News
NCC board chair hosts licensed telecoms operators in Lagos
Nasiru Yusuf Ibrahim
The Chairman of the Board of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Idris Olorunnimbe, last week received a delegation from the Association of Licensed Telecoms Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) on a courtesy visit at the Commission’s Lagos Office in Ikoyi.

KANO FOCUS reports that the delegation was led by ALTON Chairman, Gbenga Adebayo, alongside other senior members of the association.

The visit, which took place at the NCC’s Lagos office, provided an opportunity for both parties to strengthen collaboration and discuss issues affecting Nigeria’s telecommunications industry.

Industry observers say the engagement underscores the importance of sustained dialogue between the telecom regulator and licensed operators in advancing sectoral growth, improving service delivery, and addressing operational challenges within the industry.

The NCC remains the country’s telecommunications regulatory authority, while ALTON represents the interests of licensed telecom operators across Nigeria.
Headlines
Stakeholders seek stronger nutrition financing at local government level
Nasiru Yusuf Ibrahim
Civil society organisations, government officials and development partners have called for stronger financing, improved coordination and enhanced accountability to tackle malnutrition at the Local Government Area (LGA) level.
KANO FOCUS reports that the call was made at a high-level meeting convened by the Civil Society Scaling Up Nutrition in Nigeria in collaboration with the State Committee on Food and Nutrition. The meeting brought together representatives of LGAs, relevant ministries, departments and agencies, development partners, media actors and nutrition advocates to review the status of nutrition financing and governance at the grassroots.
Participants described the forum as a strategic platform for dialogue and collective commitment aimed at accelerating progress in addressing malnutrition through strengthened governance structures, sustainable financing and community-driven accountability systems.
Key Concerns Raised
Stakeholders expressed concern over the persistently high burden of malnutrition in several LGAs, noting alarming rates of stunting, wasting, micronutrient deficiencies and maternal malnutrition. They warned that these trends pose serious threats to child survival, cognitive development and long-term productivity.
The meeting also highlighted inadequate and inconsistent budgetary allocations for nutrition-specific and nutrition-sensitive interventions across federal, state and LGA levels. In many cases, participants observed, funds are either insufficient or released irregularly, undermining effective implementation and sustainability of nutrition programmes.
Other challenges identified included weak multi-sectoral coordination among critical sectors such as health, agriculture, education, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), and social protection; limited community engagement and accountability systems; and technical capacity gaps at the LGA level affecting planning, budgeting, monitoring and reporting.
Resolutions and Commitments
In response to the identified gaps, stakeholders resolved to prioritise investment in preventive, high-impact, low-cost nutrition interventions while strengthening curative measures at the grassroots. They emphasised that LGA budget allocations should focus more on preventive strategies to reduce long-term costs and save more lives.
Participants also pledged support for scaling up the local production of Ready-to-Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF) as both a preventive and therapeutic measure against acute malnutrition, while strengthening local economic value chains.
The meeting further resolved to improve budgetary releases for nutrition interventions, reactivate and strengthen Local Government Committees on Food and Nutrition (LGCFN), and revitalise coordination mechanisms at state and LGA levels to ensure integrated, evidence-based programming.
Stakeholders committed to facilitating continuous capacity building for LGA nutrition focal persons, civil society organisations and community structures. They also agreed to institutionalise community-led monitoring and social accountability mechanisms to track budget releases and service delivery performance.
In addition, participants called for intensified behaviour change communication campaigns promoting optimal Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF), dietary diversity, micronutrient supplementation and maternal nutrition. Traditional, religious and community leaders, as well as women’s groups, are to be engaged as nutrition champions.
Call to Action
The meeting urged state governments to prioritise nutrition in annual budgets, ensure timely release and efficient utilisation of funds, and institutionalise performance tracking mechanisms.
Local Government Authorities were called upon to mainstream nutrition into development plans, strengthen primary healthcare delivery systems, ensure functional Ward Development Committees and reactivate LGCFN platforms.
Development partners were encouraged to sustain and expand technical and financial support in alignment with national and subnational priorities.
Communities and caregivers were advised to adopt improved nutrition practices for children, adolescents, pregnant women and lactating mothers.
The media and civil society organisations were also tasked with institutionalising quarterly budget performance review sessions across the 44 LGAs, publicly recognising high-performing LGAs while constructively engaging those performing below expectations.
Commitment to Action
In their concluding remarks, stakeholders reaffirmed that improving nutrition at the LGA level is urgent and foundational to Nigeria’s socio-economic transformation. They stressed that ending malnutrition requires coordinated action, strong political will, transparent financing, empowered communities and sustained investment.
The communiqué was endorsed by Tijjani M., Mustapha Uba and Aminu Musa Saji of the Ministry for Local Government, as well as Sheriff Abubakar of CS-SUN Kano State.
News
Kwankwaso, Kano deputy governor visit Shekarau over death of his brother
Ibrahim Khalil
The National Leader of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, on Saturday paid a condolence visit to former Kano State Governor, Ibrahim Shekarau, at his residence in Kano State.
KANO FOCUS reports that Kwankwaso was accompanied by the Deputy Governor of Kano State, Aminu Abdulsalam Gwarzo, during the visit.
The visit was to commiserate with Shekarau and his family over a recent death of Dahiru Shekarau.
During the condolence call, prayers were offered for the repose of the soul of the deceased and for strength and comfort for the bereaved family.

