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Access Bank Wins 2016 Euromoney ‘Best Bank Transformation’ Award

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Access Bank

Nigeria’s top tier lender, Access Bank Plc has just received the award for ‘Africa’s Best Bank Transformation’ in the Euromoney 2016 Awards for Excellence. The award was in recognition of the Bank’s progress in the enhancement of its operations through its ‘Winning with Service’ initiative, as well as commitment to raising the standards of customer experience through its digital banking strategy.

The Africa’s Best Bank Transformation award is one of the new categories launched this year to reflect the changing nature of the global banking industry, and Access Bank is the foremost winner of this award.

This prestigious award was presented to the Bank at the 25th anniversary of the Euromoney Awards dinner which took place on Wednesday at the Tower of London, United Kingdom and attended by over 500 CEOs and senior executives of winning institutions as well as members of the Euromoney team.

The Euromoney Awards for Excellence, launched in 1992 and now in its 25th year, were the first of their kind in the global financial publishing industry. Recall that Access Bank was named the Best Flow House in Africa at the 2015 awards ceremony which held at the Natural History Museum in London.

Speaking at the presentation ceremony Herbert Wigwe, Group Managing Director/CEO of the Bank said, “We are delighted to be presented with this highly coveted award. It is a testimonial to the hard work we have done in line with our five-year strategy to become the world’s most respected African Bank.’’

“It also confirms the transformation of the Bank into a large diversified enterprise with enhanced retail structure as well as fast digital banking platform,” he added. He assured that the Bank will sustain this growth momentum while noting that the award is an honour not only for Access Bank, but for Nigeria and the seven million Access Bank customers who have been instrumental to the Bank’s success.

Euromoney said the 2016 awards focused on commercial and investment banks that demonstrated ability to deliver the different parts of their firms to meet clients’ needs and adapt to market and regulatory conditions. It also considered candidates for awards that might not be global in scale, but are truly world class in the way they are run and in the services they deliver to clients.

BUSINESS

UBA Foundation Deepens Pan-African Impact, Delivers Continent-Wide Aid To Vulnerable Communities, Others.

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As part of its Food Bank and Giving Back drive, the bank impacted over 100,000 individuals in the communities with essential items and cash gifts, between November 2025 and January 2026, to alleviate the financial strain associated with the end of the year and beginning of the new year, underscoring the bank and Foundation’s unwavering commitment to fostering hope, and resilience among individuals living within the communities where it operates.

In Nigeria for instance, UBA Foundation’s outreach extended to beneficiaries across all the regions of the country, impacting homes, and IDP camps including the Daughter of Mercy Mother of Mary Orphanage Home in Abia; the Trinitarian Foundation for Orphans and the Helpless in Ebonyi; The Destitute Home Okobaba in Lagos; Oyiza Orphanage and Foster Foundation in Oyo; Itsoghena Orphanage Home in Edo; Enoima Children Home in Akwa Ibom; Yekope Orphanage in Kogi; IDP Camps in Niger and Borno; UMCN Orphanage Home in Taraba; Kebbi Children’s Home; and the Orphanage Home in Dutse, Jigawa.

In Africa, UBA Foundation’s humanitarian efforts and nutritional support were also replicated in the Benin Republic, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Congo Brazzaville, Congo DRC, Côte d’Ivoire, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Mali, Mozambique, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia, where several hundreds of thousands were also impacted.

The Managing Director/CEO, UBA Foundation, Bola Atta, who visited some of the orphanages including the Destitute Home Okobaba, Lagos where she distributed non-perishable food items and school materials to adults and students alike, emphasised the foundation’s belief in impacting lives all-year round, to create lasting effect and touch the lives of people in all areas, regardless of location and economic barriers.

She said, “At UBA Foundation, we believe that true development begins with compassion and action. Through our various Food Bank and Giving Back initiatives, we are not only providing nourishment and essential support but also restoring hope and creating pathways for children and families to learn, grow, and thrive. This is our commitment to Africa: to show up consistently, act responsibly, and leave no community behind.”

Explaining further, she said, “Our various interventions aim to support people by equipping them not only with the right tools but also with the essential nourishment required for cognitive development and physical well-being.”

