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ICPC confirms receipt of Dangote’s petition against NMDPRA CEO Farouk Ahmed.
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Dangote alleges corruption, foreign school fees scandal, seeks prosecution.
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Lawyers, students, CSOs, PETROAN rally behind Ahmed, urge due process.
Nigeria’s downstream petroleum sector has been plunged into renewed controversy following confirmation by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) that it will investigate a petition filed against the Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), Farouk Ahmed.
The petition, submitted on December 16, 2025, by the Chairman of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, through his lawyer, Ogwu Onoja (SAN), accuses Ahmed of corruption, abuse of office, and financial impropriety.
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Dangote alleged that the NMDPRA boss spent over $7 million on the education of his four children in Switzerland, purportedly paid upfront for six years, without any legitimate source of income to justify such expenditure.
In the petition, Dangote claimed that Ahmed violated the Code of Conduct for Public Officers, diverted public funds for personal use, and engaged in corrupt enrichment through his position at the regulatory authority.
Reacting to the development, ICPC spokesperson John Odey confirmed that the anti-graft agency had received the petition and would subject it to investigation in line with its statutory mandate.
“The ICPC confirms receipt of a formal petition against the CEO of NMDPRA. The allegations will be thoroughly investigated,” Odey said.
However, the allegations have drawn sharp reactions from multiple groups, including lawyers, civil society organisations, students, and industry stakeholders, many of whom dismissed the claims as a coordinated media trial.
A coalition of 40 lawyers under the Lawyers in Defence of Democracy and Anti-Corruption described Dangote’s accusations as unfounded and aimed at discrediting a public officer without due process.
Speaking in Abuja, the group said the allegations were unsupported by evidence and warned that such public campaigns could undermine investor confidence and Nigeria’s economic reform agenda.
Similarly, the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) condemned what it described as an attempt to intimidate the NMDPRA leadership, stressing that regulatory institutions must not be coerced to serve private interests.
NANS stated that while it supports industrial growth, character assassination of public officials undermines national stability and governance.
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More than 50 civil society organisations also rejected the allegations, describing them as false and politically motivated. The groups argued that the NMDPRA’s anti-monopoly posture in the downstream sector had attracted resistance from vested interests.
The Petroleum Products Retail Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria (PETROAN) equally passed a vote of confidence in Ahmed, warning that sustained public attacks on regulators could erode confidence in Nigeria’s petroleum industry.
PETROAN further cautioned that aggressive price wars and public pronouncements on fuel pricing violate provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act, and could destabilise the market.
Despite the backlash, Dangote has insisted on a full investigation, calling on Ahmed to appear before the Code of Conduct Tribunal to explain the source of funds used for his children’s education.
The NMDPRA has previously dismissed similar allegations as smear campaigns, insisting that its leadership remains committed to transparency and regulatory fairness.
