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    Ernest Ndukwe replaces Pascal Dozie as MTN chairman

    Chronicle EditorBy Chronicle EditorJuly 25, 2019No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Ernest Ndukwe will replace Pascal Dozie as chairman of MTN Nigeria
    Ernest Ndukwe will replace Pascal Dozie as chairman of MTN Nigeria
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    • Omobola Johnson, Muhammad Ahmad appointed board members
    Ernest Ndukwe will replace Pascal Dozie as chairman of MTN Nigeria
    Ernest Ndukwe will replace Pascal Dozie as chairman of MTN Nigeria

    MTN Nigeria has appointed former telecoms regulatory chief Ernest Ndukwe as chairman-designate in a board shake-up following its debut stock market listing on the Nigerian bourse.

    Majority owned by South Africa’s MTN Group, MTN Nigeria listed in Lagos in May in a 2 trillion naira ($6.54 billion) debut, in part to settle a long-running dispute in Nigeria, its biggest market.

    That listing turned the telecoms company into the exchange’s second-largest stock by market value.

    Ndukwe, ex-chief executive of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), will take over from Pascal Dozie, who has been at the helm for almost two decades, on Sept. 2, MTN said.

    In addition to Ndukwe, MTN has appointed former Nigerian pension regulatory chief Muhammad Ahmad, ex-minister for communication Omobola Johnson and ex-banker Andrew Alli who once represented the International Finance Corporation to MTN Nigeria’s board.

    READ: MTN Nigeria board Chairman, Paschal Dozie, 5 other directors retire

    “(The) combination of extensive experience across the worlds of technology, finance, regulatory and policy development and corporate governance offers a hugely synergistic set of skills that will be of great benefit to us as we move into a new phase of growth,” MTN Nigeria Chief Executive Ferdinand Moolman said.

    MTN Nigeria grew to become Nigeria’s biggest telecoms firm under Dozie, who steps down alongside five other directors after 18 years at the helm of the company.

    In December, MTN agreed to make a $53 million payment to resolve a multibillion-dollar dividend repatriation row in Nigeria after it paid over $1 billion to settle a dispute over unregistered SIM cards and agreed to list on Nigeria’s bourse.

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    ADC youths protest at INEC office, demand Amupitan’s resignation

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    Retired Nigeria Police Force men and their families blocked a gate at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on Monday to protest their continued inclusion in the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). The demonstrators, led by the Police Retired Officers Forum of Nigeria (PROF), branded the program as "fraudulent, illegal, inhumane, and obnoxious" and urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign the Police Exit Bill. According to the retirees, if signed into law, the bill, which was passed by the National Assembly on December 4, 2025, and transmitted to the president on March 16, 2026, would remove police personnel from the CPS. The National Coordinator of PROF, CSP Raphael Irowainu (retd.), led the protest and stated that the goal was to get the president to act on the legislation. “Our major aim here is to prevail on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign our bill—the bill exiting the police from the Contributory Pension Scheme—passed by the National Assembly on 4th December 2025 and transmitted to him on 16th March 2026 into law, nothing more than that,” he said. Ads by Irowainu bemoaned that while other security agencies have been removed from the scheme, police personnel remain included. “The soldiers have been exited, the SSS has been exited, the Air Force has been exited, the Navy has been exited, and the National Intelligence Agency has been exited. The police, who are the father of them all, are trapped in this obnoxious Contributory Pension Scheme,” he added. The pensioners maintained that the CPS had a negative impact on their wellbeing, calling it a "slavery and untimely death-inducing pension scheme." Monday's demonstration is not the first time retired police officers have raised the issue. In July 2025, retirees held a similar demonstration at the National Assembly, seeking their expulsion from the plan. Some demonstrators, many of whom were elderly, also protested at the Force Headquarters in Abuja, expressing their dissatisfaction with the CPS's pension arrangements. The latest protest reflects rising frustration among retired police officers with pension reforms and their exclusion from benefits provided to other security organizations.

    Retired police officers block Presidential Villa, protest over pension scheme

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    ADC youths protest at INEC office, demand Amupitan’s resignation

    ADC youths protest at INEC office, demand Amupitan’s resignation

    April 20, 2026
    Marco Rose

    Bournemouth appoint Marco Rose as Iraola successor

    April 20, 2026
    Peter Okoye and NASRE dispute over alleged threat to journalist Bayo Adetu at Ikoyi High Court

    NASRE warns Peter Okoye over alleged threat to journalist

    April 20, 2026
    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police nab 42 miners over abduction of Kwara monarch

    April 20, 2026
    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police confirm kidnap of UTME candidates, others by pirates in Calabar

    April 20, 2026
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