Lagos moves to ban DISCOs Band system

By Omolade Adegbuyi
The Lagos State Government is planning to stop electricity distributors from the Band System which distributes electricity using the Band segregation deal.
The Bands are from A to E. Earlier in 2025, the Nigerian Human Rights Community, (NHRC) had written to the Lagos State Government and the Federal Government calling for the ban.
NHRC, a coalition of 130 civil society and community based groups in a statement made available to Irohinoodua renewed its call urging the Lagos State Government to work towards total elimination of DISCOs.
“The power distribution companies are not competent. Their primary motive is savage accumulation of wealth. The best thing is to scrap the DISCOs. Their activities have led to the exit of many industries from Nigeria. They behave like common criminals. Many have died of hypertension because of their criminal activities,” the group’s official Taiwo Adeleye stated in the statement.
The Lagos State Government said it wanted to ensure universal, continuous power supply at a flat rate.
DISCos who make billions of cash from the deal, are already pushing back.
The current Electricity Banding System is as follows:
Band A:
hours (Higher, non-subsidized tariff)
Band B to E are calculated based on hours.
The Lagos State Electricity Regulatory Commission (LASERC) said more than 70% of feeders in Bands B through E have failed to meet set goals. Such breaking of commercial rules are Exploitative Billing, power disruptions, failure to supply pre-paid meters, outright corruption and dual application of meters to residents.
The Lagos State Lagos State Commissioner for Energy, Biodun Ogunleye said the state government is determined to eliminate Band System to ensure equity in electricity distribution
He said Lagos aims to “create an environment that eliminates banding and guarantees continuous power supply, effectively rendering the classifications obsolete.”
But DisCos are fighting back to sustain the current exploitation of residents, a system that ensures excessive profit for DISCOs leaving millions of people vulnerable to criminal extortion.
The National Assembly are considering considering bills that would remove NERC’s tariff bands across the country.
[5/27, 2:16 PM] Olowoʻ Orimi: 👇🏻
US says 30,000 armed Fulani militants behind violence in Nigeria
Warns of more violence
By Ahmed Babatunde
The United States has said that some 30,000 armed Fulani terrorists are responsible for violence in Nigeria.
This figure is up to the population of soldiers in some countries.
Experts say it represents close to a quarter of the Nigeria Army fighting force
The report was made available to Irohinoodua on Wednesday suggesting that the Yoruba South West may be dealing with close to 15,000 heavily armed terrorists in her territories signalling a major danger to security in the region.
The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, USCIRF, in the newly released report said an estimated 30,000 armed Fulani militants are dispersed across Nigerian territories.
The reports said the large number worsen insecurity and religious freedom violations across Nigeria.
This is coming on the heels of various cases of kidnapping across Nigeria the latest being the kidnapping of 46 pupils and teachers at a community school in Isiele, Oyo State.
The report was titled “Nonstate Violators of Religious Freedom in Nigeria: Fulani Militants.”
The report described the armed groups as “some of the deadliest non-state actors responsible for violent attacks across the Middle Belt and Southern Nigeria.”
The report said the armed nomadic have clusters of 10 to 1,000 fighters, which “carrying out coordinated assaults that have led to thousands of deaths, mass displacement and heightened religious tensions.”
USCIRF stated that attacks linked to Fulani militants accounted for the highest number of deaths among religious communities in Nigeria in the past year, surpassing casualties attributed to organised insurgent groups and criminal gangs.
The report said though Christians are chief targets, Muslims have also been victims.
The report stated that “Violence by Fulani militants caused the highest number of deaths among all religious communities in Nigeria over the last year compared to attacks by organised insurgent groups and criminal gangs.”
It said while the groups “lacked a central leadership structure, some factions occasionally collaborated with bandit networks and extremist organisations.”
It noted further that “These actors operate in a variety of contexts and with a multiplicity of likely aims and motivations,” the report said.
“While many Fulani militant groups wage independent attacks, others periodically coordinate with a wide range of actors, from conventional bandit gangs seeking financial enrichment to recognised terrorist organisations that espouse violent interpretations of Islam.”
USCIRF report observed that little protected or vulnerable communities remain prime targets.
It stated that “They often wield machetes and descend on vulnerable communities during the night, eliciting terror as a way to force victims to quickly leave and to achieve greater control of desired land.”
According to the report, thousands of people have been killed by the armed groups with millions displaced.
“Militant actors have often carried out operations during Christian holidays such as Christmas or Easter to further maximise the psychological impact,” the report noted.
It noted that in February 2026, suspected Fulani militants killed at least 32 persons in Niger State and attacked Holy Trinity Parish in the Kafanchan Diocese of Kaduna State, killing three persons and abducting 11 others, including the parish priest, Father Nathaniel Asuwaye.
USCIRF said armed men abducted Muslim worshippers from a mosque in Plateau State in February 2026 and later demanded a ransom of N16 million while on Palm Sunday and Easter attacks in April 2026 led to many deaths in Plateau, Kaduna and Benue states.
“On Easter Sunday, Fulani militants reportedly killed five worshippers at two churches in Kaduna State while abducting 31 others,” the report stated.
It noted further “Victims have long reported that security forces are consistently slow to respond to attacks on their communities,” USCIRF stated.




