Business
Shortages and price rises: US sanctions Serbia’s main oil supplier over Russian-majority control
The US has sanctioned Serbia’s main oil supplier, which is majority-owned by Russia, the company confirmed on Thursday.
The sanctions against the Petroleum Industry of Serbia (NIS), which employs 5,000 people, took effect at 6 am on Thursday.
American authorities sanctioned the oil giant, which operates a refinery and 330 petrol stations in Serbia, because it is controlled by Moscow.
The move comes as part of the West’s crackdown on Moscow’s energy sector, following its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
NIS’ main shareholder is Russia’s Gazpromneft with 45%, and after a swap deal, the Gazprom Capital-related JSC Intelligence controls around 11%. The Serbian state holds 30%, while small investors hold the remaining shares, accounting for about 13-15%.
The Russian-majority ownership can only be resolved through a buyout or nationalisation. While there is no money for the former, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić is unwilling to take the second option.
“Nationalisation could be the only way out of the sanctions, but it is the last thing I would do,” Vučić said on Thursday.
The Russian owners are not willing to withdraw from the market voluntarily, as they have “established a foothold” there, according to Vučić. They are also politically motivated to stay in a region they consider to be within their sphere of interest.
The sanctions, which were announced with a 45-day notice period, have been postponed six times at Belgrade’s request, but now even the Serbian president does not hope for another reprieve from Washington.
What are the immediate consequences?
Once the sanctions are enforced, deliveries via the Croatia-owned pipeline JANAF will immediately cease by force of law. The pipeline supplies crude oil to Serbia’s only refinery in Pančevo, which comes from Iraq and Gulf countries, not Russia.
JANAF was granted a delivery permit, which ended on Wednesday. It largely managed to meet Serbia’s needs independently.
Between 2023 and 2024, a total of 6.2 million barrels of crude were transported from the port of Rijeka to Pančevo, near Belgrade.
Losing a client like NIS is set to create serious sanctions in Croatia, sending ripples through JANAF’s largest owners including the state-owned asset management and pension fund, oil company INA, the Croatian state-owned electric utility company and the government itself, which owns 15% of its shares.
Motorists in Serbia will experience the effects of the sanctions immediately.
From 6 am on Thursday, the option to pay by card at the NIS chain of petrol stations will be discontinued. Terminals will no longer accept MasterCard or Visa cards, which operate on the US payment system.

Card payment terminal in New York AP Photo/Mark Lennihan
According to forecasts, purchases at NIS filling stations will only be possible with cash.
If banks stop cooperating with NIS, it “will not affect employees’ and consumers’ personal accounts”, said the company’s CEO, Kiril Tyurgyenev.
An immediate fuel shortage is not expected. However, if reserves run out, not only will queues form at petrol stations, but fuel price hikes will be inevitable.
Is there a stockpile of petrol in the country?
Waiting in line at petrol stations in Serbia has occurred before.
In March 2022, cars lined up at stations after the Serbian government froze fuel prices, and rumours spread rapidly on social media that the quantity of fuel allowed per fill-up would be limited, a measure that had occurred several times before.
Dušan Bajatović, director of Srbijagas, reassured the public on state television that fuel stocks in Serbia are “sufficient for six to eight months” and that there is “no threat of a price shock or fuel shortage”.
For a month or two, no one will feel the consequences of the sanctions, according to Bajatović in another broadcast of the same media outlet.
However, expert Miloš Zdravković claimed Serbia has “insignificant reserves” that “will not last long” after the sanctions are enforced.
He believes these reserves are “sufficient for a few months”, arguing that the Serbian oil industry will shut down because “it is impossible to transport the necessary amount of crude oil by Danube barges”.

Queues at Novi Sad petrol stations, March 2022 Forrás: Nova, 021
“The company stores sufficient crude oil for processing, as well as enough oil derivatives to meet the current market demand,” NIS stated in a press release without giving further details, adding that its filling stations “are ready to meet consumers’ needs”.
If the sanctions are imposed, petrol station owners will increase the supply of imported fuel “above the usual quantity”, said the owner of the Knez Petrol petrol station chain, which sources half of its supplies from NIS.
“I believe there will be enough fuel until the end of the year, but afterwards, in the long run, the situation will probably be uncertain and tense,” said Jelena Radun, co-owner of the Radun Avia petrol station chain. She believes the most significant problem could be the lack of storage and port capacity.
Hungarian-owned MOL, which is not affected by the sanctions, operates 65 petrol stations in Serbia. At the end of February, it announced that it is ready to take over NIS’s role in the Serbian market.
