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Governor Akeredolu Opens St. Jacobs Hotel

Conscious of the role of  hospitality in transforming the socio-economic landscape of a city, Dubai business mogul and Chairman of Jacob Family Investment Ltd, King Babatope Jacob Abayomi Adebiyi has pioneered St. Jacobs Hotel – a world-class hotel in the city of Akure, Ondo State, Nigeria.

Now the cynosure of all eyes in and around Alagbaka GRA, St. Jacobs’ Hotel is a luxurious edifice which boasts 45 executive rooms, 5 royal suites, 5 diplomatic suites and one presidential suite. Located in a serene environment and poised to give its lodgers utmost comfort. The hotel, embodies opulence, and reflects the owner’s high taste and hospitality.

Described by many as one of its kind in Southwest Nigeria, St. Jacobs Hotel is fitted with a grandeur reception, life gym, laundry, water fountain carved out of a rock, serene poolside, an exotic restaurant, exclusive lounge deluxe rooms and beautiful artistic images depicting Africa’s rich culture.

Governor Akeredolu Opens St. Jacobs Hotel

On Saturday, 20 September 2020, King Adebiyi hosted top officials, business tycoons, industrialists and dignitaries to the official opening of the edifice.

Basking in the euphoria of the great achievement, he could not but give glory to God for the successful completion of the project which, according to him, was conceived five years ago. Shortly after, the St. Jacobs Hotel was opened by the Governor of Ondo, Arakunrin Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN) alongside the Deji of Akure, HRH Oba Aladetoyinbo Ogunlade Aladelusi and the Olowa of Igbara-Oke, Oba Adefarakanmi Agbede.

The event began with an opening prayer by Pastor Dele David, followed by a welcome address by Mrs Taiwo Adebiyi, the CEO’s wife, who warmly welcomed guests and acknowledged the presence of the royal fathers and the special guest of honour, Governor of Ondo State, Arakunrin Rotimi Akeredolu (SAN).

Also Read: Prince Bisi Olatilo Honoured at the Bisi Olatilo Show’s 20th Anniversary

In his goodwill message, Mr Tope Ogunrinde commended the CEO’s doggedness towards the great achievement. Governor Akeredolu, a passionate advocate of industrialization, in his speech, thanked the CEO for choosing Akure for such a laudable project as well as creating job opportunities for people. Amidst prayers and appreciation for the honor bestowed on him to open the facility. He further enlivened the facility tour with rib-cracking jokes and commendations.

Thereafter, prayers for the CEO, staff members and management were said, after which the vote of thanks was proposed by Mrs Taiwo Adebiyi.

At the exotic restaurant were guests being treated to a delicious buffet, an all-you-can-eat of both local and continental dishes.

Governor Akeredolu Opens St. Jacobs Hotel

The Deji of Akure, Oba Aladelusi in his interview with Spotlight Africa Magazine at the end of the event, applauded the Chairman of St. Jacobs’ Hotel for establishing such a laudable investment in Akure. Describing the city as a peaceful place, he encouraged Akure’s sons and daughters abroad to come home and invest in the city.

Meanwhile, a grand supermarket, salon, and restaurant are a few other features of the much-anticipated annex of the hotel currently under construction. Without a doubt, this will pave the way for a lively atmosphere engendered by the ease of shopping for residents of Alagbaka and neighboring areas.

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Unity Bank and Providus Bank are merging Amidst Ongoing Reforms

The Unity Bank and Providus Bank merger has been approved by the Supreme Court, clearing the final legal hurdle. The combined bank will operate as Providus-Unity Bank (PUB).

The long-awaited merger between Unity Bank Plc and Providus Bank Limited has finally cleared its last major hurdle after the Nigerian Supreme Court dismissed the final legal challenges against the deal and approved the transfer of Unity Bank’s assets and liabilities.

The ruling comes after regulatory approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and overwhelming support from shareholders of both banks, effectively paving the way for the consolidation to move into its implementation phase.

The merger is part of efforts to create a stronger financial institution that meets the CBN’s recapitalisation requirements for banks with national licences.

With the legal process now concluded, the combined entity is expected to operate under the name Providus-Unity Bank (PUB). While the banks have not yet released a detailed transition timetable, official documents and statements provide a fairly clear picture of what customers can expect.

