Category: Info Tech

  • Alhamrani Universal, Stanchion Payments, INETCO Partner to Counter Payment Fraud Across Middle East

    Alhamrani Universal, Stanchion Payments, INETCO Partner to Counter Payment Fraud Across Middle East

    2026-01-21 09:00:00

    Alhamrani Universal, Stanchion Payments, INETCO Partner to Counter Payment Fraud Across Middle East

    Vancouver, Canada / Jeddah, Saudi Arabia — January 21, 2026

    Alhamrani Universal, a leading Saudi fintech solutions provider and the region’s largest ATM solution provider, has announced the deployment of INETCO BullzAI, an AI-powered cyber-fraud prevention platform, to strengthen payments security across the Middle East. The rollout is delivered through Stanchion Payments, INETCO’s global partner, as the three organizations position the initiative as a response to accelerating digital payments and increasingly sophisticated financial crime in the region.

    The companies said the deployment will provide real-time visibility into transactions across self-service terminals and digital payment channels, enabling Alhamrani Universal to validate terminal legitimacy, detect anomalies early, and protect transaction settlement workflows—an emphasis aligned with Saudi Arabia’s broader digital transformation agenda under Vision 2030.

    The announcement also pointed to heightened concern about cyber exposure across the Middle East’s financial services sector as cloud adoption and generative AI expand attack surfaces, referencing PwC’s 2025 Global Digital Trust Insights (Middle East) on breach impacts and costs.

    What INETCO BullzAI is expected to deliver

    • Real-time monitoring of every transaction with zero performance impact, improving visibility and helping identify unauthorized or unregistered terminals operating outside the licensed ecosystem.
    • Deeper payments intelligence using full transaction message-field access for flexible, no-code rule creation, behavioral modeling, and detailed reporting on volumes and terminal activity.
    • Rapid adaptation to evolving threats via self-training machine learning models that update after every transaction to detect emerging (“zero-day”) fraud patterns.
    • Pre-emptive blocking of high-risk activity through an AI-driven transaction firewall designed to stop attacks such as BIN attacks, malware, account takeovers, bot attacks, and card-present/card-not-present fraud without disrupting legitimate transactions.

    Echotitbits take: This partnership reflects a broader shift in payments security: fraud prevention is moving earlier in the transaction lifecycle—from post-incident investigation to real-time interdiction. The practical test will be measurable reduction in fraud losses and disputes, stronger compliance assurance, and improved settlement confidence without degrading customer experience.

    Source: Press Release (Alhamrani Universal / Stanchion Payments / INETCO) (2026-01-21)

  • FG Unveils New Digital Tools for Maritime Operations

    FG Unveils New Digital Tools for Maritime Operations

    The Federal Government has launched the Nigerian Shippers’ Council’s Enterprise Content Management System to digitise document handling in the maritime sector. The Marine and Blue Economy Ministry says it will improve transparency and reduce bottlenecks.

    PUNCH, 11 Dec 2025

  • PalmPay Launches ‘Purple December’ Rewards Push

    PalmPay Launches ‘Purple December’ Rewards Push

    PalmPay has launched a month-long ‘Purple December’ campaign encouraging users to complete weekly digital tasks for prizes, culminating in a Christmas-themed social challenge.

    The fintech says the activation celebrates user loyalty and highlights everyday digital-payment stories during the festive season.

    Source: Punch, 2025-12-09

  • SSANU Urges Surveillance Tech for Schools

    SSANU Urges Surveillance Tech for Schools

    The Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities has urged governments to deploy modern surveillance technology and strengthen campus perimeter security in response to rising school abduction concerns.

    The union says technology-backed safety is essential to protect staff and students and sustain learning stability.

    Source : The Nation, 2025-12-08

  • FG clarifies subject choices in new senior secondary curriculum

    FG clarifies subject choices in new senior secondary curriculum

    Vanguard reports that the Education Ministry has clarified that the new senior secondary curriculum remains flexible, allowing students to select across science, arts, and social science clusters where appropriate guidance exists. The minister also said the subject formerly known as ICT has been renamed “Digital Technology,” emphasising that the change is largely nomenclature rather than a shift in content, and that students remain eligible to register and sit relevant exams under the updated name. Source: Vanguard, December 2025.