Prior to the announcement, Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó criticised the US sanctions, attributing them to the Biden administration’s retaliatory action against the sovereign policies of Hungary and Serbia, despite the new Trump administration having imposed the punitive measures.
Will there be any layoffs?
As a result of US sanctions, it is likely that NIS will eventually be forced to let some of its workers go.
“I hope the company will not lay off a large number of employees,” Vučić said.
“We will talk to the Russians because there is nothing left to discuss with the Americans,” he added.

The Pančevo refinery Forrás: NIS
The company’s accounts with foreign banks are expected to be frozen, raising questions about how, for example, employee salaries will be paid. Since the sanctions were announced, salaries have been paid a month in advance as a preemptive measure, according to sources in Gazprom.
It is unclear even to experts how the giant company will operate in the future. Banks, for example, risk their own operations if they continue to do business with NIS.
This risk extends even to the state-owned Postal Savings Bank, which could remain the oil company’s only financial partner after the sanctions.
Some other companies maintained their cooperation with the Serbian oil company until this week, while others severed ties as early as January when the US first announced sanctions.
NIS a ‘lifeline’ to Serbia’s economy
The sanctions will have severe consequences because they will practically paralyse NIS’ operations, Ljubodrag Savić, a professor from the Faculty of Economics at the University of Belgrade told Euronews Serbia.
NIS contributes 11.9% to the state budget, and its production and operations account for 6.9% of GDP, said Savić, who suggested that the large company plays a “lifeline” role in the country’s infrastructure.
He pointed out that NIS employs 5,000 people, whose fate affects the lives of 20,000 family members.
NIS had already been operating with weaker results in the first half of this year, with its turnover falling by more than a quarter compared to the same period in 2024.
The situation is exacerbated by the fact that banks expect NIS to repay just over half a billion euros in loans, of which €180 million is due this year.

Will the supply dry up? – NIS’s fuel range Forrás: NIS
There is always the possibility that foreign banks will attempt to collect their debts immediately, according to the former secretary general of the Association of Serbian Banks Veroljub Dugalić.
Dugalić recalled that Washington had no problem seizing or freezing Russian assets abroad in the past.
“They won’t have a problem doing the same here,” Dugalić said.
Sanctions are easy to impose but hard to lift, warned Professor Savić, who added that Serbia would suffer the most collateral damage in what he described as the clash between the US and Russia.
Business
Soludo takes over Onitsha main market as IPOB declares compulsory sit-at-home
The Governor of Anambra State, Prof Chukwuma Soludo has announced that his government will take over the running of Onitsha Main Market.
The governor had last Monday visited the market and also announced a one week closure over the continued adherence to sit at home protest by traders in the market.
The closure had generated a lot of tension, leading to protests by the traders, while the governor stuck to his gone, insisting that the market will remain closed for one week. He also held a meeting with the leaders of the market yesterday, where he presented them with two options.
Though it was a closed door meeting, which held at the Light House, Awka, a source in the meeting told THISDAY that the traders chose to open their shops on Monday, against an earlier option of demolishing and remodelling the market.
The source said: “The governor gave them two options. The first included; they will resume full trading activities on Mondays, mark attendance as required, while he regenerate and reorganise the market, demolish all illegal structures and plazas and create proper spaces and car parks. The second includes; To continue with Sit-at-Home on Mondays and risk the demolition of the market and use two-years for its reconstruction to restore it to its original master plan.
“The governor told them that restoring parking facilities in Main Market is an emergency, and any illegal structure erected at the park would be demolished soonest.”
It was gathered that the traders choose the first option, which will involve them opening on Monday, and giving the governor the go ahead to remove illegal structures to make way for wider roads in the market and restoring its packing space.
During the meeting, the governor told the traders that a committee will be set up to rectify all occupants of shops in the market, and that this will commence work soon, insisting that the government needs to know those who are trading in its market.
The governor was also said to have rejected a plea for the market to be opened on Saturday, insisting it can only be opened on Monday, when their compliance will again be re-accessed.
“The traders agreed to the terms, and will on Monday reopen the market to recommence business,” the source said.
Meanwhile, secessionist group, Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has declared what it called Biafra-wide solidarity lockdown which is to hold on Monday in solidarity with Onitsha traders and to demand for Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s immediate release.
A press release by the group’s publicity secretary, Mr Emma Powerful said the total shutdown across Biafraland is a direct, peaceful, and unified response to the shutting down of Onitsha Main Market for one week by Soludo.
