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Super Eagles’ 2026 World Cup Hopes All But Over as NFF Lines Up Jordan Friendlies in Playoff Window

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Nigeria’s Super Eagles will join a Four-Nation Invitational in Jordan next March —during the World Cup playoff window

Super Eagles to Play Iran & Jordan in Amman Tournament as NFF Signals End to 2026 World Cup Hopes

Nigeria’s slim chance of a dramatic late entry into the 2026 FIFA World Cup seems to have evaporated, with the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) now scheduling the Super Eagles for a Four-Nation Invitational Tournament in Amman, Jordan—right in the March FIFA window reserved for the final intercontinental playoffs.

The announcement came on Friday from NFF Director of Communication Ademola Olajire, confirming Nigeria’s participation alongside Iran, hosts Jordan, and Costa Rica.

“Three-time African champions Nigeria will feature in a Four-Nation Invitational Tournament in Amman, capital of Jordan, during next month’s FIFA Men’s International Window.

“The mini-tournament will kick off with a clash between the Super Eagles and the senior men national team of Iran, at the 17,000-capacity Amman International Stadium, on Friday, 27th March 2026.

“The same day, the senior men national teams of Jordan and Costa Rica will be at each other’s jugular at the 62,000-capacity King Abdullah Sports City Stadium, also in Amman.

“On Tuesday, 31st March, hosts Jordan will take on 2025 AFCON bronze-medallists Nigeria at the Amman International Stadium, while Costa Rica will confront Iran at the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium.

“Organisers will announce the time-schedule for the four matches in a few days.”

The timing is telling: March is when the remaining World Cup playoff spots will be decided. By committing to friendlies without any reference to potential playoff action, the NFF appears to have accepted elimination after last November’s penalty shootout loss to DR Congo in the African qualifiers.

Nigeria lodged a protest with FIFA, alleging DR Congo fielded ineligible players—some possibly retaining European passports despite Congolese law’s restrictions on adult dual citizenship. NFF General Secretary Mohammed Sanusi had stated: “As far as FIFA is concerned, once you have the passport of your country, you are eligible. But our concern is that FIFA may have been deceived into clearing them.”

FIFA has yet to issue a final ruling, with the matter still under review by independent bodies. The NFF recently debunked online rumors of a decision on February 16.

“There is no decision from FIFA at this time. Any claims that a ruling has been made are false. FIFA has not communicated any verdict to the NFF or the Congolese federation,” Mr Olajire said.

National Sports Commission Chairman Shehu Dikko echoed the wait-and-see stance but signaled a forward focus: “So the relevant bodies of FIFA are dealing with it, and we are hoping, any moment, we will hear their decisions… But we are confident we have a good case. But I keep saying, we have put the World Cup behind us already. Whatever happens, it is what it is. But we are not looking at that, we are looking at how do you build for the next competitions, the next AFCON, the next WAFCON is next month.

“World Cup is a closed chapter, but yes, we have a pending legal issue to deal with.

“Even FIFA, it’s not the FIFA deciding, there are independent bodies in FIFA who are independent of FIFA; disciplinary committee, ethics committee, are independent bodies of FIFA, they make their decision based on what they see on the rules and they won’t tell you, we are doing it tomorrow or next tomorrow, when they finish, they will tell the world.”

With back-to-back World Cup absences (2022 and now likely 2026) looming, the Super Eagles are pivoting toward rebuilding—starting with these high-profile friendlies against strong opposition. For Nigerian fans, the dream of North America 2026 may be over, but the road to future glory begins now. Read More

The unsolicited crusade of Bamidele Opeyemi and the Sovereignty of Ogun State | By Yinka ANIMASHAUN

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A video has been circulating on social media capturing the Senate Majority Leader on a phone call, canvassing support for Senator Solomon Adeola Olamilekan

The unsolicited crusade of Bamidele Opeyemi and the Sovereignty of Ogun State

By Yinka ANIMASHAUN

There is an old Yoruba adage that has guided the conduct of elders across generations: “Eni tó mọ́ ayé rẹ̀, kì í fi àgbára rẹ̀ kọja ààlà t’ẹlòmíràn.” Loosely translated, this means that “He who knows his worth (or place) in the world does not use his power to exceed the boundaries of another.”