  • TikTok Pays Price for Breaking Age Limit: UK Imposes $15.9 Million Fine

    TikTok Pays Price for Breaking Age Limit: UK Imposes $15.9 Million Fine

    On Tuesday, the UK’s data regulator announced that it had imposed a fine of £12.7 million ($15.9 million) on TikTok for allowing approximately 1.4 million children under the age of 13 to use its social media platform in breach of its own policies.

    The Information Commissioner’s Office stated that the Chinese-owned company had violated UK law by failing to obtain the consent of parents or guardians for the use of their children’s data, despite the fact that these users were too young to create accounts.

    TikTok nevertheless welcomed a decision by the ICO to slash the fine from £27 million, which the regulator had previously warned it might impose.

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    TikTok contested the ICO’s conclusion, which comes in addition to a series of prohibitions on the platform’s use by Western governments on official devices, citing concerns that Beijing may be able to access the data.

    “We will continue to review the decision and are considering next steps,” the company said in a statement.

    “We invest heavily to help keep under 13s off the platform and our 40,000-strong safety team works around the clock to help keep the platform safe for our community,” it said.

    Despite this, TikTok expressed its appreciation for the ICO’s decision to reduce the fine from £27 million, which the regulator had earlier cautioned might be imposed.

    Although TikTok’s terms of service prohibit the creation of accounts by children under the age of 13, the ICO stated that the company had not conducted sufficient checks to prevent such occurrences in the UK, resulting in up to 1.4 million children being impacted in 2020.

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    “That means that their data may have been used to track them and profile them, potentially delivering harmful, inappropriate content at their very next scroll,” Information Commissioner John Edwards said.

    “There are laws in place to make sure our children are as safe in the digital world as they are in the physical world,” he said in a statement.

    “TikTok did not abide by those laws.”

     

  • 5 Consequences of Staying Behind a Digital Future

    5 Consequences of Staying Behind a Digital Future

    By Tobiloba Kolawole

    We couldn’t have forgotten so soon how Ebola, Zika, and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) viruses have in recent years ravaged the world’s social-economic settings.

    More than we could ever imagine, with thousands of people dead including many business and institutional deaths, the year 2020 will remain a remarkable year for millions of people around the world. From South Africa to Nigeria, Britain to United States, China to Korea, our lives, businesses have experienced a kind of disruption that is only to be imagined.

    In no small ways, organizations and businesses in Nigeria, just like in any other parts of the world have been severely impacted and are still experiencing COVID-19 disruptions. There were concerns about how Board of Directors of organizations would meet as the law requires, how Annual General Meeting were to hold and even conduct elections and how to keep the distribution channel running. In other areas, there were issues of how pensioners, who only rely on monthly pension allowances would be verified so their pay doesn’t stop. Organizations like cooperative societies, professional and societal associations whose administration rely on elected officials had to think outside the box to carry on pending election electronically, yes, this is possible with some electronic voting system.

    Organization’s exposure to COVID-19 did not only leave many Nigerians unemployed, it impaired distribution network, increased cyber security and fraud risk, increased the burden of both customer and employee relations.

    COVID-19 isn’t the only disruption that we have seen, it is a part of the black swan experience of 2020 if we consider the changes in global oil prices, Naira devaluation and the EndSARS protest that turned violent. All of these fuels the shocks that test the balance and survival of organizations – where their operations are directly or indirectly affected.

    As though the COVID-19 lockdown of not less than 4 months and attendant restrictions following the gradual easing wasn’t disruptive enough, the EndSARS protest also added its bite on an already stressed business environment.

    These disruptions gave credence to the campaign ‘The Future is Digital’. Organizations had to seek alternatives

    Because we haven’t possessed the capacity to really figure out when the next crisis will happen, it is important for businesses and organizations to position for resilience in the face of the next global threat.

    “We expect that the COVID-19 threat will eventually fade, as the Ebola, Zika, and Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) viruses have in recent years. However, social-economic impact will still be felt long after the virus fades”, KPMG stated in an introduction to its series of publications under the title COVID-19: A Business Impact Series.

