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Facts Don’t Lie: Appraising The Professional Efforts Of Dr. Maxwell Patrick Uloko In Repositioning OPay’s Image While Debunking Unverified Rumours Against The Under-Publicized Fintech Giant

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BY AARON MIKE ODEH

At a time when social media speculation, couple with Artificial Intelligence work and unverified claims are increasingly shaping public perception, one Nigerian fintech institution that has recently become the subject of widespread rumours is OPay. Yet, beyond the sensational narratives being circulated online, verifiable facts, statistics, and institutional realities clearly indicate that OPay remains one of the strongest and fastest-growing digital financial service providers in Nigeria and Africa.

Ironically, despite its enormous economic contributions, many analysts believe OPay remains one of the most under-publicized corporate success stories in Nigeria’s financial technology sector. While the company’s POS network, financial inclusion drive, scholarship programmes, and employment opportunities continue impacting millions of lives daily, public conversations around the brand are often overshadowed by misinformation, controversy, or deliberate false narratives rather than its measurable developmental contributions to society.

More importantly, industry observers believe the company’s growing public confidence and institutional stability have been significantly strengthened through the strategic public engagement efforts of Dr. Maxwell Patrick Uloko, the Vice President, Public and Government Affairs at OPay Nigeria. Since assuming leadership responsibilities in public and government affairs, Dr. Uloko has consistently projected OPay as a responsible, regulation-compliant, and socially responsive financial institution committed to grassroots financial inclusion and national economic development.

Since its official launch in Nigeria in 2018 following Opera’s acquisition of PayCom Nigeria, OPay has evolved from a mobile payment platform into a major financial ecosystem serving millions of Nigerians through money transfers, POS operations, merchant payments, airtime purchases, debit card services, and digital banking solutions. The company was established with the mission of making financial services more inclusive through technology.

Today, OPay’s influence cuts across urban centres and rural communities alike. Reports indicate that the fintech giant supports millions of users nationwide through a vast network of over 500,000 POS agents and merchants operating across Nigeria. These agents have become critical to local economies, especially in underserved rural areas where access to conventional banking infrastructure remains limited. Through this extensive POS ecosystem, countless Nigerians now conduct daily transactions without travelling long distances to commercial bank branches.

A practical example of OPay’s growing grassroots importance can be seen in Otukpa, headquarters of Ogbadibo Local Government Area of Benue State, where local traders and residents increasingly depend on digital financial platforms for their daily survival and business activities.

At the popular Edeh Market in Otukpa, Mrs. Ene Oche, a local garri trader, represents thousands of rural market women whose businesses have gradually been transformed through easy-to-use digital transfer services provided by fintech platforms like OPay. According to observations within the market environment, many customers no longer move around with large volumes of cash due to insecurity concerns and the convenience associated with instant digital payments.

For traders like Mrs. Ene Oche, OPay has become more than just a mobile banking application; it now serves as an informal economic lifeline simplifying commercial transactions within the local market. Buyers purchasing garri, beans, vegetables, yam flour, and other food items can now transfer money instantly through nearby POS agents or directly through mobile transfers without delays traditionally associated with cash shortages or banking difficulties.

Residents within Otukpa also increasingly depend on OPay services for school fees payments, hospital bills, contribution levies, transport fares, and emergency family support transfers. In communities where commercial banking infrastructure remains inadequate, digital finance platforms have become practical alternatives helping ordinary citizens participate more effectively within the modern economy.

Market observers note that before the widespread penetration of fintech services, many traders often lost customers or sold goods on credit whenever buyers lacked physical cash. Today, the availability of OPay agents and digital payment channels has significantly improved transaction confidence, reduced financial stress, and strengthened commercial activities even within rural settlements.

Analysts believe this growing grassroots acceptance is partly connected to OPay’s deliberate financial inclusion policies and aggressive community engagement strategy championed by Dr. Maxwell Patrick Uloko. Under his public affairs leadership, the company has increasingly projected itself not merely as an urban fintech institution, but as a people-oriented financial platform accessible to ordinary Nigerians across villages, semi-urban settlements, and local markets nationwide.

The economic impact of this expansion cannot be ignored. OPay’s operations have directly and indirectly created thousands of employment opportunities for Nigerians, including POS operators, customer support personnel, logistics providers, technology professionals, field marketers, and merchant partners. During one of the company’s regulatory engagements, reports indicated that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission acknowledged OPay’s strong Nigerian workforce participation, making it one of the leading employment-driven fintech institutions in the country.