It is a proverb about propriety. About the wisdom of knowing where one’s authority ends. I invoke it today for one man, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele, Senate Majority Leader, son of Ekiti, and increasingly, uninvited stakeholder in the internal politics of Ogun State.

A video has been circulating on social media captureimg the Senate Majority Leader on a phone call, canvassing support for Senator Solomon Adeola Olamilekan, declaring him the next Governor of Ogun State

The next Governor of Ogun State. I want every reader to hold those words. Bamidele is from Ekiti. He does not represent Ogun state. He was not elected by Ogun state people. He carries no mandate from Ogun state. And he has taken it upon himself to decide who shall govern it.

This is, I must stress, not his first offence. Weeks earlier, he made an ill-advised pilgrimage to Ogun West, where he delivered what he dressed up as an intellectual paper, a document whose true purpose was the promotion of Yayi’s gubernatorial ambitions. He went further, forwarding excerpts to the Deputy Governor of Ogun State, Engr. Noimot Salako-Oyedele, a woman of standing and institutional loyalty to Governor Prince Dapo Abiodun, presumably expecting her gratitude.

He received something else entirely. The Deputy Governor told him, without equivocation that he was meddling in a state that was none of his business. That Prince Dapo Abiodun is undoubtedly the number one leader of the APC in Ogun state.  Her response has since passed into the political vocabulary of the Southwest: “Thanks, but no thanks.”

That rebuke caused a furore of course. A lesser man might have taken the hint. Senator Bamidele doubled down. The video is his written confession.

I am not interested in reducing this to personal grievance. What Senator Bamidele is doing is structurally dangerous. In a federation as layered and combustible as ours, the internal democratic processes of state-level politics are sacred territory. They are where communities negotiate identity, where local voices decide their own futures. When a federal lawmaker, particularly one wielding the gravitas of the Senate’s second-highest office, inserts himself into those processes, he corrupts the ecosystem. He transforms a conversation that should belong to the people of Ogun state into a transaction brokered in Abuja, weighted with federal patronage and the silent threat of federal leverage.

History instructs us here. The electoral controversies of 1983 were, in no small measure, the harvest of exactly this kind of external imposition, powerful men reaching across borders, anointing candidates, overriding the democratic instincts of communities. Nigeria has paid, and continues to pay, the price of that refusal to learn. Senator Bamidele is not deploying thugs. I grant him that. The principle, I am afraid, remains identical: influence exercised beyond the boundaries of one’s democratic mandate is an assault on democratic sovereignty, however it is dressed.

Let me be precise on one point. This is not an attack on Yayi as a person. Every Nigerian citizen has the constitutional right to aspire to any office. If Senator Olamilekan wishes to be Governor of Ogun State, that conversation belongs to the people of Ogun state and they are fully equipped to have it. What I insist upon is this, the questions that surround any aspiring governor are the sovereign property of the electorate, not the Senate Majority Leader from another state. The people of Ogun West will ask whether this man’s roots in their soil run deep enough. They will probe his temperament, his humility, the texture of his connection to the state he wishes to govern. They will want to know whether he has earned that right, through service, through sacrifice, through presence or whether he arrives wearing the endorsement of Abuja like a borrowed garment.

The endorsement of a Senate Majority Leader from Ekiti confers no legitimacy on any Ogun state governorship aspirant. If anything, it raises a question that demands an answer, what exactly is the transaction underpinning this extraordinary level of enthusiasm?

The people of Ogun State have watched Senator Bamidele invest political capital at a scale disproportionate even to close friendship, in a candidate whose ancestral connection to Ogun State remains, to put it charitably, a matter of legitimate public inquiry.

Ogun State people are drawing conclusions. And Nigerians, contrary to the comfortable assumption of the powerful keep political ledgers with extraordinary precision. The Ekitinization of Ogun State’s politics will not stand. I daresay.

But of course, this matter demands the President’s attention. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu whose own political biography is sewn into the  fabric of Southwest politics, who understands as well as any living Nigerian the volatility of intra-party dynamics in these states carries both the authority and the obligation to act.