    The words out there now is that The Future is Digital. Embracing digital processes is what has aided the survival of a many organizations in the tumultuous 2020 year of the COVID-19.

    In just three months from May to July, Zoom reportedly recorded higher sales and profit than it did in all of 2019, as more people work and learn remotely during the coronavirus pandemic.

    Getting onboard digital cannot be overemphasized as those who fail to do so will suffer the consequences. The world will apparently not remain the same, digital is its future. Whether for strategic meetings, corporate sector elections, verification processes and or any other identification needs, the solutions are available.

    For some organizations, digital transformation may appear costly and unnecessary investment. Although, the process takes time, investment and patience, ultimately, it’s the businesses that adapt and adopt that are reaping the rewards. In other words, going digital isn’t really an option. It’s a necessity.

    Here is what organizations and businesses that won’t digitalize are likely to suffer.

    1) Competitive disadvantage

    It is not easy keeping up when new companies come in with innovation that disrupt the industry. You should know that keeping up is pertinent, and digital capabilities are the best ways to stay sprightly. A popular reference is the Blockbuster and Netflix story.

    In the predigital era, you’d have to walk into a Blockbuster to rent a film or video game. Blockbuster is one of the most glaring examples of a business unwilling to adapt to digital. The mistake cost them an entire empire.

    You must have learned about the story. Netflix’s Reed Hastings approached former Blockbuster CEO John Antioco in 2000 and asked him to pay $50 million for the company he founded. Today Reed Hastings is worth $5 billion.

    Apparently, Antioco didn’t take the offer to buy Netflix as he couldn’t imagine a film business without customers walking into a rental store just like many Nigerians would not foresee that elections at all levels, especially private sector elections, can be conducted without voters walking into a polling venue and get the process done fast and with less cost.

    Netflix, an online DVD ordering and mailing service at the time saw a world of digital transactions and convenience.

    Take a big turn from that box of traditional methods and think outside it innovatively. Failure to think outside the box and innovate can keep companies moored to traditional tried and tested methods. In today’s digital landscape, experimentation is required to find new paths to a customer and new ways to make revenue.

    2) Inability to collect key analytics

    In today’s world, consumers are far less brand loyal than they were 3 decades ago. This is a wakeup call to businesses and organizations on the need to understand their stakeholders and consumers to promote loyalty.

    In the case of an election, unlike the paper-based polling process with all the attendant manual input of data, an electronic voting solution simplifies the rigorous processes and draw data in the simplest form.

    Data allows companies to tailor content, engage on the platforms that matter, and continuously learn what does and doesn’t work. Without this type of insight, companies and organizations can make detrimental strategy errors.

    Data provided by digital platforms is invaluable in shaping the knowledge a process or brand has of a stakeholders and customers respectively. By missing the opportunity to capitalize on data and take a digital approach, companies can struggle to thrive and even survive.

    3) Lose relevance

    It is so easy to be lost in an ocean of high speed-moving digital era when an organization is not digitally positioned. The speed at which digital move is as much as 5 times faster than traditional business methods.

    When the iPhone 6 launched consumers realized the new model of phones were prone to bending. Seeing an opportunity, Kit Kat’s marketing department took to Twitter to play off the news cycle.

    Kit Kat leveraged hashtags that were trending and news that was hyped across hundreds of news outlets to gain visibility.

    Their quick wit and digital effort made the brand relevant at the right moment, and the company achieved over 25,000 retweets bringing them timely exposure.

    Wise digital strategists look for these types of opportunities every day, and those who are successful continue to steal the spotlight. Without a digital presence, it is impossible to compete with the pace of modern marketers. https://digitalmarketinginstitute.com/blog/what-is-the-cost-of-not-going-digital-for-a-business

    4) Stifle company and revenue growth

    A lack of digital activity will make growth a challenge. Take Kodak as an example. The decades-long decline of film-based business ended in bankruptcy due to the resistance of change. For the company, digital change was realized as early as 1975.

