconnaissance, funding, and propaganda operations.

Our sources confirmed that investigators recovered two gun trucks, anti-aircraft (AA) guns, PKT guns, RPG bombs, AK-47 rifles, ammunition and tactical gear from a lieutenant colonel attached to the army’s 130 Battalion.

In addition to the weapons and ammunition traced to the suspects, investigators seized four Toyota Hilux trucks, one Toyota Prado SUV, two Toyota saloon cars, and 32 Volkswagen Golf vehicles allegedly procured for covert operations.

Investigators found that the vehicles were acquired for movements to gather intelligence and enable discreet access to sensitive locations, including airports and other strategic facilities.

“The cars were used to move operatives around without attracting attention and to conduct reconnaissance activities linked to the plot,” one source said.

The investigation also identified retired Major General Adamu as one of the key figures connected to the network. He remains at large, alongside three other suspects.

Intelligence sources disclosed that one of the fleeing suspects was tracked to a country in Southern America, although his exact location remained undisclosed for security reasons.

Multiple security agencies are now working together to dismantle the remaining cells linked to the plot, with ongoing surveillance and cross-border intelligence coordination.

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Our sources said authorities are awaiting presidential approval to formally announce a court-martial to try the soldiers involved.

PREMIUM TIMES had reported that 16 military officers were initially arrested for direct participation, but the constitution of a special investigative panel, led by General Undiandeye, later led to additional arrests.

“At least 25 military officers and personnel are expected to face trial in connection with the coup attempt,” one source familiar with the investigation said.

An unspecified number of civilians are currently in custody, being held and investigated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the State Security Service (SSS) for alleged roles in financing, logistics, and coordination.

Sylva, retired general, accused of bankrolling coup plot’

A former governor, Timipre Sylva, who served as Minister of State for Petroleum Resources under former President Muhammadu Buhari, has been accused of bankrolling the coup plotters and remains at large.

PREMIUM TIMES gathered that Mr Sylva allegedly transferred almost N1 billion in multiple tranches to three separate bank accounts operated by a Bureau De Change operator to fund the conspiracy.

The coup was initially scheduled for 29 May 2023, during the presidential inauguration, when power was handed over from Mr Buhari to Mr Tinubu. However, the plan was suspended due to insufficient funds and inadequate logistical arrangements, sources said.

The conspirators reactivated their plans in 2024 after raising some funds, investigators found.

In an earlier report, sources with direct knowledge of the investigation told PREMIUM TIMES that the plotters marked several top government officials for assassination, including President Tinubu, Vice President Kashim Shettima, Senate President Godswill Akpabio, and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas.

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Further investigation has now revealed that the conspirators also targeted the service chiefs and the Commander of the Guards Brigade for assassination.

“There are other people targeted, but those are the key targets,” one source said.

Some officers were assigned to seize control of the Presidential Villa, Niger Barracks, the Armed Forces of Nigeria (AFN) Complex, and Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja.

The plotters also planned to detain senior military officers, including the service chiefs. “They did not want to kill them,” one source added.

According to multiple sources, the conspirators intended to assassinate the political leaders simultaneously.

“They were waiting for a day when all of them would be in the country,” one official said. “Wherever they were, they would be assassinated.”

The sources said the plotters relied on informants within the Presidential Villa and around the officials slated for elimination.

“They have people inside the Villa who monitor the movements of these officials,” one source said. “The plan was to kill them at the same time and install a military government.”

Coup investigation report transmitted

On Monday, the Defence Headquarters announced that the investigation had been completed and forwarded to “appropriate superior authority in line with extant regulations.”

The military disclosed that the findings identified “several officers with allegations of plotting to overthrow the government,” describing such conduct as “inconsistent with the ethics, values and professional standards required of members of the Armed Forces of Nigeria.”

The suspects were captured in a covert intelligence operation coordinated by the Army Headquarters and the SSS.

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Credits: PREMIUM TIMES

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US Justice dept releases documents, images, videos from Epstein files

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The US Justice Department began releasing millions of new pages on Friday from the Jeffrey Epstein files along with photos and videos, adding fuel to the politically explosive case that has dogged President Donald Trump.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the White House played no role in the review of the extensive files related to the convicted sex offender, a former friend of Trump.

“They did not tell this department how to do our review, what to look for, what to redact, what to not redact,” Blanche said at a press conference.

The Justice Department said some of the documents being released contained “untrue and sensationalist claims” about the 79-year-old Trump submitted to the FBI before the 2020 presidential election.

But Blanche — who previously served as Trump’s personal lawyer — dismissed suggestions that embarrassing material about the president had been redacted from the more than three million documents, 180,000 images and 2,000 videos being released on Friday.

“We did not protect President Trump,” he said. “We didn’t protect or not protect anybody.”

Blanche said all images of girls and women were being redacted aside from those of Ghislaine Maxwell, who was convicted of trafficking underage girls for Epstein and is serving a 20-year prison sentence.

However, a statement by survivors of Epstein’s alleged abuse claimed identifying information about them still remained in the files, “while the men who abused us remain hidden and protected.”

The letter signed by 19 individuals, some using aliases or initials, demanded “the full release of the Epstein files” and that Attorney General Pam Bondi directly address the matter when she testifies before Congress next month.

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A wealthy US financier, Epstein died in a New York prison cell in 2019 while awaiting trial for sex trafficking of underage girls. His death was ruled a suicide.

Previous document releases have shed light on Epstein’s ties to top business executives such as Microsoft’s Bill Gates, celebrities such as filmmaker Woody Allen, academics and politicians, including Trump and former president Bill Clinton.