A Senate Majority Leader is among the most senior political officers in our federal architecture. His public interventions do not land as those of a private citizen. They arrive carrying the weight of federal authority, whether or not he intends them to. When that officer is caught on video campaigning for a gubernatorial candidate in a state he was never elected to represent, he is lending federal gravitational pull to a local political contest. Unchecked, this is the kind of precedent that quietly dismantles the principle of state sovereignty within our federation.

I call on Mr. President to call Senator Bamidele to order, firmly, and without ambiguity. The APC’s leadership in Ogun State, under Governor Dapo Abiodun, possesses both the standing and the mandate to manage its own succession. That process deserves to proceed on its own democratic terms, free from the suffocating weight of external enthusiasm dressed as fraternity.

Senator Bamidele is a man of evident intelligence. He did not ascend to his position by accident. He understands power. And it is precisely because he understands power that I address him directly: political goodwill, once lost to overreach, is extraordinarily difficult to recover. The people of Ogun State are watching. The APC leadership in Ogun is watching. The Southwest is watching.

Ogun is not Ekiti. It has never been Ekiti. And with the vigilance of its people and the integrity of its democratic instincts, it will not be remade in any other state’s image.

Senator Bamidele should leave Ogun State alone. Let this state breathe its own political air. Let its people decide their own future. Let its democracy function on its own terms. And let him return with urgency and with contrition to the magnificent, unfinished business of serving the people who actually sent him to Abuja.

Because the people of Ogun State will speak, in their own time and on their own terms. When they do, that voice will carry the full weight of democratic authority, the one authority that no Senate Majority Leader, from Ekiti or anywhere else, has ever had the power to override.

Yinka Animashaun is a concerned citizen of Ogun state and writes via yinkaanimashaun@gmail.com

*The views and opinions in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent the position or editorial stance of Newsheadline247.

The platform publishes this piece to encourage diverse perspectives and is not responsible for the content, accuracy, or implications of the opinions expressed. Full responsibility rests with the author.

CBN Targets $1B Monthly Diaspora Remittances as Reforms Drive Inflows to $600 Million

CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso announces Nigeria’s push for $1 billion monthly diaspora remittances, with current inflows averaging $600 million

CBN Targets $1B Monthly Diaspora Remittances as Inflows Surge to $600M

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is setting its sights on a major milestone: $1 billion in monthly diaspora remittances, with recent reforms already driving average inflows to around $600 million per month.

CBN Governor Olayemi Cardoso made the announcement on Thursday during the G-24 Technical Group Meetings in Abuja, highlighting how targeted changes have streamlined diaspora transfers and boosted confidence in formal channels.

“As a result of these reforms, remittance inflows now average about $600 million per month, and we are confident of reaching a $1 billion monthly milestone in the near term,” he said.

The surge stems from key 2024 initiatives designed to eliminate bottlenecks in cross-border transactions:

  • The Non-Resident Nigerian Ordinary Account (NRNOA) for easier family remittances and support transfers.
  • The Non-Resident Nigerian Investment Account (NRNIA) to encourage diaspora investments in local assets.
  • A Non-Resident Bank Verification Number (BVN) platform allowing Nigerians abroad to open and manage accounts remotely.

These tools aim to cut friction, enhance transparency, and build greater trust in Nigeria’s financial system.

Diaspora remittances rank among Nigeria’s top foreign exchange sources—alongside oil and portfolio inflows—offering vital support for external reserves, naira stability, and FX market liquidity amid global volatility and oil price swings.

While no exact timeline was given for hitting $1 billion monthly, Cardoso expressed strong optimism that continued reforms will expand formal channels further.

He stressed the importance of improving cross-border payment systems by reducing transaction costs and speeding up settlements. Global remittance corridors still average over 6% in fees—deemed too high by multilateral bodies for remittance-dependent developing economies.

Sustained $1 billion monthly inflows would significantly bolster Nigeria’s FX earnings, providing stronger macroeconomic buffers and reducing reliance on volatile oil revenues.

The renewed push aligns with broader efforts to diversify foreign exchange sources and modernize payment infrastructure for inclusive growth. Read More

Tonto Dikeh Foundation Sponsors 1,000 Students with Free JAMB Registration

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The Tonto Dikeh Foundation has launched a new scholarship initiative providing free JAMB registration for 1,000 eligible students across Port Harcourt, Lagos, and Abuja.

