Benue State is witnessing an unprecedented digital awakening, as the government of His Excellency, Rev. Fr. Dr. Hyacinth Iormem Alia, marks the successful delivery of the first batch of BDIC-branded technological devices—culminating in a historic milestone for education, industrialization, and ICT development in Nigeria’s Middle Belt.
This landmark achievement traces its roots back to November 2024, when Governor Alia embarked on a high-level diplomatic and investment mission to China. Accompanied by a powerful delegation of technocrats, policymakers, and private sector stakeholders, the Governor visited Shenzhen—China’s innovation capital—and engaged with global tech giants, including Huawei Technologies and ITS Technology. The outcome of these engagements laid the groundwork for Benue’s aggressive push toward a fully digitized, diversified economy.

Among the most significant results of that visit was the strategic partnership established between the Benue Digital Infrastructure Company PLC (BDIC) and ITS Technology Shenzhen. This collaboration has now birthed the production of high-quality, BDIC-branded laptops, all-in-one desktop computers, projectors, and power banks—each engineered to support Benue State’s ambitious digital transformation and education reform agenda.
The “Digital Benue” Dream Becomes Reality
As of July 2025, the first phase of the BDIC-ITS agreement has been successfully executed. The devices, produced to international standards, have passed rigorous quality control procedures and have been granted full certification by Nigerian regulatory bodies, most notably the Standards Organisation of Nigeria through its Conformity Assessment Programme (SONCAP).

Speaking from Shenzhen, where he officially received the inaugural batch of equipment, a senior official from the BDIC described the moment as “historic, not just for Benue, but for Nigeria’s entire digital education sector.”
The shipment, now en route to Nigeria, is expected to arrive by August 2025. Its arrival will mark a pivotal step in the rollout of the “One Student, One Digital Skill, One Computer” policy—a signature initiative of the Alia-led administration aimed at ensuring every student in the state has access to modern digital tools and skill-building opportunities.
“Digital empowerment is no longer optional—it’s the bedrock of 21st-century education,” Governor Alia said in a statement. “What we are delivering are not just computers; they are instruments of transformation, unlocking creativity, expanding opportunity, and preparing our youths to compete globally.”
Youth, Innovation, and Industrialization at the Forefront
The introduction of BDIC-branded devices is only the beginning. The agreement’s second phase, scheduled to begin shortly, will see the establishment of a state-of-the-art BDIC Computer Assembly and Manufacturing Plant in Benue State. This plant, once operational, will localize the production process, reduce dependency on imports, build indigenous technical capacity, and generate hundreds of direct and indirect jobs.

Slated for completion within the next two years, the facility is projected to become one of the most advanced ICT manufacturing hubs in West Africa. Its presence in Benue will not only stimulate regional economic activity but also serve as a magnet for further investment in the technology and innovation ecosystem.
“This is about building capacity at home,” noted Dr. Terna Utenge, a digital policy advisor to the Governor. “With the assembly plant, we will be training local engineers, hiring skilled workers, and fostering an ecosystem where innovation thrives locally. This is the industrial policy of the future—rooted in education, powered by technology.”
Education Reimagined: “One Student, One Skill, One Computer”
At the core of this initiative lies the desire to redefine learning in Benue. The “One Student, One Skill, One Computer” program seeks to eliminate the digital divide by democratizing access to technology in public schools. Students will now be equipped with personal computing devices—preloaded with curriculum-aligned learning tools, coding software, and productivity apps—alongside structured digital literacy training.
This initiative places Benue among the few Nigerian states taking bold, practical steps to integrate technology into the public education system at scale. Teachers are already undergoing specialized training in digital pedagogy, while schools are being retrofitted with internet access and power solutions to support this digital shift.
Already, excitement is building across secondary schools and tertiary institutions. Student leaders from Benue State University and various Colleges of Education have expressed optimism that the new tools will enhance their learning experience, increase their employability, and foster innovation among youths.
Strategic Foresight, Global Partnerships, Local Impact
This transformation is the direct result of Governor Alia’s vision and strategic commitment to rebranding Benue as a knowledge-driven, investment-ready state. By forging global partnerships and investing in digital infrastructure, his administration is steadily moving the state from a primarily agrarian economy into one that embraces innovation, entrepreneurship, and knowledge capital.
The formation of BDIC—tasked with driving digital infrastructure deployment and innovation policy—has proven to be a masterstroke. In less than a year, BDIC has secured global partnerships, catalyzed industrial agreements, and spearheaded education transformation programs—demonstrating what is possible when public sector leadership is bold, focused, and forward-thinking.
“The seeds we sowed in China are now bearing fruit,” said Mr. Chris Aondofa, Managing Director of BDIC. “We are no longer just consumers of technology. We are becoming producers, thinkers, innovators. This is how nations grow.”
As Benue eagerly awaits the arrival of the devices in August, the implications of this project are already reverberating across Nigeria’s digital landscape. From Abuja to Lagos, tech industry leaders are praising Benue for breaking new ground and setting a model for ICT-led development.
The planned BDIC Assembly Plant will further deepen these gains by embedding technological production capacity within the state, turning Benue into a hub for digital manufacturing and education innovation.
For now, Governor Alia and his team remain focused on implementation. “The work has just begun,” he said in a recent address. “Our goal is not just to launch projects—but to deliver results that change lives, empower our youth, and redefine the future of Benue.”
With bold leadership, strategic alliances, and unwavering commitment, Benue State is stepping confidently into the digital age—not as a spectator, but as a key player shaping Nigeria’s tech future.
Written By: Christian Asema
News Editor/Web Admin Hobnob News Nigeria
