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Forgery, illegal taxes, extortion, corruption: Realities of taxing Adaidaita Sahu riders in Kano State Part 2
This is the second and concluding part of a two – part series on corruption that has riddled transport tax collection in Kano State
By Zulaiha Danjuma
Selected Implementation of the KAROTA daily Adaidaita sahu ticket tax in Kano.
When KAROTA and the then Ganduje government started the collection of daily ticket tax from Adaidaita sahu riders, it was announced to cover the entire state, including metropolitan areas, towns and villages. It was discovered that some major townships within Kano who have tricycle activities never paid the daily Adaidaita sahu tax of N120. Those towns include Dambatta and Gwarzo.
The Adaidaita sahu community in Dambatta never paid the Kano State Tricycle daily tax which lasted for about three years. According to the Secretary of the Dambatta Tricycle Association called WASIAN, Mammam Abdu Danbatta, the Adaidaita sahu operatives in Dambatta town only pay N200 for newly registered Adaidaita sahu riders in the village and N50 association dues weekly.
“We our Adaidaita sahu riders only pay an association due of N50 weekly, this money is used to support each other in terms of any eventuality like accidents matters that require the associations involvement.”
“We collect N50 weekly per Adaidaita sahu because we are a small town and we do not have much Keke riders in the village,” he said.
According to Dambatta, when the Kano State government started collecting the N120 ticket tax in Kano metropolis, the Adaidaita sahu operatives in Dambatta were very few and it did not make sense to enforce the tax policy.
“We heard about the collection of N120 from Tricycles but during the time that collection started the Adaidaita sahu in Dambatta were about 10 in number,” he said.
It was gathered though that the Adaidaita sahu Riders Association in Dambatta pays N1,000 tax yearly to the local government secretariat for being in operation as an association.
“We only pay N1000 to the council yearly for renewal of our association registration,” he explained.
The story was not different at Gwarzo Local Government area. The Adaidaita sahu riders in Gwarzo attested to never paying the N120 KAROTA Kano state tricycle ticket tax.
However, the head of the Adaidaita sahu riders Group at Gwarzo, Hassan Abdullahi, he that the only time the personnel of the Kano State Road Traffic Agency (KAROTA) enforced any kind of payment on them was when they came into the town about a year ago to enforce a state government and KAROTA order of re-registration all tricycles in the state.
“When the KAROTA men came that time they caught anyone who did not re-register his Keke, they enforced them to do so.”
“The money we paid at that time was N19,000 each per Adaidaita sahu” he said.
On Monday, January 10, 2022, the Kano state government and KAROTA demanded for a new yearly registration fee that will permit the tricyclists to continue operations in Kano state.
New tricyclists registrants were charged N18,000, while renewal fees for already registered tricyclists was N8,000 per annum. The KAROTA agency had previously put the registration fee at 100,000 Naira before it got reduced to N20,000, then it was left at N18,000.
The new registrants would have a tracking device as part of their payment. This paper-like sticker known as the tracker was sighted pasted on the windshield of one of the Adaidaita sahu riders at Gwarzo village.
KANO FOCUS followed up to find out the reason some areas of Kano state were exempted from the compulsory daily Adaidaita sahu tax.
Na’isa said that the KAROTA was understaffed and could not cover a wide range of areas, hence the management limited the taxing exercise to inside major metropolitan areas in the state.
However, when the reporter enquired deeper on reasons the agency had not deployed its staffs to LGAs to enforce the collection and payment of the tax like it did during the enforcement of the re-registration of operational license, he declined to provide any answer.
Interestingly the Kano State government does not have a record of how much tax it collects from Adaidaita sahu riders in the state daily.

Tracking machine at Kofar Dan’agundi
Our reporter asked both KAROTA and KIRS for the data but neither of them could provide it. KIRS said they did not have it and that all monies coming from KAROTA were cumulatively sent in, without a breakdown of which money was for Adaidaita sahu daily tax and which were for other road offense levies.
On the part of KAROTA, its officials declined any attempt to disclose figures. The KAROTA spokesperson kept saying all the funds were sent to KIRS.
However, it is easy determine that the state government collects up to N6 million as Adaidaita sahu tax daily going by the number of riders in the state, which KAROTA gave as 60,000.
Some Adaidaita sahu Riders Association leaders dispute this figure, saying it is certainly higher. But staying with the government figure, at N100 per day Adaidaita sahu tax collected, the government would make N180 million from this tax alone in a month and over N2 billion in a year.