Beyond financial transactions, OPay’s expanding Corporate Social Responsibility programmes have also contributed significantly to its positive public image. The company has invested heavily in education, youth empowerment, digital literacy, and community development initiatives across Nigeria.

One of its most ambitious interventions is the ₦1.2 billion 10-year scholarship programme designed to support Nigerian students in tertiary institutions nationwide. Reports indicate that over ₦126 million has already been disbursed to hundreds of students across several institutions under the programme.

The company’s CSR footprint extends even further. Available reports show that over 11,000 children have benefited from various intervention programmes, more than 40 schools have received educational support, while several communities across Nigeria have benefited from empowerment and digital inclusion projects. OPay also recently introduced the CyberLabs initiative aimed at equipping Nigerian students with practical cybersecurity and digital innovation skills necessary for the evolving global digital economy.

Significantly, OPay’s improving institutional reputation became more visible when the company received the Fintech Company of the Year Award for the second consecutive time at the Leadership Annual Conference and Awards in Abuja. Receiving the award on behalf of the company, Dr. Maxwell Patrick Uloko reaffirmed OPay’s commitment to secure financial services, innovation, customer protection, and economic empowerment.

Critically examining the rumours surrounding OPay, there remains no credible evidence suggesting that the company is preparing to shut down operations in Nigeria. On the contrary, the fintech giant has continued expanding offices, deepening community investments, strengthening customer engagement, and increasing support for educational and empowerment initiatives nationwide.

The danger associated with spreading false and unverified information against major financial institutions cannot be overstated. Rumours capable of triggering public panic could negatively affect rural businesses, weaken investor confidence, disrupt POS operations, and destabilize Nigeria’s broader financial inclusion agenda.

If a company with such extensive grassroots economic impact were unfairly undermined through misinformation campaigns, thousands of Nigerians dependent on its services for daily survival could face serious hardship. Rural traders, students, transport operators, artisans, SMEs, and local market women like Mrs. Ene Oche who rely on OPay’s digital infrastructure would likely be among the hardest affected.

In a developing economy where digital finance is becoming central to national growth, institutions like OPay remain critical economic assets. Constructive criticism, public scrutiny, and regulatory accountability are legitimate necessities. However, deliberate falsehoods and panic-driven narratives against legally operating institutions ultimately damage national economic interests and discourage investment confidence.

Ultimately, facts remain superior to rumours. And the facts available today clearly show that OPay is not collapsing; rather, it is expanding, employing, investing, empowering communities, and strengthening financial inclusion across Nigeria under a leadership structure that continues to prioritize innovation, trust, accessibility, and social impact.

At a time when social media speculation and unverified claims are increasingly shaping public perception, one Nigerian fintech institution that has recently become the subject of widespread rumours is OPay. Yet, beyond the sensational narratives being circulated online, verifiable facts, statistics, and institutional realities clearly indicate that OPay remains one of the strongest and fastest-growing digital financial service providers in Nigeria and Africa.

Ironically, despite its enormous economic contributions, many analysts believe OPay remains one of the most underpublicized corporate success stories in Nigeria’s financial technology sector. While the company’s POS network, financial inclusion drive, scholarship programmes, and employment opportunities continue impacting millions of lives daily, public conversations around the brand are often overshadowed by misinformation, controversy, or deliberate false narratives rather than its measurable developmental contributions to society.

More importantly, industry observers believe the company’s growing public confidence and institutional stability have been significantly strengthened through the strategic public engagement efforts of Dr. Maxwell Patrick Uloko, the Vice President, Public and Government Affairs at OPay Nigeria. Since assuming leadership responsibilities in public and government affairs, Dr. Uloko has consistently projected OPay as a responsible, regulation-compliant, and socially responsive financial institution committed to grassroots financial inclusion and national economic development.

Since its official launch in Nigeria in 2018 following Opera’s acquisition of PayCom Nigeria, OPay has evolved from a mobile payment platform into a major financial ecosystem serving millions of Nigerians through money transfers, POS operations, merchant payments, airtime purchases, debit card services, and digital banking solutions. The company was established with the mission of making financial services more inclusive through technology.

Today, OPay’s influence cuts across urban centres and rural communities alike. Reports indicate that the fintech giant supports millions of users nationwide through a vast network of over 500,000 POS agents and merchants operating across Nigeria. These agents have become critical to local economies, especially in underserved rural areas where access to conventional banking infrastructure remains limited. Through this extensive POS ecosystem, countless Nigerians now conduct daily transactions without travelling long distances to commercial bank branches.