In a draft email among the documents published on Friday, Epstein said Gates had engaged in extramarital affairs, a claim the Gates Foundation denied in a statement to The New York Times.

“These claims — from a proven, disgruntled liar — are absolutely absurd and completely false,” it said.

In other emails, Epstein connected Steve Tisch, 76, producer of the movies “Forrest Gump” and “Risky Business” and the co-owner of the New York Giants football team, with multiple women.

In one exchange with Tisch, Epstein describes a woman as “russian, and rarely tells the full truth, but fun.”

– Conspiracy theories –

Trump’s right-wing base has long been obsessed by the Epstein saga and conspiracy theories that the financier oversaw a sex trafficking ring for the world’s elite.

Only one person — Epstein’s former girlfriend Maxwell — has ever been charged in connection with his crimes, and Blanche appeared to play down expectations that the latest files would lead to further prosecutions.

Trump and Clinton both figure prominently in the records published so far but neither has been accused of wrongdoing.

A Republican-led House panel voted recently to launch contempt of Congress proceedings against Bill and Hillary Clinton over their refusal to testify before its probe into Epstein.

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Trump, who used to move in the same social circles as Epstein in Florida and New York, fought for months to prevent release of the vast trove of documents about the disgraced financier.

But a rebellion inside his Republican Party forced him to sign off on a law mandating release of all the documents.

Trump has given varying accounts of why he eventually fell out with Epstein. He has criticized the file dumps, expressing concern that people who “innocently met” Epstein over the years risked having their reputations smeared.

The Epstein Files Transparency Act called for all of the documents held by the Justice Department to be published by December 19.

Blanche said Friday’s release “marks the end of a very comprehensive document identification and review process to ensure transparency to the American people.”

He blamed the delay on the need to painstakingly carry out redactions that protected the identities of Epstein’s more than 1,000 alleged victims.

AFP

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Venezuelan interim president announces proposal for mass amnesty

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Venezuela’s acting president announced on Friday a proposal for mass amnesty in the country, in her latest major reform since the US toppling of Nicolas Maduro just weeks ago.

Delcy Rodriguez, in a speech at the Venezuelan Supreme Court attended by top government officials, said she will propose a “general amnesty law covering the entire period of political violence from 1999 to the present.”

Leftist revolutionary Hugo Chavez assumed the presidency in 1999, and was succeeded upon his death in 2013 by Maduro, who oversaw an increasingly authoritarian government and whose two re-elections were widely dismissed as fraudulent.

“This law will serve to heal the wounds left by political confrontation, fueled by violence and extremism. It will allow us to put justice back on track in our country,” Rodriguez said, also announcing a “major national consultation for a new judicial system.”

She also announced plans to close the notorious El Helicoide prison in Caracas, where rights groups say political prisoners were tortured by Maduro’s intelligence services.

The massive facility, originally built as a shopping mall, will be turned into a “sports, cultural and commercial center for police families and neighboring communities,” Rodriguez said.

A mother interviewed by AFP near El Helicoide was overjoyed that her son, imprisoned inside, may soon be released under the law.

“It’s wonderful! I haven’t heard from my son in six months, so, damn it, this is a huge joy, it’s an amnesty, my God, it’s total liberation,” said Betsy Orellana, 63.

– Wary opposition –

Formerly Maduro’s vice president, Rodriguez, 56, has quickly moved in less than four weeks in power to overhaul Venezuelan society in ways sought by the United States, earning high praise from US President Donald Trump.

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Along with her brother, National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez, she has passed a new law opening up the country’s critical oil sector to private investments — a key demand of Trump.

The move on Thursday was almost immediately followed by a rollback on US sanctions targeting Venezuela’s oil industry.

The government also agreed on January 8, five days after Maduro was seized in a deadly US military operation, to free inmates considered political prisoners by rights groups.

Families — many of whom began camping outside the prisons — and rights groups have criticized the slow pace of the releases, with the Foro Penal NGO counting less than 300 in total released since January 8.

Opposition figures in Venezuela have voiced reserved optimism at the changes taking place, wary that Maduro’s closest allies still remain in power.

Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Corina Machado said Friday that Rodriguez’s amnesty proposal came only after she was pushed by Washington.

“This is not a voluntary gesture by the regime, but a response to pressure from the United States government. And I hope that the prisoners will soon be able to be with their families,” she posted on social media.

Opposition lawmaker Tomas Guanipa, whose two brothers are imprisoned, said he hope the amnesty would end “an era of repression.”

“May this be the beginning of a path that leads us to freedom and democracy, definitively and forever,” he told AFP in an interview at his home in Caracas.

– Americans freed –

US authorities on Friday announced that all Americans known to be held prisoner in Venezuela had been released.

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The announcement came hours after the release of Peruvian-American political prisoner Arturo Gallino Rullier, whom the Foro Penal group said was on his way to the United States.

For years, Venezuela has routinely arrested foreigners and domestic opposition actors on a range of charges from spying to plotting attacks — charges critics dismiss as fabricated.

In a sign of Trump’s satisfaction with the new Venezuelan authorities, his administration lifted a ban on US flights to the South American country.

And after years of the US embassy being shuttered, Washington is also preparing to re-establish its diplomatic presence in Caracas.

Seasoned diplomat Laura Dogu was recently named US charge d’affaires for Venezuela — the highest level representative below an ambassador.

Dogu is expected to arrive in Caracas on Saturday, diplomatic sources told AFP.

AFP

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