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  • Family ties in Giffnock medals and joy for Aberdeen youngsters, too

    Family ties in Giffnock medals and joy for Aberdeen youngsters, too

    Sunday 26th October 2025

    Heard the one about the brothers who teamed up to win gold at the Lindsays National XC Relays?

    Cian and Calum Dick did so for Giffnock North AC in the Young Males race at…

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  • PM announces to open new domestic gas connections – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. PM announces to open new domestic gas connections  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. PM Shehbaz announces new gas connections for domestic consumers  The Express Tribune
    3. Pakistan reopens domestic gas connections nationwide  ARY News
    4. PM unveils restoration of gas…

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  • Football Falls To No. 16 Virginia In Overtime, 17-16

    Football Falls To No. 16 Virginia In Overtime, 17-16

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  • Trump says he can ‘quickly solve’ Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict – Business Recorder

    1. Trump says he can ‘quickly solve’ Pakistan-Afghanistan conflict  Business Recorder
    2. Trump says will get Pak-Afghan conflict ‘solved very quickly’  Dawn
    3. Great people: Trump’s big praise for Munir, Sharif, and an Afghanistan mention  India…

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  • Elon Musk Says China’s Falcon 9 Rival Might Outperform In 5 Years ‘If They Are Lucky,’ Notes SpaceX Will Be Launching Starship By Then

    Elon Musk Says China’s Falcon 9 Rival Might Outperform In 5 Years ‘If They Are Lucky,’ Notes SpaceX Will Be Launching Starship By Then

    Elon Musk on Saturday stated that SpaceX’s Chinese rival, LandSpace Technology’s Zhuque-3 launch vehicle, might outperform the Falcon 9 “if they are lucky,” but it could still take a few years.

    Rising Competition

    Musk noted that LandSpace has…

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  • what we learned from the 2025 World Gymnastics Championships

    what we learned from the 2025 World Gymnastics Championships

    Hashimoto Daiki and Zhang Boheng’s rivalry is here to stay

    Tokyo 2020 all-around champion Hashimoto Daiki claimed his third straight world all-around title, just 15 months after a fall in the all-around final at Paris 2024 left his effort to…

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  • Can intermittent fasting help in cancer treatment? Cancer surgeon warns ‘you cannot selectively kill cancer cells…’

    Can intermittent fasting help in cancer treatment? Cancer surgeon warns ‘you cannot selectively kill cancer cells…’

    In recent years, intermittent fasting has surged in popularity, often hailed as a solution for various health concerns, including its potential role in cancer prevention and even treatment. However, this mainstream attention has inevitably led…

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  • Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni’s 3 Big Lessons From Phia

    Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni’s 3 Big Lessons From Phia

    Phoebe Gates and Sophia Kianni, both 23, are turning heads with Phia, their AI fashion app that’s drawing interest from investors and trendsetters.

    Phia, an AI-powered shopping assistant, went live in April and said…

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  • Two men arrested after Louvre jewel heist | France

    Two men arrested after Louvre jewel heist | France

    Two suspects have been arrested in relation to last Sunday’s heist at the Louvre museum in Paris, in which a gang of four men made off with crown jewels worth an estimated €88m (£76m), according to the Paris prosecutor.

    Citing police sources,…

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  • Nigeria’s Central Bank Engages Fintech Leaders to Shape Future Policy

    Nigeria’s Central Bank Engages Fintech Leaders to Shape Future Policy

    The Central Bank of Nigeria hosted a fintech roundtable at the IMF–World Bank Meetings to refine policy and strengthen digital finance stability.

     


     

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    Nigeria’s Central Bank Advances Fintech Collaboration at Global Meetings

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has renewed its push to align financial innovation with regulatory oversight, hosting a strategic fintech roundtable on the sidelines of the IMF–World Bank Annual Meetings in Washington. The dialogue brought together policymakers, investors, and executives from Nigeria’s expanding digital finance sector to discuss how the country can balance innovation with financial stability.

    Governor Olayemi Cardoso outlined the central bank’s goal of creating a financial environment where technology can thrive under prudent supervision. The initiative underscored the CBN’s intent to develop a policy framework that fosters inclusion and innovation while safeguarding consumer confidence and institutional trust.

