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Retirement bombshell: Five DCGs to lead 1,516 officers out of Customs

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The Nigeria Customs Service will lose 1,516 officers nationwide over the next two years following the release of statutory retirement lists covering 825 officers in 2026 and 691 officers in 2027.

The retirement notices were contained in two restricted circulars issued by the Service’s Human Resource and Development Department and signed by the Comptroller, Establishment, A.A. Bazuaye, on behalf of the Deputy Comptroller-General, Human Resources and Development.

According to the documents, officers across all cadres, from the rank of Deputy Comptroller-General to Customs Assistant II, will exit the service in line with statutory retirement provisions.

The first document, Circular No. HRD/2025/048 dated September 19, 2025, contains what was described as the final list of 825 officers scheduled to retire in 2026.

The breakdown shows that the Deputy Superintendent of Customs cadre accounts for 285 officers, followed by the Superintendent of Customs with 226 officers. Other affected cadres include Assistant Superintendent of Customs I with 64 officers, Chief Customs Officer with 53, Deputy Customs Officer with 51, Assistant Customs Officer with 46, Chief Superintendent of Customs with 61, Inspector of Customs with eight, Assistant Superintendent of Customs II with 10, Customs Assistant I with one, Customs Assistant II with two, Assistant Comptroller-General with 13 and Deputy Comptroller-General with five officers.

A second Circular No. HRD/2026/020 dated May 26, 2026, forwarded a draft list of 691 officers due for statutory retirement in 2027.

The list indicates that the Superintendent of Customs cadre will account for the highest number of retirements with 200 officers, followed by the Deputy Superintendent of Customs cadre with 193 officers. Others include Deputy Customs Officer with 81 officers, Chief Superintendent of Customs with 68, Assistant Customs Officer with 57, Assistant Superintendent of Customs I with 39, Chief Customs Officer with 38, Assistant Superintendent of Customs II with four, Customs Assistant I with four, Customs Assistant II with four, Inspector of Customs with two and Assistant Comptroller-General with four officers.

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In both circulars, the Service directed affected officers to proceed on mandatory pre-retirement leave in accordance with Public Service Rule 100238 and Federal Government Circular No. 63216/S.I/X/T; CR 1/2001/5 of March 20, 2001.

The officers were further directed to ensure compliance and forward their three-month pre-retirement notice to the Comptroller-General of Customs accordingly.

The circulars stated that, “I am directed to forward the attached list on the above subject matter as retirement notice to all affected personnel. In accordance with the Public Service Rule (PSR) No. 100238 and Federal Government circular No.63216/S.I/X/T; CR 1,/2001/5 of 20/03/2001, all affected officers due for retirement are to disengage from the active service and proceed on pre-retirement leave, three months prior to their effective date of retirement.”

The 2027 circular also opened a window for complaints and corrections, stating that “any observed error, omission or legitimate complaints arising from the attached list should be forwarded to the office of the Deputy Comptroller-General (HRD) on or before 31 July 2026.”

To ensure dissemination, Zonal Coordinators, Area Controllers and Unit Heads were directed to circulate the lists to all affected officers.

Some of the affected officers include:Deputy Comptrollers-General Omale (SVC No. 41148), who retired on June 7, 2026; Nnadi (SVC No. 43193), whose retirement took effect on March 3, 2026; Chiroma (SVC No. 42988), who retired on September 23, 2026; and Adeola MRS (SVC No. 42972) and Niagwan (SVC No. 41524), both scheduled to retire on December 23, 2026.

Among Assistant Comptrollers-General affected by the 2026 retirement exercise are Egwuh (SVC No. 38991), who retired on March 14, 2026; Umoh (SVC No. 41351), who exited the Service on February 2, 2026; Mohammed (SVC Nos. 41394 and 41395), both of whom retired on June 24, 2026; and Abe (SVC No. 41110), whose retirement date is August 21, 2026.

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Others are Olomu (SVC No. 41145), Olaniyan (SVC No. 41197), Yusuf (SVC No. 41257), Oladeji (SVC No. 41308) and Gaji (SVC No. 41328), all scheduled to retire on September 24, 2026. Also on the list are Adebakin (SVC No. 41670) and Bomodi (SVC No. 42758), both due for retirement on September 23, 2026, as well as Nyam (SVC No. 40428) and Abubakar (SVC No. 40139), whose retirement dates are October 1, 2026, among others.