A practical example of OPay’s growing grassroots importance can be seen in Otukpa, headquarters of Ogbadibo Local Government Area of Benue State, where local traders and residents increasingly depend on digital financial platforms for their daily survival and business activities.

At the popular Edeh Market in Otukpa, Mrs. Ene Oche, a local garri trader, represents thousands of rural market women whose businesses have gradually been transformed through easy-to-use digital transfer services provided by fintech platforms like OPay. According to observations within the market environment, many customers no longer move around with large volumes of cash due to insecurity concerns and the convenience associated with instant digital payments.

For traders like Mrs. Ene Oche, OPay has become more than just a mobile banking application; it now serves as an informal economic lifeline simplifying commercial transactions within the local market. Buyers purchasing garri, beans, vegetables, yam flour, and other food items can now transfer money instantly through nearby POS agents or directly through mobile transfers without delays traditionally associated with cash shortages or banking difficulties.

Residents within Otukpa also increasingly depend on OPay services for school fees payments, hospital bills, contribution levies, transport fares, and emergency family support transfers. In communities where commercial banking infrastructure remains inadequate, digital finance platforms have become practical alternatives helping ordinary citizens participate more effectively within the modern economy.

Market observers note that before the widespread penetration of fintech services, many traders often lost customers or sold goods on credit whenever buyers lacked physical cash. Today, the availability of OPay agents and digital payment channels has significantly improved transaction confidence, reduced financial stress, and strengthened commercial activities even within rural settlements.

Analysts believe this growing grassroots acceptance is partly connected to OPay’s deliberate financial inclusion policies and aggressive community engagement strategy championed by Dr. Maxwell Patrick Uloko. Under his public affairs leadership, the company has increasingly projected itself not merely as an urban fintech institution, but as a people-oriented financial platform accessible to ordinary Nigerians across villages, semi-urban settlements, and local markets nationwide.

The economic impact of this expansion cannot be ignored. OPay’s operations have directly and indirectly created thousands of employment opportunities for Nigerians, including POS operators, customer support personnel, logistics providers, technology professionals, field marketers, and merchant partners. During one of the company’s regulatory engagements, reports indicated that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission acknowledged OPay’s strong Nigerian workforce participation, making it one of the leading employment-driven fintech institutions in the country.

Beyond financial transactions, OPay’s expanding Corporate Social Responsibility programmes have also contributed significantly to its positive public image. The company has invested heavily in education, youth empowerment, digital literacy, and community development initiatives across Nigeria.

One of its most ambitious interventions is the ₦1.2 billion 10-year scholarship programme designed to support Nigerian students in tertiary institutions nationwide. Reports indicate that over ₦126 million has already been disbursed to hundreds of students across several institutions under the programme.

The company’s CSR footprint extends even further. Available reports show that over 11,000 children have benefited from various intervention programmes, more than 40 schools have received educational support, while several communities across Nigeria have benefited from empowerment and digital inclusion projects. OPay also recently introduced the CyberLabs initiative aimed at equipping Nigerian students with practical cybersecurity and digital innovation skills necessary for the evolving global digital economy.

Significantly, OPay’s improving institutional reputation became more visible when the company received the Fintech Company of the Year Award for the second consecutive time at the Leadership Annual Conference and Awards in Abuja. Receiving the award on behalf of the company, Dr. Maxwell Patrick Uloko reaffirmed OPay’s commitment to secure financial services, innovation, customer protection, and economic empowerment.

Critically examining the rumours surrounding OPay, there remains no credible evidence suggesting that the company is preparing to shut down operations in Nigeria. On the contrary, the fintech giant has continued expanding offices, deepening community investments, strengthening customer engagement, and increasing support for educational and empowerment initiatives nationwide.

The danger associated with spreading false and unverified information against major financial institutions cannot be overstated. Rumours capable of triggering public panic could negatively affect rural businesses, weaken investor confidence, disrupt POS operations, and destabilize Nigeria’s broader financial inclusion agenda.

If a company with such extensive grassroots economic impact were unfairly undermined through misinformation campaigns, thousands of Nigerians dependent on its services for daily survival could face serious hardship. Rural traders, students, transport operators, artisans, SMEs, and local market women like Mrs. Ene Oche who rely on OPay’s digital infrastructure would likely be among the hardest affected.

