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Over 30 Property Owners Sue Adron Homes Over Estate Maintenance Issues {SEE DOCUMENTS}

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Over 30 property owners at Treasure Park & Gardens, City of David Estate, Simawa, Ogun State, have dragged real estate firm, Adron Homes & Properties Limited, its Chief Executive Officer, Adetola Emmanuel King, and its facility management company to court over alleged imposition of services, extortion and unlawful electricity disconnection.

The aggrieved residents, led by Mr Olabode Lukman Cole, alleged in their suit that Adron Homes was treating them like tenants despite their outright purchase of plots of land and payment for development levies within the estate.

According to the statement of claim, the residents said Adron promised during sale that it was only a developer and would hand over the estate to landowners after completion. They claimed the company assured them it was not an estate manager and would not interfere in the day-to-day running of the estate.

Contrary to the promise, the claimants said the firm imposed a facility management company and took unilateral decisions on the management of the estate, including the appointment of a security outfit without residents’ input.

They accused Adron of sidelining a duly registered residents’ association which had been managing estate affairs through committees, alleging that the company disrupted an already functional structure and replaced it with imposed services.

On power supply, the residents said Adron introduced a 33KV electricity line and collected payments with a promise of steady power. However, they alleged that the firm later installed its own prepaid meters without the involvement of Ibadan Electricity Distribution Company (IBEDC), the statutory supplier in the area.

They said the company now sells electricity at N231.45/kwh, which they claimed is above the NERC-approved rate of N209.50/kwh. Despite this, they alleged that power supply became epileptic from late 2022, while complaints to Adron were ignored.

The claimants added that the company introduced fresh policies through a circular dated June 5, 2023, which included the planned introduction of access cards to control entry into the estate and removal of street name plates funded by residents.

They alleged that the company’s owner, King, insisted publicly that he owned the estate and could make any decision unilaterally, even against the interests of landowners.

They said when efforts at the Ogun State Multi-Door Courthouse failed due to the company’s refusal to sign an agreement, they approached the court for redress.

Among other reliefs, they are asking the court to declare that they are not tenants, that Adron has no right to unilaterally manage the estate, and that it lacks the licence to sell electricity without NERC’s approval.

However, in its defence, a team of lawyers from Afe Babalola (SAN) & Co., led by Ola Faro, denied the claims, stating that Adron did not promise to hand over control of the estate to the residents.

They argued that Adron had developed infrastructure including fences, roads and estate gates before sales and only charged infrastructure fees for maintenance purposes.

On the electricity issue, the defence stated that IBEDC had refused to install individual meters and insisted on a central system, prompting Adron to install the 33KV line and engage a third-party firm to manage supply and vending.

The firm maintained that the residents agreed to this arrangement and that Adron had spent millions on the power infrastructure.

Justice M. Akinyemi of the Ogun State High Court had earlier ordered all parties to maintain status quo in a ruling delivered on March 10, 2025. But tensions escalated after Adron allegedly disconnected power supply to some claimants in early May over their refusal to pay a N250,000 annual maintenance levy.

The residents filed contempt proceedings on May 15

 

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Tegbe clarifies: No 3-month promise on power grid, outlines realistic reform timeline

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The Minister-designate for Power, Joseph Olasunkanmi Tegbe, has firmly clarified that he never promised to fix Nigeria’s national electricity grid within three months, describing such claims circulating in sections of the media as a misrepresentation of his Senate screening remarks.

A statement issued  after his appearance before the Senate stressed that Tegbe was deliberate and cautious in his presentation, avoiding unrealistic timelines while outlining a structured reform pathway for the power sector.

According to the clarification, Tegbe explained that while Nigerians can expect early signs of progress, particularly in grid stabilisation within his first 100 days in office, comprehensive reforms will be guided strictly by technical assessments, stakeholder consultations, and sector realities.

He noted that critical challenges such as gas supply constraints, metering gaps, infrastructure decay, and commercial inefficiencies require coordinated interventions that cannot be resolved through arbitrary timelines.

“My commitment to this distinguished chamber and to Nigerians is clear: we will deliver visible and measurable improvement in the power sector,” Tegbe stated during the screening.
He assured that his focus would include stabilising the national grid, modernising transmission and distribution infrastructure, strengthening commercial frameworks, and enforcing accountability across the electricity value chain.

On tariff policy, the minister-designate reaffirmed that reforms would be carefully designed to balance sustainability with social protection, ensuring that vulnerable households are shielded while also restoring investor confidence in the sector.

The statement further emphasised that Tegbe’s approach reflects discipline, technical understanding, and a reform-minded agenda aimed at delivering lasting solutions rather than short-term political promises.