    The meeting, which drew participants from both local and international organizations, reflected the central bank’s broader effort to integrate Nigeria’s fintech ecosystem into its long-term economic strategy. Officials said the session served as an opportunity to review global best practices and gather input for the next stage of regulatory reform.

     

    Fintech as a Pillar of Economic Modernization

    Nigeria has emerged as one of Africa’s leading fintech markets, with startups transforming payments, credit access, and remittances. Yet this rapid growth has presented regulators with complex challenges around data protection, interoperability, and systemic risk.

    At the Washington meeting, CBN officials reiterated that the institution’s approach remains “pro-innovation” but guided by prudence. The bank emphasized its dual mandate: promoting innovation-driven growth while preserving the soundness of the financial system. This principle has shaped the CBN’s recent reforms, from payment interoperability frameworks to new guidelines for digital banks.

    Governor Cardoso’s remarks reflected this balance, emphasizing that technology should serve inclusion and efficiency without eroding trust. According to central bank statements, the insights gathered from the roundtable will feed directly into ongoing consultations with market participants as part of Nigeria’s evolving fintech policy blueprint.

     

    Collaboration and Confidence in the Fintech Sector

    Participants in the Washington roundtable discussed how global standards could inform Nigeria’s domestic regulation and how the private sector can contribute to policy design. The conversation highlighted that sustaining investor confidence requires predictability, transparency, and strong governance.

    By engaging directly with fintech firms, the central bank aims to ensure that regulatory design evolves with market needs. The CBN views structured industry engagement as critical to building trust between regulators and innovators, a theme that has guided several of its recent initiatives, including the FinTech Regulatory Sandbox and the National Payments Strategy.

    Observers noted that the roundtable signaled a shift from reactive supervision to a more collaborative model, in which regulators and private firms share information and co-develop frameworks for financial innovation. The CBN sees this as a prerequisite for maintaining Nigeria’s competitive advantage as an emerging digital economy.

     

    Balancing Innovation with Oversight

    The discussion in Washington placed particular emphasis on infrastructure resilience, compliance, and market confidence. While Nigeria’s fintech market has attracted substantial domestic and foreign investment, the CBN remains cautious about risks tied to cybersecurity, liquidity management, and financial crime.

    Officials underscored that technological advancement must not come at the expense of prudential discipline. The bank’s position reflects a growing global consensus that digital finance innovation should be accompanied by strong safeguards against fraud, money laundering, and operational failures.

    Through its policy agenda, the CBN continues to reinforce the integrity of Nigeria’s financial system while supporting innovations that expand access to credit and payments. The institution’s recent work on interoperability aims to ensure that consumers can transact across platforms without friction, an essential step toward a unified national payments ecosystem.

     

    Toward a Sustainable Fintech Framework

    The Washington roundtable is part of a broader series of structured engagements between the CBN and the private sector. These sessions are designed to refine regulations for digital assets, mobile money, and payment service providers while preserving monetary stability.

    The CBN’s next phase of reform will focus on establishing clear operational standards for fintech companies seeking licensing under the bank’s regulatory sandbox. This framework allows startups to test products under controlled conditions, balancing innovation with consumer protection.

    By integrating these mechanisms, the central bank seeks to strengthen its oversight capacity and build confidence among both domestic and international investors. The emphasis on inclusion and resilience aligns with the CBN’s long-term vision of a digital financial system that supports Nigeria’s economic diversification goals.

     

    Outlook

    The Central Bank of Nigeria’s engagement with fintech leaders at the IMF–World Bank Meetings marks an important step in shaping the country’s digital finance future. The dialogue reflects a shift toward regulatory partnership and strategic openness at a time when global financial institutions are redefining their role in technological transformation.

    For Nigeria, the outcome of these discussions will likely determine how effectively its financial sector can attract capital, expand access, and safeguard stability in a rapidly digitalizing economy. The CBN’s commitment to inclusive innovation and prudent regulation suggests that fintech will remain a central component of Nigeria’s strategy for sustainable growth in the years ahead.

     

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