Yet, this huge revenue source is not properly regulated and is largely in the hands of touts and other non-state actors.
Manual collection of Tax does not aid government accountability.
In a reaction to the issues of selective implementation of government taxes and manual collection of taxes, the Programs Officer of Dispute Resolution and Development Initiative, the secretariat of the tax justice and governance platform for Kano State, Sadeeq Muhammad Mustapha, said there are several modes of payment structures that are made available by the Kano State KIRS as well as the local government revenue administration.
“The KIRS has a website that allows for payment of taxes, the site offers a gateway that allows for payment or the person who intends to make the payment may pay directly by going to the bank and generating an invoice for the payment process,” he said.
However, he added that there are some taxes for the informal sector that are not offered the access to pay directly through the website or go directly to offices of KIRS to process payment.
“In such cases there are certain provisions made by the KIRS to access those taxes,” he said.
Mustapha added that KIRS currently categories daily wage earners into the informal sector category.
“With such earners, the personnel of the KIRS go directly like to the markets to collect these taxes,” he stated.
He recommended that to simplify the process for everyone, the purchase of Adaidaita sahu tax tickets can be done based on daily, monthly, quarterly or even bi-annual basis, adding that “manual collection of taxes does not aid in accountability because it gives an opportunity for corruption, and it makes tax collection processes porous.
“Manual collection of taxes does not give a measuring system that will help ascertain the amount being collected or remitted to the government as exact.
“For example, when a revenue officer collects an approximate amount of N50,000, there is no exact way to ascertain if that N50,000 collected manually by that officer is what is remitted to the government.
“That can easily cause corruption, if a person is not up right that individual might remit much less than they actually collected, so manual collection of taxes and levy by the government doesn’t not aid accountability in the state at all,” he said.
He, however, said to make tax collection and compliance easier tax methods should be simplified for both the formal and inform sector which will increase voluntary tax compliance.
Mustapha also added that the recently adopted consolidation and codification law should be implemented effectively and KIRS should be the sole administrator taxes collected both at local government and state level.
Adaidaita sahu riders speak out.
According to Ahmad Kabir, (38) (Not his real name), who hails from Gezawa LGA but operates his Adaidaita sahu business in Kano metropolis, many Adaidaita sahu operators who live outside the city are harassed, extorted and delayed in carrying out their daily activities.
Mr. Kabir said for any Adaidaita sahu riders coming from Bichi, Tokarawa or Gezawa where the tickets were not sold and was unable to meet any daily Adaidaita sahu tax vendors on his way before having an encounter KAROTA enforcers would be stopped and harassed.
“They would stop us and ask why we didn’t have a ticket; we would say we just entered the metropolis and haven’t bought the tickets yet. They will now tell us to either give them money as bribe or they will take us to the KAROTA headquarters.”
“Most time, to avoid going to the KAROTA head office where we might end up paying up to N10,000 as fine, we will give the men on the road N500 or N,1000 and they’ll let us go,” he said.
He lamented when a Adaidaita sahu rider who lives far away comes into the metropolis around 2.00pm, he would find it a little difficult to get a ticket vendor, because most likely most of them would have finished selling their bundle for that day due to high demand.
Another Adaidaita sahu driver, Muazu Abubakar, a resident of Farawa area of Kano City, said a lot of Adaidaita sahu men were not as bothered with the daily N100 collection as they were angered by the sale of a fake tracking device.
According to Abubakar, the strike action in 2021 by the Adaidaita sahu riders was not really about the enforcement of the daily Adaidaita sahu tax but was an outburst of anger against the issuance in 2020 of paper stickers as tracking device.
“We paid N19,500 each to get that tracking device, they told us that they will give us a tracking device that will be attached to our Adaidaita sahu. The supposed tracking device was meant to be able to secure our tricycles in case of theft, so that the KAROTA agency will be able to track down the location of the Adaidaita sahu and retrieve it,” Abubakar recalled.
Alas!!! When it got to the time for the riders to get the tracking devices as promised, he said, “we were given paper stickers instead, which were pasted on the windshield of our tricycles.”
He stated that the sticker has no electronic device attached to it for it to be considered a tracking device that could locate the whereabouts of a stolen tricycle.
“That is to say they tricked us, and that action greatly angered us,” he said.
Furthermore, Mr. Abubakar also said that aside the collection of 19,500 form Keke men as money for a tracking device in 2020, in 2021 they were compelled to pay a sum of N5,500 as Adaidaita sahu plate number renewal fee.
