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Amaechi, Hayatu-Deen reject ADC presidential primary over alleged rigging

TWO of the three presidential aspirants of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Rotimi Amaechi and Mohammed Hayatu-Deen, on Tuesday rejected the party’s presidential primary over alleged rigging and voter disenfranchisement.

The protests came as the party continued collation of results from the nationwide exercise held  on Monday, May 25., ahead of the 2027 presidential election

Amaechi, a former Minister of Transportation, in a statement, on his X handle, said the process was neither free nor transparent.

“Following reports of widespread voter disenfranchisement in most parts of the country during the African Democratic Congress (ADC) presidential primaries yesterday, I unequivocally reject the concocted results being announced,” he said.

Amaechi alleged that about 80 per cent of party members were denied the opportunity to vote.

“There’s no way that about eighty per cent of members of the party were not allowed to vote, and you expect me to accept such results,” he said.

He stressed that ADC could not be engaging in the same practices it accused the ruling All Progressives Congress and the Independent National Electoral Commission of committing.

“A party that criticises the ruling  APC and INEC for vote buying, rigging and writing of results cannot be engaging in vote buying, writing of results, and other electoral malpractices that leads to the disenfranchisement of voters who are party members,” he added.

Hayatu-Deen also rejected the process and announced that he would not attend the official declaration of the results.

“I will not be attending the announcement of the ADC presidential election results today. I am concerned by reports from across the country of widespread vote rigging, some of which I myself observed, and will therefore be taking advice on my next steps,” he said.

Reacting to the allegations, the ADC National Publicity Secretary, Bolaji Abdullahi in an interview om Channels Television, said the party had not established any evidence of irregularities.

“We don’t have any evidence to be able to support his position or to deny his position because we’ve not collated the results,” Abdullahi said.

“We’ve not noticed any pattern in the result, and we’ve not seen enough to be able to establish a pattern,” he added.

Meanwhile, the ADC announced that collation of results had begun at the party’s national secretariat.

In a statement on its official handle, the party said the process reflected its commitment to transparency and internal democracy.

The latest crisis adds to the internal challenges that have trailed the opposition coalition built around the ADC ahead of the 2027 elections.

The coalition had attracted key opposition figures, including former governors Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso, who joined the platform as part of efforts to build a united front against President Bola Tinubu of the APC ahead of 2027.

However, both politicians dumped the coalition earlier this month and moved to the Nigeria Democratic Congress, NDC,  amid internal disputes and legal wranglings within the ADC.

Ex-Southampton Nigerian footballer Victor Udoh dies at 21

FORMER Southampton and Royal Antwerp forward, Victor Udoh, has died at the age of 21.

According to UK mirror, the Nigerian footballer was found dead in Abuja under what was described as suspicious circumstances.

Udoh had recently returned to Nigeria following the end of his spell with Czech club Dynamo České Budějovice, which he joined after leaving Southampton in 2025.

Southampton confirmed his death in a statement, expressing grief over the loss of the former academy player.

“We are devastated by the tragic passing of former player Victor Udoh at the age of 21,” the club said.

“The thoughts of everyone at the club go out to Victor’s loved ones at this extremely difficult time.”

Royal Antwerp also mourned the player, describing the news of his death as heartbreaking.

“With great dismay, RAFC has learned of the passing of former player Victor Udoh,” the Belgian club said.

“Our thoughts are with Victor’s family, friends, and loved ones. We wish them much strength, support, and warmth during this particularly difficult time.”

Udoh joined Southampton in February 2025 on a three-and-a-half-year deal but spent only a brief period at the club, featuring in eight matches for the under-21 side in Premier League 2 without making a senior appearance.

He later left by mutual consent in search of regular playing time before joining Czech second-tier side Dynamo České Budějovice.

Before moving to England, the deceased grew at Royal Antwerp after joining from Abuja-based Hypebuzz in 2023.

He impressed with Antwerp’s reserve side, scoring 12 goals in 27 appearances for the Young Reds, before breaking into the first team, where he made 28 appearances.

 

Eid-el-Kabir: Abuja ram sellers blame insecurity, transport costs for price surge

Less than 24hours to Eid-el-Kabir, livestock markets in Lugbe, a suburb situated within the Abuja Municipal Area Council are experiencing low patronage. Traders attribute the downturn to increase in livestock prices driven by rising transportation costs and persistent insecurity in sourcing regions. The ICIR reports on how the current economic realities are affecting the supply of livestock in Lugbe Market.