    And, in 1981 researchers at Kodak suggested the company still had the chance to stay relevant if they embraced a digital transformation. Researchers anticipated, that for a full business revamp, the change would take approximately 10 years— but it was still possible.

    The problem is that, during the 10-year window, Kodak did little to change. Even as late as 2007, a Kodak marketing video continued to emphasize “Kodak is back” disregarding the new digital landscape.

    These strategic errors stifled the company’s ability to grow and in January 2012, Kodak filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

    Acknowledging change is not enough, a company needs to embed that change into its practices, culture and processes in order to realize its full potential. The change apparent and it will sweep away resistance.

    In June, the Governor of Lagos State, Babajide Sanwo-Olu demonstrated an understanding of the changing times from traditional tom digital process when he approved the conduct of year 2020 biometric verification of pensioners tagged “I am Alive” virtually (online) in line with government’s efforts to reduce the effect of COVlD-19 pandemic in the state and ensure physical distancing.

    When it comes to digital transformation, brands and indeed organizations need to engage in the process and look at how it can be integrated to drive digital maturity.

    5) Struggle to retain (and hire) valuable talent

    The largest demographic in the current workforce is millennials, and soon Gen Z will infiltrate.

    Both of these generations grew up in a digital world, where technological innovations are an expectation rather than a novel thought. As such, when given the choice, it’s likely that these cohorts will opt to work for companies that embrace digital workflows.

    This is proving true with the rise of the gig economy, which now accounts for 34% of the US workforce.

    More specifically, we can point to Uber vs taxi services, and the growth of each industry. As taxis fail to take a digital approach, they continue to lose staff numbers.

    Currently, there are 13,587 yellow cabs on New York City streets. The total number of black cars associated with ride-hailing apps total 60,000, with more than 46,000 specifically connected with Uber.

    The imbalance between drivers for Uber and taxi are accounting for a large productivity difference. As of December 2017, ride-hail apps performed 65% more rides per month than taxi drivers did in New York City.

    Though yellow cabs are still in business, as more drivers shift to jobs at Uber, Lyft, and other app-driven taxi services, the fate of old-school taxi and cab services looks uncertain.

    As more digital disrupters enter the marketplace across industries, it’s key to have an agile workforce that can adapt to change and rise to challenges. Cultivate a culture of collaboration and learning that prepares employees for the pace of the digital world.

    #tech #technology #covid19 #future #digital #futureisdigital

  • I’M Alive Mobile Verification App Set to Ease Nigerian Pension Administration

    I’M Alive Mobile Verification App Set to Ease Nigerian Pension Administration

    A technology approach to solving some of the challenges faced in pension administration has been introduced with the development of I’M Alive, a pensioner verification solution by Chams Plc.

    The Group Managing Director (GMD) of Chams Plc, Gavin Young, at an interactive session with journalists on Monday, at the firm’s corporate headquarters in Victoria Island, Lagos, said the solution, which is a mobile application, is designed to ease verification processes for both pension administrators and pensioners.

    The I’M Alive solution, according to the Lagos based firm will verify pensioners remotely in the comfort of their homes using a facial biometric mobile app that facilitates quick and easy verification for both government and private pensioners, and provides pension administrators with comprehensive reporting to ultimately facilitate pension payments.

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    In his remark while explaining the impact, Young noted that the I’M Alive solution would go a long way towards solving a major process-intensive hurdle for the Pension Industry.

    “For both pensioners and pension payers, I’m Alive solution is convenient, saves time & money, easy-to-use, less administrative bottle neck and headaches. The Solution is fully equipped with features that will make life easy for pensioners as it is supported by Artificial Intelligence which will detect liveliness and authenticate the Pensioner for payment processing.

    “The app and pensioner are not linked to a particular phone number or mobile handset. Any smartphone with a functionality that aides selfie alignment and lighting quality can be used, ensuring a higher success rate for pensioners using the app.

    The firm’s GMD expressed confidence about the security of the application noting that it cannot be hacked, stressing that no third party can impersonate a registered and verified pensioner on the app.

    “Every data is encrypted and it cannot be copied. In addition, Chams Plc adheres to data protection compliance regulations as specified by NITDA”, he stated.

