Education
NOUN To Adopt NECO’s e-Verify Platform From 2026 Admission Cycle
Registrar of the National Examinations Council (NECO), Prof. Ibrahim Dantani Wushishi, has announced plans to deepen collaboration with the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) to enhance the verification of candidates’ results and promote computer-based examinations nationwide.
Speaking during a visit to the university yesterday, Wushishi said the partnership is aimed at safeguarding the integrity of NECO certificates and ensuring that only candidates with authentic results gain admission into NOUN.
Wushishi said the visit was driven by three key objectives: to formally felicitate with the new VC, to explore collaboration on result authentication through NECO’s e-Verify platform and to examine areas of cooperation in computer-based testing (CBT).
While providing further details, the NECO boss recalled that the organisation previously handled result verification manually, often taking months to process requests from institutions in more than 50 countries.
“With the API integration, institutions can seamlessly confirm the authenticity of candidates’ NECO results without delay,” Wushishi said, urging NOUN to key into the platform.
Responding, Prof. Uduma welcomed the initiative and assured NECO of the university’s readiness to collaborate.
He stressed that result verification is critical to maintaining academic integrity. “Any certificate that is not verified is a paper tiger.”
Uduma disclosed that the university would begin integration with the NECO e-Verify platform from the 2026 admission cycle.
He also affirmed NOUN’s willingness to support NECO’s CBT expansion, citing the university’s network of about 128 study centres in the country.
To fast-track implementation, the vice-chancellor announced the constitution of a joint committee comprising key academic and ICT officials to interface with NECO.
-Leadership
Education
ASUU Issues 4-Day Ultimatum To Federal Govt Over New Salary Structure
The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has issued a four-day ultimatum to the Federal Government, demanding the immediate implementation of a newly approved salary structure for university lecturers nationwide.
ASUU President, Christopher Piwuna, made this known on Thursday while delivering a speech at a public lecture held at Sa’adu Zungur University, Yuli Campus, in Bauchi.
“We have issued a four-day ultimatum from today to the Federal Government to begin the payment of the newly approved salary structure. Failure to comply will attract a strong response from the union,” he said.
The ASUU president noted that the demand forms part of broader efforts to improve the welfare of university lecturers and address long-standing concerns about poor remuneration, which he said has contributed to brain drain and declining standards in Nigeria’s higher education sector.
Business
Amid Middle East Crisis, Inflation To Hit 16% – Analysts
Analysts at Afrinvest West Africa have warned that Nigeria’s inflation trajectory may reverse its recent disinflation trend, with headline inflation projected to climb to about 16 per cent in the near term, driven by the ripple effects of the escalating Middle East crisis on energy and domestic prices.
This is as they stressed that without swift policy responses, rising energy costs could deepen cost-of-living pressures and erode recent gains in price stability.
However, the analysts noted that the decline was weaker than expected, largely due to a resurgence in food inflation, which rose by 3.2 percentage points year-on-year to 12.1 per cent, offsetting gains in core inflation, which declined by 1.8 percentage points to 15.9 per cent.
On a month-on-month basis, inflationary pressures showed renewed volatility, with headline inflation rising by 2.0 per cent in February, a sharp reversal from the deflationary reading of negative 2.9 per cent recorded in January.
Despite this, analysts cautioned that underlying price pressures remain elevated, particularly from persistently high food costs and structural bottlenecks across the economy.
Looking ahead, Afrinvest highlighted that developments in the Middle East pose significant upside risks to inflation. According to the firm, crude oil prices have surged to about $105 per barrel from $72.69 at the end of February, triggering a sharp increase in domestic energy costs.
The report noted that the spike has already translated into higher retail prices of petroleum products, with petrol rising to about N1,350 per litre, diesel to N1,650 per litre, and cooking gas to N1,400 per kilogram in several states.
“These increases are expected to cascade across transportation, logistics, healthcare and food prices,” the analysts said, adding that existing structural challenges such as inadequate power supply, poor road infrastructure and insecurity could further amplify inflationary pressures.