For livestock sellers in the market, the current sales cycle falls short of previous years.

Sultan Lukman, a ram seller, said sales volume have dropped by more than half compared to the same period last year. He noted the low patronage due to the high cost of the animals.

“I came here with more than 12 rams, and I’ve barely sold four, compared to last year, where I sold everything. I was even helping my partners here to sell theirs. But this time around, it is very poor,” Lukman lamented.

Sultan Lukman

He explained that the price hike is a direct reflection of the expenses incurred in moving the animals from parts of the northern region to the capital city.

“They are complaining that the rams are too expensive, and it’s not our fault. Transportation is too expensive. I spent hundreds of naira just to bring in these rams,” he noted.

He didn’t end it there, he spoke about the feeding expenses of the stocks, saying the incessant hike in transportation has made everything harder to reach.

Another seller, Mukhtar Yahya, corroborated this, factoring fuel prices and transportation cost as the major factor for the massive price spike in the livestock market.

But a ram seller simply identified as Aliyu Muhammadu said insecurity and particularly banditry have disrupted traditional supply chains in rural communities.

“Many people that sell to us are nowhere to be found,” he said adding that “in Zamfara, they ran away because bandits were always going to their villages.”

Buyers adjust budgets amid price inflation 

The ICIR observed that the impact of the price hike is felt heavily by residents and buyers who visited the market with fixed budgets, only to find that prices have doubled or tripled over the past 12 months.

A buyer, identified as Bello Abubakar, expressed surprise at the market realities after failing to secure an animal within his planned budget. He was forced to review his household festive spending to accommodate the purchase. He said the price has ruined lots of planning he had done.

“This ram, I bought it for 350,000 naira. I was thinking I would find a good one for 250,000 naira, but I did not get any. Now, I have to go back home and review my budget, as what I planned to buy will have to reduce because I have spent too much on the ram,” he said.

Another buyer, Chukwuemeke, noted that the rates mentioned by the sellers shocked him, as he was only expecting the changes in price to be slightly different from last year.

“Walai, rams are too costly. When I bought a ram last year, the price was just 300,000 to 400,000 naira, but today, I’m hearing 800,000 naira and above.”

The leadership of the livestock market confirmed to the ICIR that the current economic situation has severely altered their sales patterns. Speaking on behalf of other sellers, Firdaus Sanni observed that while inquiries from buyers are high, they still record low sales because consumers cannot afford the price rates given to them.

Sanni stated, “The ram we used to sell for N200,000 to N300,000 is now going for N500,000 to N600,000. People are crying that there is no money.”

However, Isiaka Idris, the chairman of the livestock market said the turnout this year hasn’t been impressive. He added that corporate and bulk buyers who usually purchase large quantities for distribution have been noticeably absent.

“In previous years, people would come and buy in bulk, up to 50 pieces. But I haven’t seen them this year,” he stated.

Idris speaking with the ICIR reporter

Despite the slow start, traders express hope that market activity will improve in on Eid day as civil servants receive their monthly salaries.

AAC adopts Sowore as consensus candidate for 2027 presidential election

THE African Action Congress (AAC) has adopted its former presidential candidate, Omoyele Sowore, as its consensus candidate for the 2027 presidential poll.

Chairman of the AAC presidential primary committee, Kayode Babayomi, announced the adoption during the party’s 2027 presidential primary, stating that the party had resolved to present a consensus candidate ahead of the next general election in line with the 2026 Electoral Act.

Following his adoption, Sowore formally handed over his position as national chairman of the party to Samuel Ajeyigbe, the AAC Deputy National Chairman (Administration).

Addressing party members and supporters after the adoption, Sowore described the AAC as “the only registered socialist party in Nigeria” and “the only genuine opposition” capable of confronting what he called the “criminal conspiracy” masquerading as democracy in the country.

Sowore said the party represented “the oppressed masses gathered in every shanty, village, and town across the country,” insisting that the AAC was not interested in joining Nigeria’s political establishment but in dismantling it.