“The worst part was that we were not given enough time to run around to pay the money, we were given only a period of two days of grace to make the payment of the N5,500 for the Adaidaita sahu number renewal.”
“And anyone who did pay within the two days, they will have to pay N18,500.”
“It is unfair, how would they triple the fees, someone may not even have the N5,000, talk more of N18,500” he said.
A calculation by the reporter of the N19,500 paid as tracker fees by each of the 60,000 registered Keke in the state stood at a figure of 1,170,000,000 (One billion one hundred and seventy million Naira).
KAROTA’S alleged Tracking Machine — is a solar streetlamp.
It has been almost four years since the alleged issuance of fake tracker devices to Keke riders by then Baffa Babba – led KAROTA.
Aside the infamous court cases between Keke riders and Dan-Agundi, there has not been any specific inquiry into the alleged fake tracking device issued to Adaidaita sahu riders in Kano.
In interviews with the Head of Information and Communication Technology (ICT), at the Kano State Road Traffic Agency (KAROTA), Abubakar Aminu Mamade, and Na’isa, the reporter was informed that the paper – like sticker on the windshield of Adaidaita sahu riders was really a tracking device.
Mamade said the agency was able to track the locations of the Keke riders through the barcode on the paper sticker through a tracking sensor machine installed across the state.
“We installed the tracking machine in 50 areas within the state” he said.
According to Mamade the locations of the machine were not previously made public because the agency did not want to tip off the public who may sabotage the agency’s effort to apprehend those who steal tricycles in the state.
Mamade listed the following locations as the places where the tracking machines were installed: Government house by state road, Hadeje road roundabout, Dakata Bus stop, Hadeje Road by Ahmadu Bello road roundabout, Kano Club roundabout, Aminu Dantata bridge by Yan Kura junction, Aminu Dantata bridge by Igbo road, Kafor Nasarawa bridge, Kwanar Tudun Wada, Brigade, Zaria road by Ring, Madobi road bridge, Kofar Fanfo by BUK road, Kabuga bridge, Sarkin Yaki road by court sabon gari, Tijjani hashim bridge, Kadan Kofar ruwa, kwanar Ungoggo, Mill Tara roundabout, Kwanar Jaba junction, Kankare market Gwarzo road, Badawa bus stop, Taludu roundabout, Gadan kaya, Kankara junction opposite gwaran dutse, Gwammaja by Munbaiya house junction, NNPC meger station maiduguri road, Baban Gwari roundabout Katsina road, Hajjo camp roundabout, Katsina road by hajj camp junction, Katsina road by France road, Triphon roundabout, Kofar mazugal, Airport road by Kwanar Jaba, Hamadiya junction, Kings guardian junction, club road by independence road roundabout, Airport road by murtala Muhammad way, Bank road roundabout, Grand central hotel roundabout, Lorge road by Alu avenue, Sabobaki zuhu road by maiduguri road, Kofar Dan Agundi, Zoo Road by Gidan Buhari, Ibrahim Taiwo road by IBB way junction, kwari junction by IBB way, Ibrahim Taiwo road by Bello road roundabout, Igbo road by France road sabon gari, Airport road by new road junction sabon gari, Sabonbaki zuhu by lamido crescent, Court road by teaching hospital road, Ring road by Gwarzo road.
However, KANO FOCUS gathered through a quick Google search that the alleged tracking machines said to be installed across the 50 locations were in fact solar street light lamps and not tracking devices.
The Google search was conducted with pictures given to the reporter by the head of ICT in KAROTA and purported to be snapshots from the field while installation of tracker machines was carried out.
When confronted with our findings, Mamade said the tracking machines could be mistaken for solar street light lamp.
But when further enquiry was made with Google search image on the same images obtained from Mamade, it was said to be a stand-alone module streetlamp. Further searches were made to ascertain if the device could double for a secret tracking device as the KAROTA management alleged. The Google search remained the same, still indicating that the images were solar street light lamps and not tracker machines.
The reporter then visited few of the alleged locations the tracking machine was said to be mounted at State Road, Kofar Dan Agundi, Zoo Road by Gidan Buhari and Gadan kaya. The solar streetlamp at State Road stands close to the Kano state Government House.
However, it is the same lamp obtained from the picture gotten from the head of ICT at KAROTA which was searched and identified as simply a solar street lamp.
At Kofar Dan Agundi, there was not street light mounted directly by the ‘Kofa’ ancient gate. But along the major road crossing from Gangun Albassa to Titin Dan Agundi the same solar street light was mounted beneath a street lamp pole. While at Gadan Kaya, the reporter did not find any street lamp resembling the one obtained from the Head of ICT at the KAROTA.