It added that he remains open to responsible media engagement and constructive clarification where necessary, noting that accurate reporting is essential to public understanding of ongoing efforts to reposition Nigeria’s power sector.

Tegbe reaffirmed his readiness to lead a transparent, results-driven reform process anchored on accountability, realism, and measurable progress.

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Yoruba Heritage Festival Honouring Ogedengbe Begins July 29

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A grand cultural renaissance celebrating the enduring legacy of legendary Yoruba war hero and statesman, Ogedengbe Agbogungboro, will take centre stage as the 2026 edition of Ogedengbe Fiesta holds from July 29 to 31 across Osun State and Ekiti State.

The three-day heritage festival, unveiled by organisers on Wednesday, is themed, “Ogedengbe Agbogungboro Legacy: Leadership, Security, and Statecraft for Modern Governance in Nigeria.”

The event is designed to preserve Yoruba cultural heritage, deepen historical consciousness, promote tourism and stimulate national conversations on leadership, peacebuilding and governance.

According to the organisers, the fiesta will commence with traditional homage at Atorin and heritage excursions to notable Kiriji War historical sites in Imesi-Ile, where participants will relive significant moments in Yoruba military and political history.

The programme will also feature guided visits to the historic Ogedengbe Cave, Ibu Latoosa Site and the Yoruba Peace Treaty Grove, all regarded as symbolic monuments of Yoruba resilience, diplomacy and unity.

As part of activities lined up for the celebration, participants will tour the gardens of renowned legal icon and elder statesman, Afe Babalola, in Okemesi-Ekiti.

The organisers further disclosed that a Legacy Awards and Hall of Fame Investiture ceremony would hold in Ilesa to honour individuals who have contributed immensely to the promotion of Yoruba culture, leadership and community development.

A distinguished personality lecture in honour of Aare Afe Babalola, SAN, OFR, CON, and Arole Fabunmi of Okemesi-Ekiti is also expected to headline the event, with scholars, traditional rulers, cultural enthusiasts and public intellectuals billed to discuss pathways to strengthening governance and security through indigenous values and historical lessons.

The organisers noted that all activities would commence daily by 11am, adding that the festival would serve as a rallying point for lovers of Yoruba culture, history and tourism across Nigeria and beyond.

They described the fiesta as not only a celebration of the heroic exploits of Ogedengbe Agbogungboro, but also a strategic platform to inspire a new generation of leaders through the ideals of courage, unity, patriotism and visionary leadership.

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No Return to Fuel Subsidy, FG Insists Amid Rising Hardship

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Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Taiwo Oyedele

The Federal Government on Tuesday ruled out any plan to reinstate fuel subsidy despite worsening economic hardship and mounting public pressure.

The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Taiwo Oyedele, stated this in Paris, France, during a meeting with global investors alongside President Bola Tinubu.

Oyedele said the government would also not introduce price controls, stressing that market forces remain the preferred mechanism for determining petrol prices.

“We will not bring back fuel subsidy because it creates distortions for the economy, and we won’t introduce price control because we believe in the market,” he said.

The minister argued that the subsidy regime had long undermined economic efficiency, adding that emerging global energy shifts, including developments in Iran, present fresh investment opportunities for Nigeria.

The removal of petrol subsidy in May 2023 triggered a steep rise in inflation, worsening the country’s cost-of-living crisis.

Nigeria’s headline inflation climbed from 22.41 per cent in May 2023 to 34.19 per cent by June 2024 — its highest level in nearly two decades — driven by surging fuel, food, and transportation costs.
Food inflation further accelerated, exceeding 39 per cent by October 2024, while transport fares soared by nearly 300 per cent, compounded by currency devaluation.

Despite the economic strain, Tinubu defended the policy, saying it had stabilised the foreign exchange market.

“Subsidy that was a burden to the entire country was removed, and ever since we have achieved FX stability,” the President said, according to his Special Assistant on Social Media, Dada Olusegun.

In a related statement, the President’s Special Adviser on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, said the administration’s reforms were aimed at eliminating structural distortions, strengthening macroeconomic stability, and laying the foundation for inclusive growth.

He added that the government remained committed to fiscal discipline and transparency.

Highlighting economic progress, Oyedele disclosed that Nigeria recorded an 11.2 per cent growth in Gross Domestic Product in dollar terms in 2025, describing it as a major step towards the country’s ambition of building a $1tn economy by 2030.

He also pledged that the government would begin publishing quarterly financial reports to enhance accountability and public trust.

Also speaking, the Director-General of the Debt Management Office, Patience Oniha, assured investors of Nigeria’s commitment to prudent borrowing and sustainable debt management.

The Federal Government has continued to defend its reform agenda despite growing public discontent, insisting that the long-term gains will outweigh the current economic pains.

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