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When Populism Trumps Policy—A Registrar’s Public Misfire

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CRFFN Ag Registrar, Kingsley lgwe
Editorial

In the theatre of maritime governance, where strategic nuance and institutional coherence ought to reign supreme, Mr. Igwe Kingsley, Acting Registrar/CEO of the Council for the Regulation of Freight Forwarding in Nigeria (CRFFN), chose instead to play the role of a populist preacher—on the wrong pulpit, at the wrong time.

At the World Maritime Day stakeholders’ forum, Mr. Igwe took to the microphone not to illuminate policy, but to lament the woes of the freight forwarding sector with the fervor of a street agitator.

With industry stakeholders and the freight forwarding community seated, lgwe said: “The sector needs funding. It needs finance because the size of freight forwarding, that worths over $10 billion, is capital intensive. The sector contributes significantly to the economy of Nigeria.
“Companies that are providing corporate freight forwarding services in Nigeria are mostly foreign companies. You can count less than three that are local companies that are operating at a corporate level. And statistics have it that over $6-9 billion go to freight forwarding services as capital funds.
“So I want to advocate on behalf of the freight forwarding community that there is a need for a financial subvention to enable freight forwarders to access funds to help them purchase infrastructure (warehouses, etc) that will enable their business to thrive in Nigeria.”

His call for financial subvention—while not entirely misplaced—was delivered with the tact of a bull in a china shop.

In a room filled with technocrats and policymakers, he chose to air internal grievances like a man unaware of his own job description.

Let’s be clear: the freight forwarding sector does need strategic investment. But what it does not need is a serving CEO publicly begging for handouts without a coherent roadmap, especially when seated within the very ministry he’s appealing to. Mr. Igwe’s remarks, dripping with alarmist overtones about foreign dominance, lacked the analytical depth and policy alignment expected from someone entrusted with regulatory stewardship.

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The Permanent Secretary, Mr. Olufemi Oloruntola’s visibly restrained rebuke was telling. His clarification—delivered with diplomatic restraint—was a subtle reminder that governance is not a marketplace of emotional appeals.

“Let me make a clarification, the ministry is doing everything to ensure that it’s capacity development programme delivers across board, and drives this administration’s economic trajectory.

“Attention must be appropriately focused in line with statutory acts”, Oloruntola declared.

It was a masterclass in bureaucratic containment, as he tactfully redirected the conversation away from Mr. Igwe’s ill-timed sermon.

What Mr. Igwe displayed was not leadership, but a troubling cocktail of political naivety and institutional incoherence. His public appeal, devoid of strategic framing or fiscal logic, raises serious questions about his capacity to navigate the complexities of a $10 billion sector. Is this the voice of a regulator, or the echo of a man out of depth?

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In a country where maritime policy is already burdened by fragmented execution, the CRFFN cannot afford a Registrar who confuses public forums with protest rallies. The freight forwarding community deserves advocacy rooted in intelligence, not improvisation. Mr. Igwe must learn that leadership is not about sounding concerned—it’s about being competent.

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