The activist, publisher, and politician also accused the government of implementing “copy-and-paste neo-colonial policies” dictated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank.

According to him, the removal of fuel subsidy without adequate palliatives deepened economic hardship and widened inequality across the country.

“The economic pain we feel today is a policy choice,” he said, adding that “the cruel decision to remove fuel subsidies without any palliative measures or local refining capacity was a decree handed down from Washington, D.C.”

Sowore also criticised what he described as the “privatisation of security” in Nigeria, alleging that security institutions had become tools for the protection of the elite rather than ordinary citizens.

“The police have become an enforcement organ of the ruling class,” he said, adding that the State Security Service had become “a vicious attack dog.”

He linked the country’s insecurity to unemployment, inequality, and the concentration of wealth among a few powerful individuals, arguing that the rise of banditry, kidnapping, and insurgency reflected deeper structural failures within the Nigerian state.

“These people did not fall from the sky. They are the bitter fruits of the diseased tree we call a country.”

Sowore further accused powerful business interests of monopolising key sectors of the economy, including fuel distribution, cement production, and telecommunications, which he described as “economic terrorism.”

“When a private businessman can hold an entire nation hostage over fuel prices, that is no longer capitalism — it is economic terrorism,” he stated.

Campaign promises

Speaking further, the AAC candidate promised that, if elected, his government would nationalise strategic sectors, dismantle monopolies, prosecute corrupt public officials, and invest heavily in education, healthcare, transportation, and job creation.

“The new economic direction must be people-centered, color-coded, and driven by the specific needs and strengths of our population. The true measure of economic success must no longer be the obscene wealth of a few oligarchs, but the prosperity, dignity, and opportunities available to ordinary Nigerians,” he said.

He also unveiled what he called four “people-driven economic models,” which he listed as the Orange and Yellow Economy, Purple and Pink Economy, Blue Economy, and Green Economy.

According to him, the models are aimed at empowering youths, women, and environmentally sustainable industries.

Sowore further announced that the party would declare a “Nationwide State of Resistance” on August 5 against “tyranny, oppression, corruption, exploitation, and the destruction of Nigeria’s future.”

“It was on August 5th that the #RevolutionNow protests erupted across Nigeria,” he said. “History is speaking to us again.”

Jonathan eligible to contest 2027 poll, court rules

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A FEDERAL High Court in Abuja has dismissed a case seeking to stop former President Goodluck Jonathan from contesting the 2027 presidential election, clearing the way for him to participate if he decides to join the race.

The judge, Peter Lifu, delivered the judgment on Tuesday, May 26, ruling that the suit filed by lawyer Johnmary Jideobi lacked merit and amounted to “an abuse of court process” according to Daily Trust.

The court also ordered the plaintiff to pay N20 million in damages to Jonathan and an additional N1 million to the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF).

Jideobi had asked the court to determine whether Jonathan could seek the presidency again under Sections 1(1), 1(2), 1(3), and 137(3) of the 1999 Constitution. He argued that since Jonathan had already taken the oath of office twice as president, he should not be allowed to contest another presidential election.

The plaintiff also requested an order preventing the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) from accepting or publishing Jonathan’s name as a candidate for the 2027 poll.

However, Lifu ruled that the plaintiff failed to show any personal injury or legal interest that gave him the right to file the case.

According to the judge, previous decisions by both the Federal High Court in Yenagoa and the Court of Appeal had already affirmed Jonathan’s eligibility to contest, making those decisions binding on the Abuja court.

He further dismissed an application asking him to withdraw from the matter over alleged bias, describing the request as frivolous.

During earlier proceedings, lawyers representing Jonathan and the AGF strongly opposed the request for the judge to step aside.

Jonathan’s counsel, Uche, argued that the motion was baseless and urged the court to rely on its records. He said the allegations against the judge amounted to “gross misrepresentation.”

Counsel to the AGF, Maimuna Lami-Shiru, also opposed the application, insisting there was no evidence questioning the judge’s impartiality. She described the motion as “baseless, unmeritorious and an abuse of court process.”

After hearing arguments on the recusal request, Lifu proceeded to hear both the preliminary objection and the main suit, stating that judgement would be delivered immediately if the application failed.