Meanwhile, the Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Customs and Excise, Abejide Leke Joseph, said the retirements were statutory and not connected to reports surrounding the appointment of a new Comptroller-General of Customs.

In a statement on Sunday, Abejide dismissed allegations that the purported appointment of Deputy Comptroller I.D. Olorunfemi as the next Comptroller-General would trigger the forced retirement of senior officers.

“The Civil Service Rules are very clear. Retirement after 35 years in service or at the age of 60 is not by compulsion; it is by law. Therefore, suggestions that any officer would be retired to create room for another appointment are false and misleading,” he said.

The lawmaker attributed the large number of retirements to a prolonged recruitment gap in the Service.

“There is a 16-year gap of non-recruitment and stagnant promotion. As a result, officers of 41000, 42000, and 43000 service numbers categories have risen through the ranks almost simultaneously and now occupy similar levels of seniority,” Abejide said.

He explained that the situation had created a top-heavy structure within the Service, with many officers reaching retirement age or service limits at about the same period.

Abejide disclosed that more than 1,500 officers were expected to retire under the provisions of Public Service Rule 100238, stressing that the exercise was a natural and legally mandated process rather than a consequence of any leadership succession arrangement.

Efforts to obtain a response from the Nigeria Customs Service spokesperson, Abdullahi Maiwada, on plans to replace the retiring officers were unsuccessful as of the time of filing this report.

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President Bola Tinubu had on Friday approved a final six-month tenure extension for the Comptroller-General of the Nigeria Customs Service, Adewale Adeniyi, allowing him to remain in office until February 2027.

The extension was announced in a statement issued on Friday by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga.

According to the statement, Adeniyi’s first tenure extension was due to expire on August 1, 2026, but Tinubu approved an additional six months to enable him to complete key reforms within the Customs Service.

Onanuga said the extension was granted “to enable him to consolidate the implementation of the National Single Window and ensure an orderly succession in the service.”

The presidential spokesman added that during the transition period, Adeniyi would work with the Nigeria Customs Service Board to oversee critical personnel matters.

“During the transition period, Adeniyi, working with the Nigeria Customs Service Board, will ensure the promotion of eligible officers to the rank of Comptroller of Customs and the compulsory retirement of officers who have attained 60 years of age or have served 35 years,” the statement said.

Adeniyi joined the Nigeria Customs Service after graduating from Obafemi Awolowo University in the late 1980s and rose steadily through the ranks of the service.

He became a Deputy Comptroller in 2012, was promoted to Comptroller in 2017, Assistant Comptroller-General in 2020, and Acting Deputy Comptroller-General in January 2023. President Tinubu subsequently appointed him Comptroller-General of Customs in June 2023.

The six-month extension is expected to provide continuity for ongoing reforms within the Customs Service while paving the way for a smooth leadership transition.

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FG targets eradication of sheep, goat disease by 2030

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The Federal Government has reaffirmed its commitment to eradicating Peste des Petits Ruminants, a highly contagious viral disease affecting sheep and goats, by 2030, saying intensified surveillance, vaccination and cross-border collaboration remain central to achieving the target.

The assurance was given by the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Livestock Development, Chinyere Akujobi, at the opening of a two-day Stakeholders’ Workshop on the Review and Update of Nigeria’s National Strategic Plan for the Control and Eradication of Peste des Petits Ruminants in Abuja.

The Deputy Director of Information and Public Relations at the ministry, Henrietta Okokon, disclosed this in a statement on Friday.

Akujobi described the eradication of PPR as both an animal health priority and a national development goal, noting that eliminating the disease would reduce poverty, improve rural livelihoods, increase livestock productivity and expand trade opportunities.

According to her, “Nigeria has remained fully committed to the global goal, under the leadership of the Food and Agriculture Organisation and the World Organisation for Animal Health, to eradicate PPR by 2030.

“We have implemented a range of interventions, including disease surveillance, laboratory strengthening, outbreak investigations, targeted vaccination campaigns, stakeholder engagement, and capacity-building programmes aimed at reducing the burden of PPR while improving disease reporting and response systems.”