In a developing economy where digital finance is becoming central to national growth, institutions like OPay remain critical economic assets. Constructive criticism, public scrutiny, and regulatory accountability are legitimate necessities. However, deliberate falsehoods and panic-driven narratives against legally operating institutions ultimately damage national economic interests and discourage investment confidence.

Ultimately, facts remain superior to rumours. And the facts available today clearly show that OPay is not collapsing; rather, it is expanding, employing, investing, empowering communities, and strengthening financial inclusion across Nigeria under a leadership structure that continues to prioritize innovation, trust, accessibility, and social impact.

Aaron Mike Odeh, A Public Affairs Analyst, Capacity Development Expert, Media Consultant and Community Development Advocate wrote from Post Army Housing Estate Kurudu Abuja

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Nigerian Army Graduates 25 Aviation Fuel Handling Personnel at AFIT Kaduna, Boosts Air Operations

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The Nigerian Army has graduated 25 personnel from the Aviation Fuel Handling and Management (AFHM) Course 2/26, reinforcing its commitment to enhancing aviation logistics and operational efficiency through specialised training.

The graduation ceremony was held on Wednesday at the Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT), Kaduna, following the successful completion of the three-month course, which commenced on April 16, 2026.

The training programme was designed to build the capacity of Nigerian Army Aviation (NA Avn) fuel handlers in aviation fuel handling and management. A total of five officers and 20 soldiers from the Nigerian Army Corps of Supply and Transport (NACST) successfully completed the course.

The Commander, 71 Supply and Transport Brigade, Brig.-Gen. B. Yusuf, represented the Commander, Corps of Supply and Transport (CCST), Maj.-Gen. N.D. Shagaya, at the graduation ceremony.

The Commandant of the Air Force Institute of Technology, Air Vice Marshal Adeniran Kolade Ademuwagun, who was represented by the Deputy Commandant, Air Vice Marshal O. Ubadike, congratulated the graduands on successfully completing the intensive training programme.

In his address, he commended the participants for their resilience, discipline and commitment throughout the course, urging them to uphold the highest standards of professionalism and safety in the handling and management of aviation fuel.

He encouraged the graduates to apply the knowledge and skills acquired during the training to improve the operational effectiveness of Nigerian Army Aviation while remaining worthy ambassadors of the Nigerian Army Corps of Supply and Transport.

The representative of the AFIT Commandant also highlighted that the successful conduct of the course underscores the enduring partnership between the Nigerian Army and the Nigerian Air Force in developing critical aviation logistics capabilities needed to support military operations.

The ceremony featured the presentation of certificates to the 25 graduates, while outstanding participants were recognised with awards for exceptional performance during the course.

The Nigerian Army said the specialised training aligns with its ongoing efforts to strengthen operational readiness by developing skilled personnel capable of supporting safe and efficient aviation fuel operations.

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Northern group applauds CDS, Armed Forces over intensified offensive against bandits, insurgents

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A northern-based peace advocacy group, the Northern Alliance for Peace and Security, has commended the Chief of Defence Staff, General Olufemi Oluyede, and the Nigerian Armed Forces for what it described as sustained successes in ongoing military operations against banditry, terrorism and kidnapping across parts of the country.

The group said the recent rescue of hundreds of abducted persons and the neutralisation of scores of armed criminals reflect the military’s renewed offensive against violent groups operating in different regions of Nigeria.

In a statement issued on Monday in Abuja, the National President of the group, Mallam Danladi Abutu, said the recent gains demonstrated the commitment of the Armed Forces under the leadership of the CDS to improving security and restoring public confidence.

His remarks come amid intensified military operations against terrorists, bandits and other criminal groups, particularly in the North-East and North-West, where insecurity has continued to claim lives, displace communities and disrupt economic activities. Kidnapping for ransom has also spread to other parts of the country in recent years, prompting renewed calls for stronger security measures.

Among the recent operations cited by the group was the rescue of 14 of the 15 worshippers abducted during a night vigil at a church in Eda Oniyo, Ilejemeje Local Government Area of Ekiti State, on April 28, 2026. The victims regained their freedom on Saturday after spending more than 67 days in captivity and were subsequently taken to the State Teaching Hospital for medical attention.

The group also referenced the rescue of 416 residents of Ngoshe community in Gwoza Local Government Area of Borno State, who had been abducted by suspected Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists before they were freed by troops of Operation Hadin Kai.