    Speaking on the sustainability of the solution, Young admitted that while the priority for now is to solve the basic problems of inconvenience and overhead cost associated with the current physical presence verification, the mobile verification app solution can still do a lot more. He added that more features such as linking payment to the app could come later.

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    The GMD, giving further explanation on the product said “the design had in mind users that are not tech savvy and in the remote areas as pensioners don’t have to be tech-savvy to use the app as it is user friendly and has detailed explanations, including the ability to work in an offline mode.

    “The verification can be done on any smartphone, owned by anybody. Once you have your BVN & retiree number ready, it takes less than three minutes as verification is real-time.

    “Through this product, Chams has continued to expand operations through strategic partnerships and innovative products and solutions that are tailored to the Nigerian and African Markets” Young said.

    Earlier this year, Chams Plc, a Nigerian company of over 35years experience at providing digital solutions across a broad range of customer segments in Nigeria embarked upon a new vision and strategy that focuses on consumer-facing innovative digital solutions that are mobile phone based and not only beneficial to Nigerians but the greater African market.

    By Tobiloba Kolawole

  • Cybersecurity consciousness is Everyone’s Business- NCC Boss, Danbatta

    Cybersecurity consciousness is Everyone’s Business- NCC Boss, Danbatta

    The need to be cybersecurity-conscious to guarantee online safety for Internet users is said to be everyone’s business and not reserved for a group of people,

    The Executive Vice Chairman (EVC) and Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Prof. Umar Danbatta made the remark during at an event held in commencement of series of enlightenment and awareness campaign activities being embarked upon by the Commission for this year’s National Cyber Security Awareness Month (NCSAM).

    Internet users across mobile networks in Nigeria, according to Danbatta, currently stand at 149.8 million as at August, 2020. He noted that more users are expected online as services in different sectors of the economy are becoming digitalised.

    He called on individuals and corporate internet users to exhibit greater responsibility in protecting themselves against cybercrimes, especially with the increase in digital financial transactions for e-commerce activities.

    Speaking on the Commission’s activotoes on various policy initiatives to drive pervasive broadband penetration to achieve increased digital inclusiveness, Danbatta notes that NCC is not unmindful of those who use Internet to carry out nefarious and dubious activities in the cyber space.

    “To keep the genuine individual and corporate Internet users’ safe, the NCC, as regulator of the telecom sector, annually joins the rest of the world to create a lot of enlightenment around cybercrime in the month of October every year. We ensure that consumers are empowered through awareness and sensitisation campaigns, by providing information on both the positive and negative potentials available online, and measures required to safeguard themselves and their loved ones.

    “Security is not reserved for a group of people, it is truly everyone’s business; bringing competence and knowledge to help build a safer and more inclusive information society”, The EVC said.

    Danbatta however restated NCC’s commitment to continually embark on policy initiatives to enhance online security as well as educate and equip the consumers of telecoms services with information they need to be protected online.

    In October every year, the National Cyber Security Awareness Month (NCSAM) holds globally, aimed at raising awareness about cybersecurity, and to provide the public with general knowledge and tools required for online safety.

  • NIGCOMSAT-1R Opens a New Era of Satellite Navigation Performance Augmentation in Africa

    NIGCOMSAT-1R Opens a New Era of Satellite Navigation Performance Augmentation in Africa

    NIGCOMSAT-1R Satellite, managed and operated by Nigerian Communications Satellite Limited (NIGCOMSAT) under the Federal Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy has opened a new era of satellite navigation performance augmentation in Africa and Indian Ocean region.

    NIGCOMSAT, in conjunction with the Agency for Air Navigation Safety in Africa and Madagascar (ASECNA) has started to broadcast a Satellite-Based Augmentation System (SBAS) signal over Africa and Indian Ocean (AFI) region, providing the first SBAS open service in this part of the world.

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    The early open service is provided as part of ‘SBAS for Africa and Indian Ocean’ programme which pursues the autonomous provision over the continent of SBAS services, to augment the performances of the satellite navigation constellations GPS and Galileo.

    The signal is broadcasted via SBAS payload on NigComSat 1R GEO satellite of the Nigerian Communications Satellite Limited and an uplink station deployed in Abuja.