Mergers are designed to create stronger, more stable financial institutions, not to liquidate them.

Unity Bank brings a massive retail footprint and deep roots in agricultural financing, while Providus Bank contributes an advanced digital infrastructure and robust corporate banking systems.

Combined, the enlarged bank boasts an asset base projected to exceed ₦2 trillion and a deposit base of over ₦1.2 trillion. Your funds remain fully intact and accessible. Behind the scenes, IT teams from both banks are working to integrate their banking systems.

If any account number changes become necessary in the future, often to resolve rare instances where customers at both banks share identical account numbers, the bank will notify you directly well in advance.

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Nigeria remains the World Bank’s third-largest borrower with $18.5bn

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Nigeria remains the World Bank’s third-largest borrower, with $18.5bn in debt exposure, as fresh data show the country’s reliance on concessional loans continues to rise amid economic reforms and infrastructure funding needs.

Nigeria has remained the third-largest borrower from the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA), with the country’s debt exposure now standing at $18.5 billion as of March 31, 2026.

Fresh figures contained in the IDA’s March 2026 financial statements showed that Nigeria’s exposure dropped slightly from the $18.7 billion recorded in December 2025, representing a decline of about $200 million within three months.

Even with the slight quarterly drop, Nigeria’s debt to the World Bank has continued to rise on a yearly basis. The latest figure is about $1.2 billion higher than the $17.3 billion exposure recorded in March 2025, showing a 6.9 per cent increase over one year.

The new ranking places Nigeria behind Bangladesh and Pakistan among countries with the highest borrowing from the World Bank’s concessional lending arm. According to the report, Bangladesh remained the largest borrower with $22.7 billion exposure, while Pakistan followed with $19.2 billion. Nigeria came third with $18.5 billion.

Nigeria alone accounts for around eight per cent of the institution’s total loan portfolio and roughly 13.3 per cent of the combined exposure of the IDA’s ten largest borrowers.

The report further showed that the 10 largest borrowing countries account for about 60 per cent of the World Bank’s concessional lending exposure globally.

Nigeria’s rising exposure highlights the country’s growing dependence on multilateral financing to support infrastructure projects, social programmes, economic reforms and budget support amid ongoing fiscal pressures.

The Federal Government is also in talks with the World Bank for another fresh loan facility valued at $1.25 billion. If approved, total World Bank loan approvals secured by Nigeria since President Bola Ahmed Tinubu assumed office in May 2023 could rise to around $10.6 billion.

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NCC orders Telco’s To compensate subscribers for poor network service

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has instructed Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) to make things right for customers when the network quality in certain areas doesn’t meet the expected standards.

This directive was shared in a statement released on Sunday by Nnenna Ukoha, who leads the Public Affairs Department. The statement emphasized the Commission’s firm view that customers shouldn’t have to bear the entire brunt of service problems if operators aren’t meeting the required service delivery benchmarks.

Part of the statement said “Under this directive, erring operators will compensate affected users directly for breaches of Quality of Service (QoS) Key Performance Indicators (KPIs).
Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) shall be required to pay these compensations for instances of poor quality of service recorded within specified time frames.

The compensation will be provided in the form of airtime credits, calculated based on subscribers’ average spending patterns and their presence within Local Government Areas where service failures occur.”

Ukoha explained that this directive stems from the Commission’s overall approach to regulation, which prioritizes the consumer right at the heart of Nigeria’s telecommunications landscape. They emphasized that today’s telecommunications services are fundamental to economic activity, social connections, and gaining access to digital possibilities.

“When service quality is poor, the consequences affect productivity, commercial activities, and even public confidence in our communications system.

While regulatory fines have traditionally served as a deterrent against poor service delivery, the Commission is adopting a more consumer-focused approach that strengthens accountability within the industry,” the statement said.

The Commission has designed this measure to complement existing and ongoing efforts to strengthen service quality monitoring and enforce performance standards.

“Further to this directive by the Commission to MNOs on compensation to consumers, the Commission is also mandating Tower Companies that own the critical infrastructure for Quality of Service delivery, such as masts, to invest in infrastructure with measurable outcomes using sums that it has fined these companies, in addition to other financial fines the Commission will deem appropriate.

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