However, at Zoo Road by Gidan Buhari the same solar street lamp purported to be a tracking machine by the KAROTA was sighted on the middle of the main road by Gidan Buhari. It was also solar street light.
In existence though are smart street lights which are GPS based. These streetlights are regarded as smart streetlights; with their built-in technology they can locate the streetlights in case they get stolen. This is due to the sensor system they possess.
Whereabouts of KAROTA 6.3 billion Plus Revenue Adaidaita sahu Ticket Tax Generation.
According to the released 2022 figures and reconfirmed by Na’isa, there are 60,000 registered tricycles in the metropolitan area of Kano.
A quick calculation of the number of 60,000 registered tricycles multiplied by the daily collection of N100 equals to a sum of N6 million Naira daily. In a month the figure stands at N180 million, and N2.6 billion a year. Thus, the amount generated by Kano State from Adaidaita sahu tax between 2021 and 2023 is about N7.8 billion. But officials of the government could not really say exactly what all the money was used for.
The KAROTA agency had always claimed that the funds generated from the daily Adaidaita sahu taxing were used for road maintenance, among other road related issues in Kano State.
However, not one contrate mention of the funds obtained has been linked to any road maintenance in the state.
In view of this, Kano Focus got in touch with the Kano State Road Maintenance Agency (KARMA) through the media aide to the Managing Director Kano State Road Maintenance Agency (KARMA), Jabir Mukhtar Salisu
After enquiring from the MD of KARMA, Hassan Danbaffa, about the claims made by the KAROTA, Salisu said that the then management of the transport agency gave KARMA some funds to repair damaged roads in the state.
However, the funds were not said to have come from revenue gotten from the daily Adaidaita sahu tax collection, rather the agreement entered was said to be on all funds gotten from KAROTA’s monetary penalty on road use offenders in the state.
“The then KAROTA management had written to the Former Governor, seeking to start the collection of monetary penalties on vehicles found wanting for road & traffic related offenses in the state.”
“The government approved this request, and also directed KAROTA to give the funds generated from such operations to KARMA to fill up potholes on roads in the state.”
Salisu said the project was carried out in three (3) batches. The first batch of the refilling of potholes was in 2021.
According to the Maintenance of Selected Rotary Intersection, U-Turn and Cross Junction within Metropolis document obtained from the Kano State Road Maintenance Agency (KARMA), the reporter was able to obtain that the roads which had refilling and patching of potholes were Katsina road, Sani Marshall/Independence way, Sani Abacha way/Independence way by Eldorado cross junction, Muhammadu Buhari way by Kansakali (Yan rake) and a few intersections and cross junctions along Aminu Kano way.
A sum of 18,782,892.72 million Naira was given for the first batch of the repairs.
However, the reporter was unable to obtain such collaborative documents for the remaining two batches of alleged pothole repairs as the agency did not want to release any of the documents to the public.
The reporter obtained the first document only through picture shots taken at the agency on sighting the document.
In the same vein, in the interview with the Director, Government Business at the KIRS, Sammani Ibrahim, he confirmed that shortly after the Service discontinued direct involvement in the collection of the daily Keke tax, the then KAROTA under the management of Baffa Babba Dan Agundi and the state government approved for KAROTA to handover the revenue generated from the daily Adaidaita sahu taxing to the Kano state Road Maintenance Agency (KARMA).
“I can recall then that there was an approval by his Excellency Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje that whatever amount generated from the daily taxing of Keke riders to be given directly to KARMA for road repairs of roads,” he said.
However, KARMA never confirmed that the money KAROTA gave them for filling and patching potholes came from the daily Adaidaita sahu tax collection, they rather made emphasis that the funds were from all funds gotten through monetary penalties on road and traffic offenses.
The Director Government Business Mr. Ibrahim also confirmed to Kano Focus that the KAROTA pay all agency generated revenue cumulatively into the Kano State Single Treasury Account
“KAROTA has numerous revenue items that generate funds from vehicle riders in the state, if a vehicle breaks traffic law, they collect a fine, if a vehicle rides with lenses or commit any road offense they collect a fine.”
“They cumulate all these various funds as one and deposit it into the bank, they do not specify that a certain fund is for daily Adaidaita sahu tax collection or traffic offense fine” he said.
Mr. Ibrahim said the KAROTA sends the funds they generate to the bank, and they call and also send a written correspondence attached with the teller stating the amount of money they deposit into the Kano State Single Treasury Account.