In its baseline scenario, Afrinvest projected that the pass-through effect of the energy shock could drive headline inflation up by about 150 basis points to 16.6 per cent year-on-year, while month-on-month inflation could spike to 5.2 per cent.
The firm warned that a prolonged crisis could derail the Federal Government’s target of reducing average inflation to 16.5 per cent in 2026 from 23.3 per cent recorded in 2025.
To mitigate the impact on households, Afrinvest urged the government to implement targeted interventions, including the rollout of affordable mass transit systems, healthcare subsidies for low-income earners, and the temporary suspension of tariffs and related charges on food imports and other essential commodities.
-Leadership
Business
Experts Seek Relocation Of NCAT’s Boeing 737NG Simulator To Lagos
Stakeholders in Nigeria’s aviation sector have renewed calls for relocating the Boeing 737 Next Generation (B737NG) flight simulator currently housed at the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT), Zaria, to Lagos.
They argued that the move would improve accessibility, reduce operational costs, and enhance the facility’s commercial viability.
In an interview , aviation expert, Engr. Frank Oruye said situating the simulator in Lagos, Nigeria’s busiest aviation hub, would significantly reduce the time pilots and engineers spend away from duty during mandatory simulator training.
According to him, global best practice dictates that commercial flight simulators are located close to major international airport hubs where airlines and aviation personnel can easily access them.
“The B737NG simulator is not commercially viable in its current location at NCAT, Zaria,” Oruye said. He continued, “Best practice globally is to site commercial flight simulators near international aviation hubs to attract more clients and maximise utilisation.”
He explained that relocating the simulator to Lagos would reduce travel logistics for airlines and aviation personnel, enabling them to complete required training with minimal disruption to flight operations.
“This minimises the duration of absence for simulator training and helps airlines cut costs associated with travel, accommodation and time away from operations,” he said.
“Running a Flight Simulator Centre is a highly competitive business and operators must ensure maximum patronage to remain viable.”
Oruye further noted that the use of flight simulators is not optional but a regulatory requirement designed to ensure that pilots and engineers maintain high levels of competence and safety.
“The service provided by the simulator is to meet statutory requirements in the training and competence testing of pilots and engineers,” he explained.
“The capital outlay for acquiring and maintaining a modern flight simulator is extremely high, which is why operators typically run them 24 hours a day to maximise returns on investment.”
He added that airlines usually book simulator slots months in advance and arrange the travel schedules of their crew members to attend training at specific times.
However, Oruye noted that the NCAT simulator’s location in Zaria poses logistical challenges, as the aerodrome is not connected to major commercial flight routes.
“Airlines have to secure training slots in advance and facilitate the movement of their crew to attend on schedule.
Unfortunately, Zaria Aerodrome is an off-line location with limited commercial flight connectivity, making it difficult and costly for clients to access the facility,” he said.
Industry analysts say relocating the simulator to Lagos could also position Nigeria as a regional training hub for West and Central African airlines, many of which currently send their pilots abroad for recurrent simulator training at significant cost.
They noted that improved utilisation of the simulator facility would not only generate revenue for NCAT but also help reduce the outflow of foreign exchange spent on overseas aviation training.
-Leadership
-
Health12 months ago5 Life Lessons from Manchester City EPL Current woes
-
Sports12 months agoLiverpool Announce Jürgen Klopp Return To The Club
-
Business12 months agoMTN Teams Up With Meta To Boost WhatsApp Call Quality
-
News12 months agoCommonwealth Observers Prepare For Gabon Presidential Election
-
Health12 months agoPonzi Scheme CEO Francis Uju Udoms of Addfx Case still Unresolved Despite SEC certification
-
News12 months agoChibok Girls: 11 Years Of Anguish, Broken Promises
-
News12 months agoWike’s Enviable Road Construction Method along Nyanya- Maraba Highway
-
News9 months agoNASRE Promises Support To Daily Times Group Business Editor, Oseni, Over Serious Road Accident
