Nigerian Newspapers: Key Demands for Government Action | Thursday 13th November, 2025

Nigerian Newspapers

Welcome to today’s roundup of Nigerian newspaper headlines, accompanied by our advocacy-focused calls for government action on pressing issues that impact citizens.


 

1. The Guardian: Nigeria Records 566,300 Leaked Accounts Amid 90.6 million Global Breaches

A latest study by cybersecurity company Surfshark has ranked Nigeria as the 16th most breached country in Q3 2025, with 408,900 leaked accounts, revealing that in 2025, the country had witnessed 566,300 breached accounts.

Our Take: The National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) and the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) need to stop treating data breaches like harmless internet gossip and start acting like digital gatekeepers. With millions of Nigerians’ personal details now strolling freely through cyberspace, these agencies should start patching the leaks.


2. Daily Trust: Despite Tinubu’s Pledge, FG Takes Fresh N1.15 Trillion Loan

Daily Trust reports that despite a recent statement by President Bola Tinubu that Nigeria had stopped taking domestic loans, the National Assembly yesterday approved a fresh request from the federal government to borrow N1.15 trillion from the domestic debt market to fund the deficit in the 2025 budget.

Our Take: At this point, Nigerians deserve more than headlines announcing yet another loan; they deserve a clear record of how every borrowed naira is spent. The Ministry of Finance and the Debt Management Office must publish transparent, accessible reports showing where these funds go and what they achieve, while the National Assembly should follow up beyond mere approval to ensure real oversight.


3. Vanguard: UN Names Nigeria, Mali among 16 Hunger Crisis Hotspot

Two United Nations food agencies have warned that millions more people around the world, including Nigeria, could face famine, with funding shortfalls worsening already dire conditions.

Our Take: With Nigeria now earning a spot on the UN’s ‘hunger hotspot’ list, the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security and the National Emergency Management Agency need to do more than hold press briefings about ‘food security roadmaps’. President Tinubu might also want to turn his famous ‘Renewed Hope’ slogan into renewed meals for millions who can barely afford garri. If the UN can see our hunger from Rome, surely Abuja doesn’t need binoculars to notice it, unless, of course, the next National Budget plans to feed only the headlines.

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