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January 24, 2026

Adewale Dosunmu engages Saint Kitts & Nevis Citizenship by Investment Leadership and Nigeria’s Former SGF

H.E Calvin St Juste -Chairman CIU SKN, Boss Mustapha-former Secretary to the Government of the Federation of Nigeria

H.E Calvin St Juste -Chairman CIU SKN, Boss Mustapha-former Secretary to the Government of the Federation of Nigeria

By Juliet Umeh

At the 4th Annual AfriCaribbean Trade and Investment Forum (ACTIF 2025) in St. George’s, Grenada, Adewale Dosunmu continued to advance high-level dialogue on investment mobility and Africa–Caribbean economic cooperation through strategic engagements with key institutional leaders.

On the sidelines of the forum, Dosunmu was pictured alongside the Chairman of the Citizenship by Investment Unit (CIU) of Saint Kitts and Nevis and Boss Mustapha, former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) of Nigeria. The meeting reflected the convergence of policy leadership, institutional governance, and private-sector expertise shaping the future of global investment migration.

Saint Kitts and Nevis is internationally recognized as the world’s first and longest-running Citizenship by Investment program, setting the benchmark for regulatory standards, due diligence, and investor confidence within the global mobility industry. The country remains a cornerstone among the five Caribbean nations offering structured CBI programs that support national development and economic diversification.

Adewale Dosunmu, Managing Partner for West Africa at Global Citizen Consultants (GCC), has played a growing role in connecting African investors and institutions with compliant, government-backed investment pathways across the Caribbean and beyond. GCC’s advisory model emphasizes transparency, regulatory alignment, and long-term value—principles that align closely with the evolving governance frameworks of Saint Kitts and Nevis’ CIU.

Commenting on the engagement, Dosunmu said:

“Saint Kitts and Nevis continues to set the global standard for citizenship by investment. Conversations like these are critical for ensuring that African investors engage credible programs that prioritize integrity, economic impact, and mutual growth.”

The presence of Boss Mustapha added a broader governance perspective to the discussion, underscoring the importance of public-sector experience in shaping effective cross-border investment frameworks and strengthening institutional trust between Africa and the Caribbean.

ACTIF 2025 served as a platform not only for policy dialogue but for relationship-building among decision-makers who influence trade, investment, and mobility across regions. Dosunmu’s engagement with leaders from Saint Kitts and Nevis and Nigeria highlighted his role as a connector at the intersection of government policy, private capital, and global citizenship strategy.

As Africa–Caribbean cooperation deepens, such engagements continue to reinforce the importance of structured investment programs, credible advisory leadership, and sustained institutional collaboration in driving inclusive economic growth.

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