Mr. Ibrahim added that only the KAROTA could provide specifics on the amount they generate from the daily Adaidaita sahu ticket tax process.
However, the KAROTA were unable to provide any information regarding the money generated from the daily Adaidaita sahu ticket tax collect as the KAROTA PRO Mr. Nabulisi kept referring the reporter to the Kano State Internal Revenue Service.
Reintroduction of daily Adaidaita sahu taxing by Abba Kabir Yusuf Government a Hoax
In September 2023, Na’isa released a press release that the present government would soon begin the collection of daily taxes from Adaidaita sahu riders, as well as enforcement of re-registration payment on the tricyclists.
But KANO FOCUS sources assure that the present government has no plans to carry out the reintroduction of the daily Keke tax or any other form of Adaidaita sahu levy. According to an inside source at the KAROTA, the PRO was being overzealous in making the announcement.
“The declaration was indeed made, but the PRO wasn’t given approval to make the statement public when he did,” the source said. I can tell you that the press release by Nabulisi nearly caused his job,” the insider said.
KANO FOCUS reached out to Na’isa on his statement, and he said the only thing he could say “is that there is no plan yet on reintroducing the daily taxing.”
KANO FOCUS dug deeper to enquire into why the government hasn’t said anything regarding the reintroduction of the daily tax since a press release was made public on the matter, but he declined to answer any further questions on the matter.
This report was done with Support from the International Centre for Investigative Reporting, ICIR.
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NDLEA commends court over 15-Year jail term for drug suspect in Kano
Nasiru Yusuf Ibrahim
The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA), Kano Strategic Command, has commended the Federal High Court in Kano for sentencing a 20-year-old drug suspect, Muhammad Maharazu, to 15 years imprisonment.
In a statement issued by the Public Relations Officer NDLEA Kano Strategic Command Assistant Superintendent of Narcotics Sadiq Muhammad Maigatari on Thursday, the command said the conviction followed Maharazu’s arrest on February 14, 2026, at the notorious Filin Idi drug den in Kano.
According to the NDLEA, the suspect was apprehended by operatives of the Commander’s Special Joint Task Force in possession of various illicit substances, including Diazepam tablets. During the operation, Maharazu allegedly produced a knife in an attempt to attack officers while trying to evade arrest but was swiftly disarmed and taken into custody.
The agency said Justice S. M. Shuaibu of the Federal High Court, Kano, sentenced the convict to 15 years imprisonment on April 15, 2026, with no option of fine. The sentence is to take effect from the date of judgment.
Reacting to the development, the NDLEA Kano Commander, Dahiru Yahaya Lawal, described the judgment as decisive and a strong warning to drug offenders.
“This conviction sends a clear message that no amount of threats or violence will deter our officers from carrying out their mandate. Kano will not be a safe haven for drug traffickers,” he said.
The command added that the custodial sentence would serve as a deterrent to others involved in drug trafficking or those who resort to violence to resist arrest.
It also called on members of the public to continue supporting the agency’s efforts in tackling substance abuse and illicit drug trafficking, emphasizing that the fight against drug-related crimes requires collective responsibility.
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Dangote, Pope Leo XIV, Trump, Xi Jinping, others named in TIME 100 most influential people for 2026
Nasiru Yusuf Ibrahim
Renowned African industrialist and philanthropist, Aliko Dangote, has been named among TIME Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People in the World for 2026, reaffirming his standing as one of the most successful and iconic business leaders of his generation.
KANO FOCUS reports that Dangote joins global influential figures from multiple sectors, including political leaders such as U.S. President Donald Trump, Chinese President Xi Jinping, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, revered Pope Leo XIV, current head of Catholic Church as well as business and technology leaders including Google CEO Sundar Pichai and YouTube CEO Neal Mohan.
A statement sent to Kano Focus by Esan Sunday of Dangote group said the annual TIME100 list, published on Wednesday April 15, 2026, recognises global figures whose leadership, ideas, and actions are shaping the future across business, politics, culture, and society. Dangote’s inclusion places him alongside prominent international figures drawn from diverse spheres of global influence.
This marks Dangote’s second appearance on the prestigious TIME100 list, following his first recognition in 2014, when he was honoured for his exceptional impact on business and philanthropy. His return to the list more than a decade later underscores the consistency and scale of his influence on the global stage.