Jonathan’s legal team later asked the court to dismiss the case and award N50 million in costs against the plaintiff. The defence relied on earlier court rulings, including Andy Solomon v Jonathan and Cyracus Njoku v Jonathan, which had favoured the former president.

The lawyers argued that Section 137(3) of the Constitution could not be applied retroactively against Jonathan because his last election contest was in 2015. They also maintained that the suit was politically motivated and that the plaintiff lacked locus standi to bring the action.

The AGF’s lawyer supported the argument and asked the court to throw out the suit entirely.

INEC did not appear during the hearing, prompting the judge to close its case.

Although the judgement removes a legal obstacle, Jonathan has not publicly declared interest in the 2027 presidential election.

Recently, a faction of the Peoples Democratic Party reportedly backed by Oyo State Governor Seyi Makinde announced Jonathan as its preferred presidential candidate for the next general election. The former president has neither accepted nor rejected the endorsement.

Similar speculation also surrounded Jonathan ahead of the 2023 elections, but he eventually stayed out of the race and did not obtain nomination forms from any political party.

NNPC to court: Dangote fuel prices high, unstable

THE Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) has informed the Federal High Court in Lagos that petroleum products from Dangote Petroleum Refinery are sold at high and unstable prices.

It argued that granting the refinery’s request of allowing it to be the sole fuel supplier in Nigeria could create a monopoly.

In a counter-affidavit filed in opposition to Dangote Refinery’s suit (No. FHC/L/CS/857/2026), NNPC asked the court to dismiss the case, describing it as premature, incompetent, and an abuse of court process.

“The plaintiff’s petroleum products are already sold at significantly high and fluctuating market prices, dictated by its commercial interests,” NNPC said.

The ICIR reports that the dispute stemmed from Dangote Refinery’s challenge to the issuance of petrol import licences by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) to marketers and NNPC.

The refinery argued that the licences violated existing regulations and undermined its $20 billion investment, especially as it claimed to supply more than 90 per cent of Nigeria’s petrol demand. The company accused NNPC and regulators of frustrating its operations through inadequate crude oil supply and continued fuel importation despite its production capacity.

Responding, NNPC argued that there was no independently verified evidence proving the refinery could meet Nigeria’s fuel demand without support from imports.

According to the national oil company, the refinery’s production figures are selective and incomplete and do not account for critical aspects of fuel distribution such as logistics, storage, transportation, and strategic reserves.

The NNPC warned that relying on a single supplier could threaten national energy security and expose the country to shortages, supply disruptions, and price instability if refinery operations are interrupted.

The company also argued that the refinery’s requests would unfairly restrict other operators in the importation and supply chain, effectively creating monopoly control of the sector.

Defending the continued issuance of import licences, NNPC said the Petroleum Industry Act permitted regulators to approve imports when necessary to ensure energy security and market stability. It maintained that the law did not impose a mandatory ban on fuel importation.

It further denied allegations that it sabotaged Dangote Refinery’s operations or deliberately withheld crude oil supplies, stating that crude allocation depends on commercial agreements, logistics, production realities, and security considerations.

Petroleum Products Retail Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria (PETROAN) also backed NNPC’s position, insisting that competition in the petroleum sector was necessary to prevent price exploitation and encourage lower fuel prices through multiple supply sources.

PETROAN President, Billy Gillis-Harry, stressed that while Dangote Refinery’s investment was commendable, Nigeria’s downstream market must remain open and competitive to protect consumers from arbitrary pricing and supply shocks.

The latest legal battle marks another major confrontation between Dangote Refinery and government oil agencies over fuel importation, crude supply arrangements, and competition in Nigeria’s deregulated downstream petroleum sector.

The ICIR reports that the NNPC’s fight with Dangote Refinery continues as the national oil company persistently fails to revamp the government-owned Warri, Port-Harcourt and Kaduna refineries after wasting a huge chunk of state resources on them.

FG cancels $717.7m World Bank power loan amid worsening blackouts

THE Federal Government has cancelled $717.7 million in undisbursed World Bank funding earmarked for Nigeria’s struggling power sector.

According to PUNCH, the bank revealed that the cancellation followed a formal request by the Nigerian government and a mutual decision by both parties to discontinue the programme due the failure to meet key reform targets.

