Business
We are not recruiting, FIRS cautions against scam
The Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) has urged the public to be vigilant and avoid dealing with scam artists who pose as recruitment agents for the service.
This is contained in a statement issued on Monday in Abuja by Mr Johannes Wojuola, Special Assistant on Media and Communication to the Executive Chairman, FIRS, Muhammad Nami.
“On repeated occasions, the FIRS has cautioned the general public to be vigilant and circumspect not to deal with scam artists who pose as recruitment agents for the Service and collect huge sums of money from unsuspecting victims with the promise to provide them employment.
“Again, the Management of the FIRS wishes to caution the public to be wary of these employment scam artists.
“The Service wishes to emphatically state that it is not conducting any recruitment at the moment, and importantly that it does not conduct recruitment exercises through back door channels.
“Should FIRS at any instance have need to expand its workforce and consequently seek to recruit competent hands to carry out the task of revenue mobilisation for the nation, the public can be rest assured that the Service would follow appropriate channels and processes in doing so.
” This includes advertisements on public channels of communication, followed by rigorous screening, interviews and examination exercises.
“The FIRS also wishes to caution media practitioners not to allow their mediums to be used as platforms for publishing unauthorised fake application processes and recruitment portals that hoodwink the unsuspecting public,” the statement said.
It added that FIRS would take all necessary legal actions against any platform found to be engaged in such fraudulent advertisement.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that some Nigerians groan over fraudulent elements who defraud graduates seeking for jobs.
Business
TikTok won’t be sold, says Chinese owner as US ban looms
ByteDance, the Chinese parent company of TikTok, says it has no intention of selling the social media platform.
“Foreign media reports that ByteDance is exploring the sale of TikTok are untrue,” the company wrote in a statement on Toutiao, a news aggregation app that it owns.
“ByteDance doesn’t have any plan to sell TikTok.”
The statement was in response to an article by The Information on Thursday saying “ByteDance is exploring scenarios for selling TikTok’s US business without the algorithm that recommends videos to TikTok users”.
The development followed after the US passed a law to force ByteDance to sell the hugely popular video app or be banned in America.
The sell-or-ban measure was signed into law by US President Joe Biden on Wednesday.
The bill, passed by the senate on Tuesday, follows concerns among US lawmakers that China could access Americans’ data or use the app for surveillance.
In March, the house of representatives passed a bill to ban TikTok unless the app parts ways with ByteDance.
The lawmakers voted — 352 in favour of the proposed law and 65 against it — in a rare moment of bipartisan unity.
In 2022, the US house of representatives ordered its staff to delete TikTok from any house-issued mobile devices.
TikTok recently said it would challenge in court the “unconstitutional” law.
Business
Dangote refinery ranked above 10 biggest European refineries
A financial data and media company, Bloomberg, has ranked the Dangote Refinery above the top 10 biggest refineries in Europe.
According to data compiled by the business news platform, the refinery has more capacity than many European ones.
The $20bn-worth refinery located in Lekki-Epe Expressway, Lagos State, can refine 650,000 barrels of petroleum products per day.
The report sighted by newsmen on Thursday stated that this is over 246,00bpd capacity, more than Shell’s Pernis Refinery, which is located in the Netherlands.
It added that the Pernis Refinery, which has an installed capacity of 404,000bpd, is the biggest in Europe. The BP Rotterdam Refinery in the Netherlands has a capacity of 380,000.
Bloomberg also reported that the GOI Energy ISAB Refinery in Italy was built with a refining capacity of 360,000bpd.
Also, the TotalEnergies Antwerp refining facility in Belgium can refine 338,000bpd.
Others listed in the report were the Orlen Plock Refinery in Poland with 327,000bpd; Shell’s Rheinland in Germany with 327,000bpd; Miro Refinery in Germany with 310,000 capacity; and the ExxonMobil Anterwep Refinery in Belgium with 307,000 capacity.
It added that the Saras Sarroch Refinery in Italy had 300,000 capacity; the ExxonMobil Fawley in England had 270,000bpd capacity.
The Bloomberg report described the Dangote Refinery as a ‘game changer’ and said it was taking advantage of cheaper US oil imports for as much as a third of its feedstock as it started up.
According to analysts, the refinery has been shipping products in recent weeks while readying two units to enable petrol output, which will deliver a long-promised transformation of the fuel market in Nigeria and the region.
“Dangote is going to influence Atlantic Basin gasoline markets this summer and for the rest of the year,” an oil expert, Alan Gelder, told Bloomberg.
According to the average estimate of analysts at WoodMac, FGE, and Citac, the refinery is running at about 300,000 barrels a day, nearly half its nameplate capacity.
The complex has started shipping jet fuel, diesel, and naphtha as it widens to a full slate of products.
Reuters recently reported that the Dangote oil refinery could end a decades-long petrol trade from Europe to Africa, worth $17 billion a year.
Reuters, quoting analysts and traders, said the Dangote refinery was heaping pressure on European refineries already at risk of closure from heightened competition, adding that the refinery would be the largest in Africa and Europe when it reaches full capacity.
About a third of Europe’s 1.33mbpd average petrol exports in 2023 went to West Africa, a bigger chunk than any other region, with most of those exports ending up in Nigeria, Reuters said, quoting Kpler data.
Dangote Refinery has begun selling diesel into the Nigerian market, crashing the pump price from N1,600 to N940 in less than a month.
Business
FG grants Air Peace approval to commence Abuja-London flights
The federal government (FG) says it has approved the commencement of flight services from Abuja to London by Air Peace.
Festus Keyamo, minister of aviation and aerospace development, spoke on Channels television on Thursday.
Keyamo said he gave the approval for Air Peace to add Abuja to its London route on April 24.
“Just yesterday (Wednesday), I approved Air Peace for the Abuja-London route, not only Lagos-London route,” the minister said.
“British Airways also come to Abuja.
“So, let Air Peace block that path and start a war. It’s all for the good of Nigerians.”
Speaking on the British government’s refusal to grant operation access to Heathrow Airport, Keyamo said the federal government agreed to operate the Gatwick Airport.
He said Air Peace or any interested local airline should be operating to Heathrow Airport and not Gatwick.
The minister said the Gatwick Airport is only a low-hanging fruit and a starting point.
Keyamo said he has been reviewing the bilateral air service agreement (BASA) between the United Kingdom (UK) and Nigeria and some decisions would be made after the exercise.
On March 30, 2024, Air Peace began direct flight operations from Lagos to Gatwick Airport in London.
-
Business1 week ago
X will start charging new users to post, says Elon Musk
-
Entertainment1 week ago
JUST IN: Cubana Chief Priest pleads not guilty to naira abuse charge
-
News2 days ago
FAAN reopens Lagos airport runway after Dana Air incident
-
Entertainment1 week ago
Cubana Chief Priest arrives court for naira abuse trial
-
Celebrities1 week ago
‘Not see you for 6 months, impossible’ — Davido reacts to Cubana Chief Priest’s bail
-
Business1 week ago
Elon Musk threatens to suspend X accounts doing engagement farming
-
Celebrities1 week ago
Kai Cenat threatens to sue OnlyFans model, Layla Red who leaked their chats
-
World1 week ago
Dubai international airport cancels flights as flood ravages runway, UAE