    It’s compliant to the Standards and Recommended Practices of the International Civil Aviation Organisation, and the Minimum Operational Performance Standard developed by the Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics (RTCA) organisation.

    It would be visible in the whole Africa and Indian Ocean, up to the West Australian coast, and also in Europe.

    “We are proud to be part of this ambitious programme to provide satellite navigation services in the Africa and Indian Ocean region.

    “The use of our geostationary communication satellite NIGCOMSAT-1R navigation payload to broadcast the first signal will be Africa’s premier contribution to SBAS as a regional satellite-based augmentation system for the continent,” said the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, NIGCOMSAT Limited, Abimbola Alale.

    With improved accuracy to within a meter, and boosted integrity, availability and continuity of safety-related applications, SBAS services would improve flight safety and efficiency in Africa, and also benefit the economy in many areas as land, sea and rail transport, as well as mass market applications, supporting user safety, cost-effectiveness and sustainable development.

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    The launched open service essentially aims to carry-out technical trials, and to undertake with partner airlines field demonstrations for aircraft and rotorcraft, to demonstrate the benefits of the future operational safety-of-life SBAS services, expected from 2024.

    It would also include early Precise Point Positioning (PPP) and emergency warning service to populations, whose performance would be proven through other demonstrations.

    The signal-in-space is generated by a dedicated system tested, developed as part of the “SBAS for Africa and Indian Ocean” preliminary design phase, financed by the European Union and awarded to Thales Alenia Space, Joint Venture between Thales (67 per cent) and Leonardo (33 per cent).

    “SBAS for Africa and Indian Ocean” is based on the European EGNOS developed by the European Space Agency (ESA), acting under delegation of the European Commission and operated by the European GNSS Agency GSA.

    The system prototype uses as reference stations network the SAGAIE network deployed by CNES and ASECNA with the support of Thales Alenia Space.

    Speaking on the project, Vice President of the Navigation Business at Thales Alenia Space in France, Benoit Broudy, said: “Our longstanding expertise acquired with the development of EGNOS1 SBAS in Europe and KASS SBAS in Korea combined with our new leading-edge satellite positioning technologies makes Thales Alenia Space the ideal partner to best support countries to implement their own SBAS efficiently.

    “The equatorial region represents also a key engineering challenge for such a system due to difficult ionosphere conditions, for which Thales Alenia Space has developed a proven solution.”

    In his remarks, ASECNA Director General, Mohamed Moussa, added: “The provision of the first African SBAS early service is a crucial major step forward in the development of satellite navigation in the AFI Region, and in the deployment of the ‘SBAS for Africa and Indian Ocean’ system, the navigation solution for Africa by Africa.

    “It demonstrates the ambition and commitment of ASECNA to enhance air navigation safety for the benefit of the whole continent, in line with my vision for the unification of the African Sky.”

    NIGCOMSAT is a company and agency under the Federal Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy whose mission is to be the leading satellite operator and service provider in Africa.

    NIGCOMSAT Limited owns and operates the Nigerian Communications Satellite. The company provides innovative and cutting-edge satellite communications solutions by operating and managing a geostationary communication satellite-NigComSat–1R, built to provide domestic and international satellite services via a two-way satellite communications services across West, Central, South East Africa, Europe and Asia.

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    The satellite is a hybrid Communication Satellite with a payload for navigation overlay services (NOS) system similar to EGNOS.

    ASECNA is an International public organisation. Its main mission is to provide air navigation services within an airspace of 16,500,000 square kilometers, divided into six flight information regions (F.I.R) as defined by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).

    ASECNA also develops solutions for airport management, aviation infrastructure studies and construction, equipment maintenance, calibration of air navigation instruments and training for civil aviation staff. Its 18 Member States are: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Comoros, Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, France, Gabon, Guinea Bissau, Equatorial Guinea, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal, Chad and Togo.

    Thales Alenia Space has over 40 years of experience and a unique combination of skills, expertise and cultures. It delivers cost-effective solutions for telecommunications, navigation, earth observation, environmental management, exploration, science and orbital infrastructures.

    Idowu Sowunmi