“The restructuring will result in the cancellation of the entire undisbursed balance in the amount of $717.7m equivalent, and no further disbursements will be made under the programme following approval of this restructuring,” the document read.

The ICIR reports that Nigeria remained the International Development Association’s third-largest borrower in the first quarter of 2026, despite a slight decline in exposure from $18.7 billion in December 2025 to $18.5 billion as of March 31, 2026.

The latest IDA financial statements showed only Bangladesh with $22.7 billion and Pakistan with $19.2 billion ranked above Nigeria, whose exposure represented about eight per cent of the institution’s $230.8 billion loan portfolio.

Nigeria’s exposure rose by $1.2 billion from $17.3 billion in March 2025, highlighting the country’s continued dependence on concessional World Bank financing.

The Bank in its latest report also announced that the programme’s closing date had been moved forward from June 30, 2027, to May 31, 2026, effectively ending the initiative more than a year earlier than planned.

The World Bank said Nigeria’s electricity sector continued to grapple with deep-rooted structural problems including weak distribution performance, transmission bottlenecks, underutilised generation capacity, and persistent financial imbalances despite years of reforms and significant financial support.

According to the Bank, high technical, commercial, and collection losses in the distribution segment, coupled with inadequate cost recovery, have created recurring financing gaps and severe liquidity pressures across the power value chain.

“These constraints have created recurrent financing gaps, most notably in the form of tariff shortfalls, which generate liquidity pressures across the value chain and weaken the operational and financial performance of sector institutions,” the document added.

The ICIR reports that this development has brought an end to the remaining portion of the $1.52 billion Power Sector Recovery Performance-Based Operation amid worsening tariff deficits, mounting financial strain, and persistent implementation setbacks.

Recall that the Federal Government launched the Power Sector Recovery Performance-Based Operation on June 23, 2020, with financing of about $752.5 million aimed at improving electricity supply reliability, strengthening the sector’s financial sustainability, and boosting accountability across the power value chain.

After seeing the progress of the recovery programme, the Bank approved an additional $763.5 million on June 9, 2023, to take effect on June 19, 2024, and address the staggering structural challenges. The programme was also extended to June 2027 bringing the total additional funding to about $1.52 billion.

However, while the original programme recorded substantial results and largely disbursed its funds, the additional financing struggled to meet major reform conditions, leading to minimal disbursements and the eventual cancellation of the remaining balance.

Tariff shortfalls reportedly declined by 71 per cent between 2019 and 2022, dropping from N581 billion to N166 billion. Regulatory cost recovery also improved significantly from 56 per cent to 94 per cent, while electricity supplied to the distribution grid rose by 13 per cent between 2018 and 2021.

Encouraged by these gains, the World Bank approved additional funding to strengthen operational performance, improve governance, and support performance improvement plans, particularly at the Transmission Company of Nigeria.

However, the reforms failed to progress as expected and the World Bank blamed much of the setback on major macroeconomic developments, especially the liberalisation of Nigeria’s foreign exchange market in June 2023, which triggered a sharp depreciation of the naira and significantly increased the cost of gas used for power generation.

More than 70 per cent of electricity supplied to Nigeria’s national grid is generated from natural gas priced in US dollars.

At the same time, electricity tariffs for most consumers remained largely unchanged despite rising generation costs. The bank noted that tariffs had effectively remained frozen since early 2023, except for Band A customers whose rates were adjusted to cost-reflective levels in April 2024.

As a result, tariff shortfalls surged sharply from N140 billion in 2022 to about N1.9 trillion annually in 2024 and 2025, placing heavy pressure on government finances.

Nigeria’s economic growth rate falls to 3.8% in Q1 2026, says NBS

THE National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has said that Nigeria’s economy expanded by only 3.89 per cent at N51.26 year-on-year in real terms in the first quarter of 2026, reflecting a slight slowdown in growth.

The figures were released in the bureau’s latest GDP report published on Monday, May 25. It noted that the Q1 2026 growth rate was lower than the 4.07 per cent recorded in the fourth quarter of 2025, but higher than the 3.13 per cent posted in the same period last year.

“During the quarter under review, agriculture grew by 3.15 per cent, an improvement from the 0.07 per cent recorded in the corresponding quarter of 2025. The growth of the industry sector stood at 3.50 per cent from 3.42 per cent recorded in the first quarter of 2025, while the services sector recorded a growth of 4.31 per cent from 4.33 per cent in the same quarter of 2025,” the NBS said.