The foundation has a long-standing tradition of philanthropy, with numerous initiatives across Africa, including the National Essay Competition, The Read Africa Project, Tree Planting for Sustainability, Health Outreaches, Each1 Teach 1, Kindness Connect, Food Bank, and others, aimed at empowering the underprivileged and poverty alleviation.

UBA Foundation, the CSR arm of the UBA Group, is committed to the socio-economic betterment of the communities in which the bank operates, focusing on development in the areas of education, environment, economic empowerment, and special projects.

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BUSINESS

Turkey Requests Inclusion In Nigeria’s E-Visa System To Ease Business Travel

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Turkey has asked Nigeria to include its citizens in the country’s electronic visa (e-visa) system to simplify visa processing and strengthen bilateral ties.

Mehmet Poroy, the Turkish ambassador, made the request when he met Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, Nigeria’s minister of interior, in Abuja on Tuesday.

In a statement issued on Tuesday, Mary Ali, the ministry’s head of press and public relations, said Mehmet sought Turkey’s inclusion in the system to ease business travel for Turkish investors.

According to Ali, the ambassador explained that the absence of a Nigerian visa office in Istanbul poses logistical challenges for Turkish applicants, who must travel to Ankara to complete visa processes.

“Tunji-Ojo assured that denying visas to genuine Nigerian or Turkish businesspeople is not in the interest of either country,” the statement reads.

“He emphasised the Ministry’s commitment to transparency, dialogue, and continuous improvement in visa administration, while reaffirming Nigeria’s openness to legitimate investors and international business partners.”

The ministry’s spokesperson said the minister and the ambassador also discussed faster visa processing for Nigerian business travellers to Turkey, concerns over visa clarity for Turkish investors visiting Nigeria, and verification of documents, including marriage certificates.

She said Tunji-Ojo clarified that all marriage certificates issued under Nigerian law are constitutionally valid and should not require additional verification.

Both sides reaffirmed commitments to transparent, practical visa policies, openness to legitimate investors, and broader diplomatic cooperation.

In November, Poroy said Ankara authorised its embassy in Abuja to issue visas directly to Nigerian business travellers without seeking clearance from Turkey.

He said the step was a major boost for economic cooperation between both countries.

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World Bank Raises Nigeria’s 2026 Economic Growth Rate Projection To 4.4%

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The World Bank has increased its projection for Nigeria’s economic growth rate for 2026 to 4.4 percent from the 3.7 percent forecasted in June 2025.

World Bank announced the increase in its 2026 ‘Global Economic Prospects’ report on Tuesday.

The global financial institution also upgraded Nigeria’s economic growth rate for 2027 to 4.4 percent from 3.8 percent.

In addition, the Bretton Woods institution estimated that Nigeria’s economy grew by 4.2 percent in 2025, compared to the 3.6 percent forecasted in June last year.

Also, the World Bank increased its 2026 global economic growth rate projection from 2.4 percent to 2.6 percent.

In the report, the financial institution also estimated a 2.7 percent economic growth rate for the 2025 period compared to the 2.3 percent forecasted in June last year.

According to the report, the 2027 global economic growth rate is projected at 2.7 percent, compared to the 2.6 percent forecasted in June 2025.

World Bank said the global economy is proving more resilient than anticipated despite persistent trade tensions and policy uncertainty.

However, the bank noted that while global growth remains stable, it is concentrated in advanced economies and is unlikely to reduce extreme poverty, with the 2020s on track to be the weakest decade since the 1960s.

“The resilience reflects better-than-expected growth — especially in the United States, which accounts for about two-thirds of the upward revision to the forecast in 2026,” the World Bank said.

The institution stated that global growth is expected to slow in 2026 as trade-related boosts fade, but easing financial conditions and fiscal expansion are anticipated to mitigate the impact.

It added that inflation is projected to edge down to 2.6 percent in 2026, with growth expected to pick up in 2027 as trade and policy uncertainty ease.

Indermit Gill, the World Bank Group’s chief economist, said with each passing year, the global economy has become less capable of generating growth while appearing more resilient to policy uncertainty.

“But economic dynamism and resilience cannot diverge for long without fracturing public finance and credit markets,” Gill said.

“Over the coming years, the world economy is set to grow slower than it did in the troubled 1990s, while carrying record levels of public and private debt.

“To avert stagnation and joblessness, governments in emerging and advanced economies must aggressively liberalise private investment and trade, rein in public consumption, and invest in new technologies and education.”

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