The release said: “We remind Governor Soludo and his Abuja sponsors that the Monday sit-at-home originated as a peaceful protest demanding the unconditional release of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, the very cause that has galvanized global attention to Biafra’s quest for self-determination.
“Attempts to twist this into “economic sabotage” or “criminality” will fail. The markets thrived during Christmas Mondays without incident, proving that voluntary compliance stems from genuine solidarity, not fear. Soludo’s escalation only exposes his desperation to provoke confrontation at a time when Biafra’s international profile is rising and diplomatic efforts are gaining traction.
“On Monday, February 2, 2026, we call on all Biafrans traders, transporters, banks, schools, civil servants, and every sector across Anambra, Abia, Imo, Enugu, Ebonyi, and beyond to observe this solidarity strike peacefully.
“Remain indoors, refrain from all commercial and public activities, and demonstrate to the world our disciplined resolve. This is not about disruption for its own sake; it is about standing with Onitsha traders who are being punished for demanding justice, and reaffirming that no governor can coerce free citizens into abandoning their rights or their solidarity.”
Business
BUA Chairman Is My Ex-Husband – Tinubu’s Minister Opens Up On Past Secret With Abdul Samad Rabiu
Nigeria’s Minister of Art, Culture and the Creative Economy, Hannatu Musawa has opened up about her former marriage to BUA Group chairman Abdul Samad Rabiu, describing it as a meaningful and life-shaping experience.
In a conversation on the MIC On Podcast with Channels Television journalist Seun Okinbaloye, Musawa reflected on her bond with Rabiu, saying their connection has remained strong despite their separation.
She explained that their relationship has evolved into one grounded in family ties, mutual respect, and continued support.
Musawa shared that although they are no longer married, they remain close and involved in each other’s lives.
She also pointed out the lasting connection between their families, noting that her daughter, Khadija, was named after Rabiu’s grandmother, showing the enduring link between them.
The minister described her time with Rabiu as one of the most memorable periods of her life.
She stated that there is no bitterness between them and that she will continue to support him in his endeavors, maintaining respect and care for their shared history.
She said: “We love each other because you love your family, obviously. But Samad is my brother. He’s my family. That’s what he is. And I’m his sister and his family, too. The marriage of the greatest experiences I’ve ever had.
“He is my ex-husband, but we are still family. We juggle coming from a background where, once you’re joined together, you continue to participate in each other’s lives. And so, we were married, and now we are just family.
“My daughter Khadija was named after Samad’s grandmother.
“We continue to share a deep respect and a love, and more than anything, support for each other. I’ll continue to be his greatest cheerleader.”
Abdul Samad Rabiu leads BUA Group, a Nigerian conglomerate with investments in cement, sugar, and other industries, and is regarded as one of the country’s leading business figures.
Business
LIRS reiterates January 31st deadline for employers’ Annual Tax returns filing
The Lagos State Internal Revenue Service (LIRS) has reiterated the statutory deadline of 31st January 2026 for all employers of labour in Lagos State to fulfil their statutory obligation to file their annual tax returns for the 2025 financial year.
In a statement issued on Thursday, January 19, the Executive Chairman of LIRS, Dr Ayodele Subair, reminded employers that the obligation to file annual returns is in accordance with the provisions of the Nigeria Tax Administration Act 2025 (NTAA).
Dr Subair explained that employers are required to file detailed returns on emoluments and compensation paid to their employees, as well as payments made to their service providers, vendors and consultants, and to ensure that all applicable taxes due for the year 2025 are fully remitted. He emphasised that filing of annual returns is a mandatory legal obligation, and warned that failure to comply will result in statutory sanctions, including administrative penalties, as prescribed under the new tax law.
According to Section 14 of the Nigeria Tax Administration Act 2025 (NTAA), employers are required to file detailed annual returns of all emoluments paid to employees, including taxes deducted and remitted to relevant tax authorities. Such returns must be filed and submitted not later than January 31 each year.
Dr Subair stated
“Employers must prioritise the timely filing of their annual income tax returns. Compliance should be part of our everyday business practice. Early and accurate filing not only ensures adherence to the law as required by the Nigerian Constitution, but also supports effective revenue tracking, which is important to Lagos State’s fiscal planning and sustainability.”
He further noted that in Lagos State, electronic filing via the LIRS eTax platform remains the only approved and acceptable mode of filing, as manual submissions have been completely phased out. This measure, he said, is aimed at simplifying and standardising tax administration processes in the State.
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