News
Tinubu, Shettima other VIPs to pay airport fees
President Bola Tinubu and the Vice President Kashim Shettima are now to pay airport access toll and parking fees at airports. This was one of the decisions of the Federal Executive Council its meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday. Festus Keyamo, the Minister of Aviation, who announced this, said government was losing over 82 per cent of the accruable revenue from the e-tags that provide access to the airports. He said the memoranda had initially recommended an exemption for the president and the vice president, but the president had overruled the recommendation, insisting that he and the VP alongside their aides must pay tolls.
“Our memo says ‘with the exception of the President and the Vice President’. But the President overruled me and said he and the Vice President will pay, he said everybody will pay,” Keyamo said. The Minister lamented that VIPs who have the money to pay tolls are evading payment, leaving the authorities to rely on charges from the poor.

“They don’t pay the access fees. They don’t pay for parking, they don’t pay for essential services at airports, and they are VIPs. And I told myself on my team, I said not under my watch. It will not happen,” he said. Keyamo promised to put an end to episodes where uniform officers harass airport staff at the gates, assuring citizens that more cameras will be “planted” in strategic positions to capture those culpable. He said the federal government would generate over N10 billion annually from tolls even if it considered rebate for military veterans.
-
Economy8 hours agoGlobal Economy Endures War Shock So Far–Georgieva
-
Economy8 hours agoManufacturing sector paid N329.59bn to FG as VAT; company income tax net N1.37trn in Q1 2026—NBS
-
News8 hours agoAfreximbank cancels annual meeting on Ebola concerns
-
Agriculture8 hours agoAFC backs $7bn Dangote Fertiliser expansion to strengthen Africa’s food security
-
News8 hours agoFG, States, LGs shared N2.26trn as April FAAC allocation
-
Economy8 hours agoNigeria’s inflation rate inches up to 15.93% in May, CPPE attributes rise to impact of geopolitical tensions in the Middle East