The programme forms part of the foundation’s broader commitment to supporting 5,000 Nigerian students annually through full or partial educational sponsorship.

Founder Tonto Dikeh announced the initiative via her Instagram page, reaffirming the organisation’s dedication to expanding access to quality education.

Free JAMB registration for 1000 eligible students in Port Harcourt, Lagos, and Abuja. 500 students in Port Harcourt, 250 each in Lagos and Abuja,” she wrote.

According to the foundation, education remains central to its mission of empowering young Nigerians. Beyond covering academic expenses, the initiative aims to equip beneficiaries with the skills and opportunities necessary to reach their full potential and contribute meaningfully to national development.

The distribution of the scholarships allocates 500 slots to students in Port Harcourt, while Lagos and Abuja will each have 250 beneficiaries.

The foundation emphasised that its long-term goal is not only to remove financial barriers to schooling but also to nurture responsible, skilled individuals capable of shaping Nigeria’s future.

Lagos APC Defends Tinubu’s Assent to Electoral Act 2026, Slams Opposition Criticism

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The Lagos State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has defended President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s assent to the Electoral Act 2026, describing opposition criticism as “orchestrated hysteria.”

In a statement issued on Friday in Ogba, Lagos, and signed by its spokesman, Seye Oladejo, the party said governance should not be reduced to “a popularity contest or theatre for digital propaganda,” but must remain a constitutional duty carried out in the best interest of Nigerians.

The APC dismissed opposition arguments advocating real-time transmission of election results, claiming that similar systems in other democracies had exposed vulnerabilities, including technological glitches, cybersecurity risks, legal ambiguities, and judicial reversals.

According to the party, the opposition’s stance was rooted in opportunism rather than patriotism. “What manner of democracy suggests that the opposition alone possesses superior wisdom?” the statement queried, adding that electoral reform is not the “exclusive intellectual property” of any political bloc.

The Lagos APC maintained that President Tinubu’s assent followed due constitutional process, legislative debate, and institutional consultation.

It described the move as “prudence, not panic,” stressing that reforms must be sustainable, legally defensible, and not driven by social media pressure.

The party cautioned against what it termed the weaponisation of public sentiment, noting that electoral integrity should be built on durable systems rather than “experiments designed for headlines.”

Reaffirming its support for the President, the Lagos APC said reforms must strengthen institutions and promote national cohesion.

While acknowledging the importance of opposition in a democracy, it warned against what it called distortion and sensationalism.

“Governance transcends emotion. It demands maturity over melodrama, substance over spectacle, and nation over narrative,” the statement concluded.

FRSC Urges Fasting Motorists to Rest Frequently to Prevent Road Crashes

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The Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) has advised motorists observing fasting periods to take regular rest breaks to prevent fatigue-related road crashes.

The FRSC Commander in charge of the Sagamu-Ore-Benin Expressway corridor, Mr. Nasir Mohammed, gave the warning in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Ota on Friday.

Mohammed said the advisory became necessary following the commencement of fasting by both Christian and Muslim faithful.

Catholic adherents recently began the Lenten season, marked by 40 days of fasting, while Muslim faithful have also commenced Ramadan, a holy month characterised by daily fasting.

He cautioned drivers to be mindful of fatigue and dehydration, which could impair concentration and reaction time behind the wheel.

We are appealing to motorists, especially Muslims and Christians who are fasting, to always observe rest after every four hours of driving to prevent avoidable loss of lives,” he said.

The FRSC commander also warned against speeding and wrongful overtaking, stressing that adherence to traffic rules is critical to ensuring safety during the fasting season.

He urged all road users to prioritise safety, adding, “Drive to stay alive. Wishing all safer roads and fuller life.”

The Corps reiterated its commitment to reducing road crashes and promoting responsible driving habits across the country.

“Don’t Make Money an Issue in Your Home”—Ibukun Awosika Advises Couples, Shares Personal Story

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First female First Bank chairperson, Ibukun Awosika, urges couples to treat money as a tool, not a source of conflict

Ibukun Awosika’s Powerful Marriage Advice: “Make Money of No Consequence” – Her 13-Year Journey of Earning More Than Her Husband

Renowned business leader and the first female chairperson of First Bank of Nigeria, Ibukun Awosika, has shared an inspiring message for couples: never let money become a battleground in marriage. Instead, view it as a tool for shared growth, backed by unity, prudence, and faith.

