TDA shocking case involving a completely fictitious government agency that allegedly secured nearly ₦1.3 billion in the 2026 national budget has ignited fresh accusations of massive corruption and institutional collapse within President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s administration.
The entity, known as the Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council (PFIPC), also referred to in some documents as the Presidential Economic Advisory Council, existed only on paper.
Yet it reportedly:
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operated from the Federal Secretariat in Abuja,
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maintained over 300 staff,
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opened multiple bank accounts (including with the Central Bank of Nigeria),
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hosted ambassadors,
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engaged ministers, and,
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received formal recognition in the national budget.
This scandal, now thrust into the public domain through social media commentary and official statements, raises profound questions about oversight, accountability, and the potential for high-level insiders to facilitate graft on an industrial scale.
While the Presidency has described the affair as the work of a lone con artist, critics argue it exposes a rotten system where ghost agencies and padded budgets thrive under the current regime.
The Anatomy of the Alleged Scam
According to multiple sources and the Presidency’s own statement issued by Special Adviser Bayo Onanuga, one Prince Adeniyi Adeyemi Matthew (also referred to as Adeyemi Adeniyi Matthew) allegedly appointed himself Director-General of the non-existent PFIPC.
He is accused of forging appointment letters purportedly signed by the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila.
He allegedly secured physical office space at the Federal Secretariat Complex Phase III and was running the operation for over a year.
Disturbingly, official records show that ₦1,302,978,784 was allocated in the 2026 Appropriation Act for this phantom entity.
This is not pocket change — it represents funds that could have addressed critical infrastructure deficits, healthcare gaps, or security challenges in a country still grappling with economic hardship.
How a fictitious agency navigated the entire budget process — from ministerial submissions through the Budget Office, executive review, and National Assembly approval — remains the central unanswered question fueling corruption allegations.

Sophisticated Operation
The operation’s sophistication is staggering.
Reports claim the agency:
- Secured an official CBN account by allegedly misleading the Office of the Accountant-General.
- Maintained over 300 staff allegedly on the federal payroll.
- Hosted meetings with foreign ambassadors (e.g., at Wells Carlton Hotel) and Nigerian ministers.
- Received police orderlies and recognition from various government bodies.
- Secured nominations for international engagements from both the Senate and House of Representatives.
- Operated under multiple aliases, including FCT Investment Promotion Agency variants.
Critics like Deji Adesogan highlight the breadth:
“Created a fake government agency… secured office space at the Federal Secretariat, opened a CBN account in its name, got N1,302,978,784 allocation in 2026 budget, summoned ambassadors to meetings, held strategic sessions with ministers, and even represented Nigeria at international conferences.”
Official Response and Lingering Questions
The Presidency’s statement attempts to distance the government from the scandal.
It details how the Chief of Staff’s office flagged the impostor in October 2025, prompting investigations by the DSS, Police, and other agencies.
Adeyemi was arrested on October 27, 2025, at his Secretariat office.
Police recovered documents, and he faces an eight-count charge including forgery, impersonation, and obtaining by false pretence.
His trial is scheduled for July 27, 2026.
The statement also notes the mysterious death of Dolapo Babatunde Tanimola — allegedly the link who helped procure the fake appointment letter — in a hotel fire just days before the arrest.
No detailed autopsy or inquest findings were publicly shared.
However, the statement has been widely criticized as damage control that raises more questions than it answers.
Barrister Solomon Dalung, former Minister of Youth and Sports, argued that even if Adeyemi is a fraudster, the case reveals “spectacular institutional failure.”

More Questions Than Answers
Key gaps include:
1. Budget Insertion:
Who smuggled the ₦1.3 billion line item (code reportedly 0111062001) into the 2026 budget?
The Budget Office of the Federation under Babangida Hussaini, the National Assembly Appropriations Committees (Senator Barau Jibrin and Speaker Tajudeen Abbas), and executive reviewers all failed to verify the agency’s existence.
2. Office Space:
How did a fake agency occupy prime Federal Secretariat space for months without detection?
3. Staff and Payroll:
Approval for 300+ staff implies sign-off from the Head of Civil Service and Accountant-General’s office (Oluwatoyin Madein).
4. CBN Account:
How was a government account opened for a non-existent MDA?
Questions surround the Central Bank (Yemi Cardoso) and verification protocols.
5. Diplomatic Engagements:
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Yusuf Tuggar) flagged irregularities in October 2025, yet operations reportedly continued.
6. Bribery Allegations:
Social media users and commentators have raised unproven claims of a ₦400 million bribe allegedly paid to the Chief of Staff’s office.
These demand transparent investigation rather than dismissal.
Prominent voices like Enitandev have listed officials who “have questions to answer,” framing this as potential high-level complicity rather than isolated fraud.
Broader Context of Corruption Concerns Under Tinubu
This scandal does not exist in isolation.
Since assuming office in 2023, the Tinubu administration has faced persistent accusations of opacity in fiscal management, controversial appointments, and alleged budget padding.
Nigeria’s debt burden has ballooned amid fuel subsidy removal and naira floating, while citizens endure inflation and hardship.
Cases of ghost workers, abandoned projects, and unverified expenditures have plagued previous administrations too — but the scale and audacity here, occurring deep into Tinubu’s tenure, amplify perceptions of systemic rot.
The involvement of the Federal Secretariat, multiple MDAs, the Budget Office, National Assembly, and financial institutions suggests either breathtaking incompetence or a network of enablers.
As one commentator noted, fooling “Budget Office recognition, NASS recognition, EFCC Collaboration, Federation Head of Service recognition” points to deeper failures in governance guardrails.
The mysterious hotel fire death of a key figure adds a layer of intrigue reminiscent of unresolved high-profile cases that erode public trust.
Without full transparency — including published investigation reports, budget submission trails, and bank records — speculation will continue.
Implications for Governance and Public Trust
If Adeyemi acted alone, this represents the most elaborate one-man government scam in Nigeria’s history, exposing dangerous loopholes that enemies of the state could exploit.
If insiders facilitated it, it constitutes grand corruption at the heart of the Tinubu Presidency, diverting scarce resources from development to private pockets.
The Presidency must go beyond press statements.
Recommended immediate actions:
- Full forensic audit of the 2026 budget line item and all related payments.
- Publication of verification failure reports from implicated agencies.
- Independent probe (possibly by a respected retired justice) into office allocation and staff approvals.
- Status update on the CBN account and any funds involved.
- Comprehensive report on Tanimola’s death.
Until these steps are taken, public skepticism will persist. Nigerians deserve better than recycled excuses of “one bad apple.”
In an era of economic pain, tolerance for billion-naira ghost projects is zero.
This case is a litmus test for the Tinubu administration’s anti-corruption credentials.
Failure to deliver transparent accountability will only deepen the narrative of elite impunity and “state capture” — where public institutions exist to serve private interests rather than the people.
The full truth awaits court proceedings and genuine investigation.
Citizens and civil society must sustain pressure for answers, as billions in public funds hang in the balance.
This is not merely about one fake agency — it is about whether Nigeria’s governance architecture can still detect and punish grand theft at the highest levels.