The delegation expressed sympathy and solidarity with Shekarau, praying that Almighty Allah grants Dahiru Shekarau eternal rest and gives the family the fortitude to bear the loss.
News
NDLEA arrests woman with fake pregnancy, Ivorian excretes 82 cocaine wraps at Kano airport
Nasiru Yusuf Ibrahim
Operatives of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) have thwarted two separate attempts to smuggle illicit drugs through the Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport (MAKIA), Kano, and the Seme land border in Lagos State.
KANO FOCUS reports that in one of the incidents, a 35-year-old Kano-based businesswoman, Rabi Muhammad, was arrested on Monday, February 16, 2026, at the departure point of the Seme border while attempting to cross into Cotonou, Benin Republic.
In a statement signed by Femi Babafemi, Director of Media and Advocacy, NDLEA Headquarters, Abuja, on Sunday, the agency said the suspect was intercepted with a protruding stomach suggestive of pregnancy. However, a full body search revealed that the pregnancy was fake. The “baby bump” was reportedly fashioned from a pink-coloured calabash used to conceal 3,200 capsules of tramadol, which she had strapped around her stomach for onward sale in Cotonou.
On the same day in Kano, NDLEA operatives at the screening point of the departure hall of Mallam Aminu Kano International Airport intercepted a 41-year-old Ivorian national, Michael Gohouri, also known as Anunwa Onyinye Michael, during outward clearance for Ethiopian Airlines flight ET940 to Milan via Addis Ababa.
A body scan conducted on the suspect confirmed ingestion of illicit substances. He was subsequently placed under observation, during which he excreted 82 wraps of cocaine weighing 1.49 kilograms.
Investigations revealed that Gohouri had arrived in Lagos from Milan on January 17, 2026, and had travelled between Lagos and Enugu for three weeks before heading to Kano, where he allegedly ingested the cocaine in a hotel room. He was reportedly promised a payment of 5,000 Euros upon successful delivery of the drugs in Milan.
The suspect, who claims dual Ivorian and Nigerian parentage, said he applied for asylum in Italy in 2013 and currently holds a residence permit valid until May 25, 2026. He also possesses a Nigerian National Identification Number bearing the name Anunwa Onyinye Michael.
Meanwhile, the agency said its Commands and formations across the country continued their War Against Drug Abuse (WADA) sensitisation campaigns over the past week, including lectures delivered to students and staff of Government Senior Girls Secondary School, Kofar Kudu, Kano State.
Commending officers and men of the agency for the arrests and seizures, the NDLEA Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, Mohamed Buba Marwa (Rtd), said the operational successes reflect the agency’s balanced strategy of drug supply reduction and drug demand reduction efforts nationwide.