Speaking during a recent session at Celebration Church International (shared widely on Instagram by Pastor Emmanuel Iren), Awosika drew from her own life to illustrate how complementary strengths and mutual respect triumphed over financial differences.

“When I say make the money of no consequence in your home, I’m speaking from personal experience,” she said.

Awosika described herself as a bold risk-taker who ran a manufacturing company and secured various contracts early in their marriage. Her husband, Abiodun, a petroleum engineer in the public sector of the oil and gas industry, was the epitome of prudence and organization.

“When we got married, I as a business person running a manufacturing company, getting contracts, I could get any kind of contract. My husband was a petroleum engineer working in oil and gas at that point, but working in oil and gas in public sector,” she said.

“Now if we never go broke in my family because my husband is the most prudent human being in this world, that’s just the truth. Me, I’m a risk taker, so I can take risks, but he’s a prudent, organised human being. We will never be hungry because he will make sure that we’re not,” she continued.

For 13 years, she earned more while supporting his career ambitions. They clung to a biblical promise from Amos 9:13, which they repeatedly claimed in their church tradition of selecting scriptural promises.

“Have you read Amos 9? Go to 9.13. We kept picking this promise for a long time because in our church, we pick promises.”

Their patience paid off dramatically. Thirteen years into the marriage, opportunities arose for Nigerians to apply for smaller oil fields previously held by major companies.

“So anyway, he and a few of his friends applied. At the end, he got his field, and from that day till now, please go and price furniture and price oil. Let me now tell you the real lesson.

“Whatever way I behaved in the 13 years before, I was about to reap my reward in the years after, and I have reaped them big,” she said.

Awosika urged couples to prioritize teamwork over financial scorekeeping.

“So when I say to you, do not make money an issue in your home. It’s a tool. Use it to achieve the things that you can do together. Whether it’s on the side of the man, on the side of the woman, one plus one is what? Is one.

“You haven’t found a team until you find a team of a husband and a wife who understand who they are in Christ and work together as one. Nothing can stop them,” she concluded.

Her candid testimony has resonated widely, offering timeless wisdom on building resilient, faith-centered marriages beyond material wealth. Read More

Mariya Dangote: Aliko Dangote’s Eldest Daughter Steering the Family Vast Empire’s Future

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Mariya Dangote, eldest daughter of Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, rises in the Dangote Group with roles in Dangote Sugar, Cement board, and more

Mariya Dangote: The Strategic Powerhouse Guiding Aliko Dangote’s Vast Empire into the Future

As Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, accelerates plans to scale his conglomerate toward a $100 billion valuation, his eldest daughter Mariya Dangote has quietly emerged as a pivotal force in the family’s long-term succession strategy.

Mariya, the first of Aliko Dangote’s three daughters, joined Dangote Industries Limited (DIL)—the group’s holding company—in 2016, shortly after earning her MBA from Coventry University in the United Kingdom. She started as a business strategy and risk specialist, quickly building expertise in strategic planning, corporate governance, and digital transformation.

By 2022, Mariya stepped into a high-profile leadership role as Executive Director of Operations at Dangote Sugar Refinery Plc, one of the group’s flagship subsidiaries. There, she has driven operational excellence, championed backward integration projects to boost local sugar production, and spearheaded technology-led efficiency gains—aligning perfectly with the group’s push for self-sufficiency and reduced import reliance.

Her influence reached new heights in July 2025 when she was appointed to the board of Dangote Cement Plc, Africa’s largest listed industrial company. The move, following her father’s retirement as chairman, is widely seen as a deliberate step to ensure strategic continuity and long-term value creation.

Mariya also serves on the board of Dangote Peugeot Automobiles Nigeria (DPAN), underscoring her broad involvement across the group’s manufacturing and industrial sectors.

Recent developments have further elevated her profile: she now oversees commercial strategy for cement and food operations as Group Executive Director, focusing on market expansion, integration, and operational excellence.

Within corporate circles, Mariya is respected for her sharp strategic insights and low-key yet effective leadership style. As the Dangote Group positions itself for multi-generational success, her growing responsibilities signal confidence in her ability to help steer one of Africa’s most powerful business empires forward.