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PenCom Alleges Non-adherence to Pension Laws
By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa
The National Pension Commission has said that only seven states and the Federal Capital Territory are fully implementing pension reform laws despite widespread adoption of contributory pension frameworks across the country.
The Director-General of the National Pension Commission, Mrs Omolola Oloworaran, disclosed this on Thursday in Abuja during the maiden edition of the bi-annual consultative session for heads of service of states yet to adopt or fully implement the Contributory Pension Scheme or the Contributory Defined Benefits Scheme.
She said, “Out of the 36 states with pension reform laws on their books, only seven states, together with the Federal Capital Territory, are fully implementing these laws.”
The session was organised to encourage dialogue with affected state heads of service and to explore practical ways in which PenCom could provide technical support for the successful adoption and implementation of pension reforms at the sub-national level.
According to Oloworaran, 30 states and the FCT had enacted laws on the contributory pension scheme or the contributory defined benefits scheme, while six states still had pension reform bills awaiting passage in their state assemblies.
She noted that 23 states had pension laws that were either inactive or only partially implemented, leaving many civil servants uncertain about their retirement future.
“That leaves 23 states whose laws are written, inactive, or only partially being implemented. Twenty-three sets of public servants or civil servants whose retirement future hangs in the balance, not because there is no law, but because the law has not been activated,” she said.
The PenCom boss described pension reform as a constitutional and fiscal obligation rather than a policy option, citing Section 210 of the 1999 Constitution, which guarantees pension rights for civil servants.
She said the old pension structure had failed because it created uncertainty and unsustainable liabilities, adding that the contributory pension scheme was introduced to promote accountability, sustainability, and transparency in pension administration.
Oloworaran stressed that the main challenge facing many states was no longer the passage of pension laws but the discipline required for implementation, including regular remittance of pension contributions and adequate funding of accrued pension rights.
“Across our states, the challenge is no longer the enactment of laws. The challenge is the discipline of execution. It is the regular and timely remittance of contributions. It is the adequate and consistent funding of accrued pension rights,” she stated.
She urged heads of service to see pension reform as part of their governance legacy, noting that the success or failure of implementation in states would largely depend on their commitment.
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NECO Computer-based Exams Will Commence this Year–Education Minister
By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa
The Federal Government on Thursday unveiled a major reform in Nigeria’s examination system with the introduction of computer-based examinations, CBE, by the National Examinations Council, NECO, as the nation celebrated the examination body’s 25 years of existence amid glowing tributes to its rise from a troubled national initiative to an internationally recognised.
The minister of education, Dr Tunji Alausa, who announced the reform at NECO’s Silver Jubilee celebration in Abuja, declared that the transition to technology-driven examinations would significantly curb examination malpractice and reposition Nigeria’s assessment system for global competitiveness.
Speaking at the event held at the Bola Ahmed Tinubu Conference Centre, Garki, Abuja, Alausa described NECO as a “standard-bearer for credible external examinations”, saying the council had become a critical pillar in safeguarding integrity, fairness and accountability in Nigeria’s education sector.
“We are at the threshold of a very important reform, which NECO is spearheading, and that is the Computer-Based Examination, which is to commence this year,” the minister said.
According to him, the new system would provide real-time monitoring of candidates, track suspicious activities and drastically reduce examination fraud that has continued to undermine confidence in public examinations.
The minister said NECO’s 25-year journey reflected Nigeria’s determination to build a credible national examination system capable of guaranteeing equal opportunities for learners across the country.
He noted that the council had over the years strengthened examination security, improved reliability in scoring, widened access to examinations in underserved areas and embraced technological innovations that restored public confidence in national certification.
Alausa said the Ministry of Education would continue to provide policy direction and oversight to ensure NECO examinations aligned with national curricula, learning outcomes and broader development goals.
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ADC Raises Alarm Over Federal High Court Case, Alleges Govt Pressuring Judge to Recuse
By Yusuf Danjuma Yunusa
The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has issued a strongly worded warning to the federal government, demanding an immediate halt to what the party describes as covert attempts to interfere in the ongoing legal case involving Nafiu Bala Gombe.
In a statement signed by National Publicity Secretary Bolaji Abdullahi on Thursday, the opposition party alleged that desperate forces within the corridors of power are mounting pressure on Justice Nwite of the Federal High Court to recuse himself from the matter.
The party claims this alleged plot represents “a direct assault on the integrity of the judiciary” and a dangerous escalation in efforts to “weaponise state institutions against the opposition.”
According to the ADC, its legal team has obtained information indicating that despite the Certified True Copy of the Supreme Court judgment not yet being released or formally communicated to the trial court, the case has been curiously scheduled before Justice Nwite for May 8, 2026.
“This unusual haste,” the statement read, “is part of a calculated scheme to force Justice Nwite into recusing himself, thereby creating an opening for the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court to transfer the matter to judges allegedly considered more amenable to political influence.”
The party noted that this development runs contrary to directives from both the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court, which ordered an accelerated hearing by the substantive trial judge.
The ADC further warned that “judicial recusal is not a toy for political convenience” but “an extraordinary measure guided by law, facts, and established judicial principles.”
The party has called on the National Judicial Council, the Chief Justice of Nigeria, and the international community to intervene urgently, drawing parallels to what it called “the shameful roles played by certain reckless judicial actors” during the collapse of Nigeria’s First and Second Republics and the subversion of the June 12 mandate.
“The judiciary must remain the last hope of the common man,” the statement concluded, “and not the last refuge of desperate politicians terrified of justice.”
As of press time, the federal government and Justice Nwite’s chambers had not issued responses to the ADC’s allegations. The case is scheduled to resume on May 8.
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