Similarly, it noted the rescue of 11 women who were kidnapped while fishing in Dille community in Askira/Uba Local Government Area of Borno State, describing the operation as another indication of the military’s determination to protect vulnerable communities.

Abutu said the recent operations should reassure Nigerians that the security forces remain committed to defeating criminal elements across the country.

“These gains mirror the commitment of the CDS and his men to make Nigeria safe for all. What we have witnessed in the past few weeks is an indication of the battle readiness of our gallant troops to make life difficult for these terrorist elements.

“The security situation is of a huge concern to every well-meaning Nigerians. We must join hands with the Federal Government to ensure that the war against banditry is successfully prosecuted.

“What the Federal Government has done through the gallant troops is a message to the terrorists that they can never win this war. They will lose because every Nigerian deserves to live and work in peace everywhere he or she chooses to live in the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory,” he added.

Abutu also appealed to Nigerians to support ongoing security operations by volunteering credible intelligence to security agencies, arguing that community cooperation remains vital to defeating criminal networks.

He particularly condemned attacks on schools and the abduction of students, describing such acts as an assault on the country’s future.

“Why do you think they are attacking schools and abducting our children? Education is the bedrock of any society desirous of growth and progress. We must not allow the enemies of our beloved country to continue their evil enterprise. We may not be armed but volunteering information to security agencies is a sign of patriotism,” Abutu added.

Nigeria has continued to battle multiple security challenges, including insurgency in the North-East, banditry in the North-West and North-Central, as well as rising incidents of kidnapping in several parts of the country. In response, the Armed Forces have sustained coordinated land and air operations targeting terrorist enclaves, while also conducting rescue missions for kidnapped victims and clearing operations aimed at restoring normalcy in affected communities. Recent military offensives have led to the rescue of abductees, the recovery of weapons and the dismantling of several criminal hideouts, although security experts maintain that sustained intelligence gathering and stronger community collaboration remain critical to consolidating the gains.

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Gbajabiamila Issues 72-Hour Cease and Desist to Prince Adeyemi, Threatens ₦10 Billion Defamation Suit

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Rt. Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, Chief of Staff to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has given Prince Adeniyi Adeyemi Matthew 72 hours to retract what he describes as false and malicious allegations made during a widely circulated press conference on June 25, 2026.

In a formal cease and desist letter dated July 6, 2026, Gbajabiamila’s solicitors at Pinheiro LP accused Adeyemi of launching “reckless, baseless and malicious” attacks aimed at tarnishing the Chief of Staff’s reputation.

The letter, signed by ‘Kemi Pinheiro OFR, SAN, emphasised that Gbajabiamila “has never at any time met, interacted with, communicated with, or had any form of personal or official dealing whatsoever” with Adeyemi.

The legal team detailed several serious claims made by Adeyemi in his press statement, including allegations that Gbajabiamila demanded 48 percent of the take-off grant for the disputed Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council, received ₦400 million by proxy, abused his office to intimidate others, participated in fraudulent budgetary processes, and engaged in conduct suggestive of corruption, criminality, and even murder.

“These allegations are not only false but are gravely defamatory,” the letter stated. “They plainly convey to ordinary, reasonable members of society that our client is corrupt, dishonest, criminally culpable, morally bankrupt, unfit for public office, violent, dangerous and undeserving of public trust.”

The solicitors argued that the publication, which spread rapidly across traditional and social media, had caused significant reputational damage to Gbajabiamila, a seasoned public servant and former Speaker of the House of Representatives.

“Your defamatory statements… have enjoyed wide readership, no doubt carries with it the imputation of extreme dishonesty, corruption and fraud,” the letter added.

Gbajabiamila’s team demanded that within 72 hours, Adeyemi must cease making or publishing any further defamatory statements, remove all related materials including videos and transcripts from every platform, and issue a full, unequivocal retraction and apology published with equal prominence in at least five national newspapers and on the same platforms where the original claims appeared.

They also required a written undertaking to refrain from future defamatory publications.

The letter warned that failure to comply would prompt immediate legal action, including a criminal complaint for defamation and a civil suit seeking ₦10 billion in aggravated and exemplary damages — to be paid to charities chosen by Gbajabiamila — along with a perpetual injunction and a court order compelling a public apology and retraction.

The demand comes as the controversy surrounding Adeyemi and the alleged ghost agency continues to unfold, with the Presidency maintaining that the entity does not exist and that Adeyemi faces criminal charges bordering on forgery and impersonation at the Federal High Court in Abuja.

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