According to the bureau, the services sector accounted for a larger share of Nigeria’s GDP in the first quarter of 2026, contributing 57.73 per cent to the aggregate economy, compared with 57.5 per cent in the corresponding period of 2025. It added that aggregate GDP for the quarter stood at N110.78 trillion in nominal terms.

“The real growth of the oil sector was 2.57 (year-on-year) in Q1 2026, indicating an increase of 0.70 per cent points relative to the rate recorded in the corresponding quarter of 2025 (1.87 per cent). Growth decreased by 4.22 per cent points when compared to Q4 2025, which was 6.79 per cent. On a quarter-on-quarter basis, the oil sector recorded a growth rate of 9.31 per cent in Q1 2026,” the NBS said.

This performance, the organisation said, was higher when compared to the first quarter of 2025, which recorded an aggregate GDP of N94 trillion, indicating a year-on-year nominal growth of 17.79 per cent.

The report also showed a decline in oil production as Nigeria recorded an average daily crude oil output of 1.55 million barrels per day (mbpd) in Q1 2026, lower than the 1.62 mbpd produced in the same quarter of 2025, and below the 1.58 mbpd recorded in Q4 2025.

Despite the drop in production, the oil sector grew by 2.57 per cent year-on-year in real terms, an improvement from the 1.87 per cent growth recorded in Q1 2025. However, this was lower than the 6.79 per cent growth posted in the previous quarter, meaning that the sector recorded a growth rate of 9.31 per cent on a quarter-on-quarter basis.

The oil sector contributed 3.92 per cent to total real GDP in Q1 2026, slightly lower than the 3.97 per cent contribution recorded in the same period of 2025, but higher than the 2.87 per cent contribution in Q4 2025.

Meanwhile, the non-oil sector continued to dominate the economy, contributing 96.08 per cent to GDP during the quarter, slightly above the 96.03 per cent share recorded in Q1 2025, though below the 97.13 per cent recorded in Q4 2025.

The NBS said the non-oil sector grew by 3.94 per cent in real terms, compared with 3.19 per cent in the corresponding quarter of 2025 and 3.99 per cent in the preceding quarter.

“The non-oil sector grew by 3.94 per cent in real terms during the reference quarter (Q1 2026)”

The bureau added that growth in the non-oil economy was largely driven by telecommunications, crop production, trade, cement manufacturing, financial institutions, real estate, construction, and road transportation activities.

“This rate was higher by 0.75 per cent points compared to the rate recorded in the same quarter of 2025, which was 3.19 per cent, and lower than the 3.99 per cent recorded in the fourth quarter of 2025,” it added.

Kogi graduate found dead in Abuja canal

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A 29-YEAR-OLD Kogi State University graduate, Blessing Moshood, was found dead in a canal in Jikwoyi, Abuja, on Thursday, May 21.

According to the deceased’s sister, Abigail Moshood, who spoke with Daily Trust, Blessing had stepped out of their home around 8pm after receiving a phone call. She explained that the deceased later reached out again about an hour later, mentioning she would briefly return home to collect her phone charger, which she had left behind.

However, concern grew when Blessing did not return as said and could not be reached the following day.

“We later heard people talking about the body of a woman discovered inside a canal, and someone described the type of hairstyle the deceased had on, which matched my sister’s,” she said.

She added, “My mother started crying, and we also learnt that policemen from the Jikwoyi Police Station had evacuated the corpse, which was found half-naked with only a top on, to a mortuary in Mararaba, Nasarawa State.”

Her sister further explained that when she visited the Jikwoyi Police Station to seek clarity, she was shown images of the recovered body, which confirmed her worst fears.

In the neighbourhood, residents described Blessing as warm and intelligent. One of them, Margaret, said she was well-educated and easy to talk to.

“I learnt she graduated with a Second Class Upper in Sociology, and whenever she spoke, you could hardly fault her English,” she said.

“She was also very friendly in this neighbourhood and will be greatly missed by all of us, especially the children who have been crying since they learnt of her death.”

Another resident, Abdullahi Musa, called on security agencies to step up patrols and intensify operations around the Jikwoyi Medical Centre axis, noting that cases of phone snatching and other crimes were common in the area.