She said small ruminants serve as the primary economic safety net for millions of households, making their protection critical to the Federal Government’s agricultural transformation agenda.

Akujobi noted that PPR remains one of the most economically devastating transboundary diseases affecting sheep and goats across Africa, Asia and parts of the Middle East.

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“This disease continues to threaten livelihoods, reduce household incomes and constrain the growth of the livestock sector. Given that Nigeria has Africa’s largest population of small ruminants, estimated at over 200 million sheep and goats, and shares major transboundary trade corridors with Niger, Benin, Cameroon and Chad, strengthening our control measures is imperative,” she said.

She explained that the workshop was convened to develop an evidence-based National Strategic Plan for 2026–2030 that would integrate veterinary services with cross-border trade standards and risk mitigation policies.

Akujobi also commended development partners, regional technical organisations and national experts for supporting efforts to eliminate the disease, adding that the ministry would prioritise a fully costed implementation plan backed by a sustainable resource mobilisation strategy.

The statement also quoted the Chief Veterinary Officer of Nigeria, Samuel Anzaku, as saying the country had made significant progress in animal disease control but needed to update its National Strategic Plan to align with the Global PPR Eradication Programme, the Performance Monitoring and Assessment Tool roadmap benchmarks and ECOWAS regional coordination mechanisms.

According to him, the revised strategy should incorporate recent epidemiological and laboratory data, refine disease hotspot mapping, adopt risk-based vaccination strategies and strengthen laboratory-epidemiology linkages.

“This structural update is vital to advancing Nigeria into PMAT Stage 2 and beyond, ensuring that every public and private investment delivers measurable scientific progress towards achieving a PPR-free nation,” he said.

Also speaking, the representative of the African Union Inter-African Bureau for Animal Resources, Dr Perdita Hilary Lopes, described the eradication of PPR as a strategic investment in resilient livestock systems, poverty reduction, women’s economic empowerment, youth employment, sustainable rural development and improved food systems across Africa.

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She added that achieving a PPR-free Africa by 2040 would contribute significantly to the aspirations of Agenda 2063, the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme and the Sustainable Development Goals.

The renewed push follows earlier efforts by the Federal Ministry of Livestock Development to strengthen Nigeria’s campaign against PPR. In January, the ministry inaugurated a 33-member National Technical Working Group on the control and eradication of the disease to coordinate national response efforts.

At the time, the Minister of Livestock Development, Idi Maiha, described PPR as one of the most devastating transboundary animal diseases affecting sheep and goats, warning that it threatens the livelihoods of pastoralists and smallholder farmers, undermines food security and limits livestock trade.

Nigeria’s eradication drive aligns with the global campaign led by the Food and Agriculture Organisation and the World Organisation for Animal Health to eliminate PPR by 2030. As part of the regional effort, Abuja hosted a West African surveillance workshop in December 2025, where veterinary authorities and technical experts reviewed risk-based surveillance and cross-border coordination strategies aimed at accelerating progress towards the eradication target.

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Camilla Alhassan, Ghanaian TikToker jailed for claiming President Mahama sacrificed 32 cows

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A Ghanaian court has sentenced TikToker Camilla Alhassan to one year in prison after she admitted to publishing false claims that President John Mahama sacrificed 32 cows in a ritual to secure victory in the country’s 2024 presidential election, BBC reports on Friday.

Alhassan, 43, was convicted of offensive conduct and publication of false news over a series of videos she posted on TikTok last month and earlier this month.

In the videos, she alleged, without evidence, that the president carried out the ritual to help him win the election.

She also claimed that the government’s distribution of sanitary pads to flood victims was intended to cover up the alleged act.

The court rejected her plea for a lighter sentence, ruling that a prison term was necessary to discourage the growing spread of misinformation on social media.

BBC reports that prosecutors told the court that Alhassan, who has more than 70,000 followers on TikTok, made false and defamatory allegations against the president through videos that were widely shared online.

Her conviction has reignited debate in Ghana over the challenge of tackling misinformation while protecting freedom of expression.

The case is the latest involving a social media influencer in the West African country.

In September last year, TikToker David Kwodwo Prah Afful, popularly known as Kwame Nkrumah II, was jailed for seven months after he was convicted of making death threats against Mahama and members of parliament in a viral video.

