A partnership moving from talk to tools
The NITDA–FCC digital partnership entered a new phase in Abuja as the National Information Technology Development Agency conducted a Digital Skills Training programme for staff of Ministries, Departments, and Agencies under the supervision of the Federal Character Commission.
The initiative followed a courtesy visit by NITDA Director-General Kashifu Inuwa Abdullahi to the newly appointed FCC Executive Chairman, Hon. Hulayat Motunrayo Omidiran, signalling renewed institutional alignment on digital transformation priorities.
Training framed as institutional repositioning
The three-day workshop, held from February 23 to 25, 2026, at the FCC Auditorium, brought together 35 participants drawn from key departments including Human Resources, Planning and Strategy, Monitoring and Enforcement, and the Management Information System unit.
Hon. Omidiran described the programme as central to repositioning the Commission and over 700 MDAs under its supervision for improved efficiency, transparency, and accountability.
“We sincerely appreciate the Director-General of NITDA for this collaboration. This Digital Skills Training is vital for repositioning the Commission and over 700 MDAs under our supervision,” she said.
From data handling to artificial intelligence
Participants said the programme moved beyond basic digital literacy into applied data management and Artificial Intelligence integration.
Garba Umar Wudil, Director of Monitoring and Enforcement at the FCC, described the Commission as a data-driven organisation, adding that the training strengthened capacity to manipulate and visualise data while integrating AI tools into operational processes.
“NITDA has been a great partner, providing both training and laptops to apply what we learned,” he said.
At the conclusion of the workshop, 35 laptops were presented to participants to support hands-on application of acquired skills.
Why digital capacity now carries systemic weight
Across Nigeria’s public sector, digital transformation has shifted from aspirational rhetoric to operational necessity. Agencies overseeing compliance, staffing equity, and policy monitoring increasingly depend on structured data systems and interoperable platforms.
Without internal capacity, investments in digital infrastructure risk underperformance. Training initiatives therefore serve as the connective tissue between hardware procurement and measurable governance improvement.
The NITDA–FCC digital partnership reflects a broader national effort to align technical capacity with administrative reform.
What transparency will now depend on
While workshops and equipment donations signal progress, the durability of reform rests on consistent implementation. Enhanced digital literacy must translate into improved data reporting, faster processing cycles, and measurable compliance tracking across MDAs.
If effectively deployed, the tools and skills introduced this week could reduce bureaucratic friction and strengthen oversight mechanisms within institutions supervised by the FCC.
If not institutionalised, however, training risks becoming episodic rather than transformational.
For now, laptops have been distributed. The next test lies in performance metrics.
This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.