Dangote, who is being recognized for his African industrial drive is the only Nigerian on the list and featured in the titan and innovators category. Other prominent honorees named alongside Dangote in the titan category are Reid Wiseman, Commander of the Artemis II mission to the moon; Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet and Neal Mohan, CEO of YouTube.
Also featuring prominently under the titan category are Michael and Susan Dell, the high-profile American tech billionaires and philanthropists best known as the founders of the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation, a global non-profit that focuses on improving the lives of children living in urban poverty. Included here also is the American designer and billionaire, Ralph Lauren, best known for founding the global lifestyle empire Ralph Lauren Corporation.
Recognized in the Pioneer category are individuals with breakthroughs in Science and Social Advocacy such Kiran Musunuru and Rebecca Ahrens-Nicklas, both of whom were cited for medical breakthroughs in genetic therapy as well as Aaron Williams, recognized for advancements in heart transplant readiness.
Influential figures recognized in global entertainment and culture include Ranbir Kapoor, prominent Indian actor; Dakota Johnson, recognized as an actress and cultural icon and Kate Hudson, included for her cultural influence.
As Founder and President of Dangote Group—Africa’s largest indigenous industrial conglomerate—Dangote has played a central role in advancing industrialisation across the continent. Under his leadership, the Group has made landmark investments spanning cement manufacturing, sugar and food processing, agriculture, infrastructure, and lately energy, significantly reducing Africa’s reliance on imports while creating millions of direct and indirect jobs.
In its citation, TIME Magazine highlighted Dangote’s vision of building African industries with local resources for global competitiveness, noting his recent investments in large‑scale energy and manufacturing infrastructure as emblematic of his long‑term commitment to Africa’s economic transformation.
Beyond business, Dangote is widely acclaimed for his philanthropic leadership through the Aliko Dangote Foundation (ADF), one of Africa’s largest private philanthropic organisations. The Foundation supports critical initiatives across healthcare, nutrition, education, disaster relief, and economic empowerment, contributing to improved outcomes for vulnerable communities across the continent.
The 2026 TIME100 recognition further reflects a broader global acknowledgement of African leadership, innovation, and enterprise, with Dangote standing as a symbol of the continent’s growing influence in shaping global economic and development narratives.
This latest honour consolidates Aliko Dangote’s legacy as a visionary industrialist and philanthropist, whose work continues to drive sustainable development, inclusive growth, and long‑term value creation—both within Africa and beyond.
Under his leadership, Dangote Group recently launched Vision 2030, with which Dangote Industries aims to transform from a regional $30 billion conglomerate into a $100 billion global powerhouse by 2030.
This strategy focuses on industrial self-sufficiency for Africa, moving the group from “regional dominance to global relevance”.
Dangote said the roadmap to vision 2030 is divided into phases to “supercharge” the group’s expansion; with phase one spanning 2025-2028 focused on scaling existing businesses—cement, fertilizer, and energy—and optimizing assets for international competitiveness.
The Phase two running from 2028-2030 is for the deployment of new businesses and ventures into global markets to drive the final leap to the $100 billion revenue target. The Dangote Group plans to venture into steel manufacturing, power, and deep-sea ports to tackle industrial bottlenecks across Africa.
This recognition by Time Magazine underscores the growing global acknowledgment of African leadership and innovation, and highlights Aliko Dangote’s enduring influence as a visionary leader committed to sustainable development and inclusive growth.
The 2026 list underscores the expanding global visibility of African leadership and Dangote’s continued influence as a leading industrialist and philanthropist.
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Kano Govt announces second term holiday for 2025/2026 academic session
Nasiru Yusuf Ibrahim
The Kano State Government has announced the commencement of the second term holiday for the 2025/2026 academic session across all public and private primary and secondary schools in the state.
In a statement issued by the Director of Public Enlightenment in the Ministry, Musbahu Aminu Yakasai on Wednesday, day schools are to proceed on holiday from Friday, April 17, while boarding schools will close on Saturday, April 18, 2026.
According to the statement, the break is intended to provide students and staff with adequate time to rest and prepare for the third term.
The ministry further stated that boarding schools are expected to resume on Sunday, May 3, 2026, while day schools will reopen on Monday, May 4, 2026, when academic activities will continue.
The Commissioner for Education, Dr. Ali Haruna Abubakar Makoda, urged parents and guardians to ensure that their children return promptly on the resumption dates to avoid disruption to academic progress. He also directed school administrators to strictly adhere to the approved academic calendar.
Makoda reaffirmed the state government’s commitment to providing a conducive learning environment and maintaining high standards in the education sector.