The Mahama administration has repeatedly warned against the spread of false information online.

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Last year, the president said authorities would track down and prosecute individuals responsible for spreading falsehoods, hate speech and messages capable of causing fear and panic.

The government is also considering legislation aimed at tackling misinformation while preserving constitutional protections for freedom of expression.

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Kemi Badenoch backs FIFA probe, says Argentina politicised football over Falklands banner

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Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch has insisted that the Falkland Islands are “British” and accused Argentina of exploiting football to make a political statement after its players displayed a banner asserting the country’s claim to the disputed territory following their World Cup semi-final victory over England.

Her remarks came as FIFA confirmed its independent disciplinary committee was assessing match reports and the surrounding circumstances to determine whether Argentina breached its rules prohibiting political messages on the field of play.

Backing calls for an investigation, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s government maintained that the Falklands’ status was not up for debate.

Downing Street said, “The World Cup might not be ours, but the Falkland Islands definitely are,” while Business Minister Peter Kyle described the banner display as “an egregious violation” of FIFA rules and said, “Politics needs to be separate from football.”

Reacting in a video posted on X on Friday, Badenoch said, “The Falkland Islands are British. The Conservatives will always defend them. We know that political messaging and slogans are banned by FIFA, so they absolutely should investigate. It was a very silly banner.

“The fact is the Falkland Island are British and the Conservatives will never stop defending the Falklands. We did it before and we’d do it again.”

Argentina’s players unfurled a banner reading “Las Malvinas son Argentinas” (The Falklands are Argentine) after their 2-1 victory over England in Atlanta, reigniting the long-running sovereignty dispute between Britain and Argentina.

The Falkland Islands, a British Overseas Territory in the South Atlantic, have remained at the centre of competing claims for decades. The dispute culminated in the 1982 Falklands War, a 74-day conflict in which 649 Argentines, 255 British servicemen and three islanders were killed.

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Similar incident in 2014

FIFA has previously punished Argentina over a similar incident.

In 2014, the Argentine Football Association was fined after the national team displayed the same banner before an international friendly against Slovenia, with the governing body ruling that the act breached its regulations on political messages and team misconduct.

Badenoch also used the controversy to criticise the Labour government over its Chagos Islands agreement, arguing that the Conservatives would never take the same approach to the Falklands.

She said, “Unlike Labour who gave away British territory in the Chagos Island, we will never do that. That match was a great game watching our players, but very painful to watch.

“I have a nine year old who was utterly bereft at the loss, winning for so long and only to lose at the end.

“Winning a football match, I would say to Argentinians does not mean you can have the Falklands, so hands off.”

Badenoch’s criticism refers to the UK’s agreement to transfer legal sovereignty over the Chagos Archipelago to Mauritius while retaining UK and US military access to Diego Garcia under a long-term lease.

The agreement, announced in principle in 2024, followed years of international legal and diplomatic pressure over Britain’s administration of the islands.

Whether Britain “gave away” the Chagos Islands depends on the perspective. Critics, including Badenoch, describe the agreement as surrendering British territory, while supporters argue it is a negotiated settlement that protects UK and allied security interests by preserving the strategically important Diego Garcia military base while resolving the long-running sovereignty dispute.

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PUNCH Online reported in May 2025 that a British court paved the way for a government deal on returning the remote Chagos Islands to Mauritius, lifting a temporary ban that had forced an 11th-hour halt to an accord being signed.

Argentina await sanction

Meanwhile, the nation awaits FIFA verdict.

Also, AFP quoted Argentina’s President Javier Milei as describing the display “perfectly valid and legitimate.”

“It’s a feeling that exists within all Argentines,” he told El Observador radio station.

“The Malvinas are Argentine, we’re going to recover them, and we will do it through diplomatic means,” said Milei.

Argentina’s vice president, Victoria Villarruel, upped the tensions ahead of Wednesday’s kick-off by dubbing the English “usurping pirates”.

After the World Cup match, Argentina’s Foreign Minister Pablo Quirno said Buenos Aires had filed a formal protest over a British warship near the Falkland Islands.

Quirno voiced on X “the strongest rejection” of Britain’s HMS Medway’s “unconsulted and illegal” passage through Argentine territorial waters.

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