Daily Trust reported that the spokesperson of the Federal Capital Territory Police Command, Adeh Josephine, a superintendent of police, confirmed the incident and said investigations are ongoing. However, when The ICIR reached out to her, she said she was not aware of the incident but would look into it.

Abuja has witnessed a disturbing rise in suspected “one chance” attacks involving unpainted commercial vehicles, with victims reportedly robbed, assaulted, and in some cases pushed out of moving vehicles.

Apart from the once chance menace, there are other major crimes in the city, including armed robbery and kidnapping.

Among such cases reported by THE ICIR was that of Chinemerem Chuwumeziem, a nurse at Federal Medical Centre, Jabi, who was said to have boarded a vehicle after work but was later found dead by the roadside.

Another victim, Nwamaka Chigbo, a senior lawyer and former Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) Abuja branch treasurer, was reportedly attacked after boarding a vehicle along the Kubwa Expressway and pushed out while the vehicle was in motion, leading to her death.

The incidents have raised growing concern over residents’ safety in the nation’s

Global leaders demand shift from donor-driven health financing

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GLOBAL health leaders meeting in Geneva have intensified calls for a shift from donor-driven health funding and programming towards country-led financing and delivery systems. 

The push dominated the Accra Reset High-Level Dialogue on Global Health Architecture, held on the margins of the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA79), where more than 250 heads of state, ministers, and global health leaders gathered to debate the future of global health governance.

A statement released after the event on Monday, May 25, said discussions focused strongly on the Accra Reset initiative, launched in 2025 by Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama, which aims to reshape global health around country sovereignty, domestic resource mobilisation, and stronger national control of priorities and implementation. 

Mahama told participants at the event that global health reform must move beyond fragmented donor coordination towards systems where countries define and execute their own health agendas.

He described health as “the vanguard, the proof of concept, and the moral imperative” for broader development reform.

The initiative, according to the statement, proposes new mechanisms, including a Reform Observatory and a financing gateway platform, aimed at channeling investment into country-designed programmes rather than externally structured interventions.

“If the Accra Reset can move health commitments into working programmes, it can do so for any sector,” said President Mahama. “Health is the vanguard, the proof of concept, and the moral imperative.” 

The statement noted that several Ministers from Indonesia, Brazil, Kenya, and Ghana backed the proposal, arguing that sovereignty must translate into real control over health financing and delivery rather than symbolic policy shifts.

Indonesia’s Health Minister, Budi Sadikin, said financing pathways remained a key constraint, urging stronger alignment between health ministries, finance ministries, and international financial institutions.

“The money is there,” said Sadikin, adding that “As an Accra Reset Co-Chair, my proposal is to help all countries develop proper health care financing pathways, so health ministers can convince their finance ministers and the big banks to invest in health.” 

Also, the Brazil’s Health Minister, Alexandre Padilha, noted that sovereignty must be backed by stronger national systems and sustainable financing, warning against treating it as a rhetorical aspiration.

On his part, Kenya’s Health Minister, Aden Duale, said African countries were already increasing domestic funding for universal health coverage,

He also noted that it signalled what he described as a gradual reduction in dependency on external support.

“Kenya and Ghana are leading in terms of creating a practical health sovereignty. How do we do that? By making sure that we take charge of the health systems and health financing in our country,” said Duale. “In 18 months, we have mobilized domestically to fund our health care and universal health coverage.” 

According to the statement, major global health financing institutions, including the Global Fund, Gavi, and the Pandemic Fund, present at the meeting also expressed support for the reform agenda while acknowledging the difficulty of transitioning from long-standing donor-dependent systems.

Meanwhile, Nigeria’s National Health Insurance Authority highlighted ongoing efforts to consolidate fragmented health programmes into a single national framework, with the Director-General, Kelechi Ohiri, a doctor, saying the “one plan, one national dialogue” approach was improving coordination and reducing duplication.

“[In Nigeria], the Health Sector Blueprint became the foundation and the platform for coordinating activities across the entire country and our relationship with partners…the whole principle of having one plan, one national dialogue was put in place,” Ohiri said.

“With the Global Fund, we began to pilot the integration of [HIV, TB, and malaria] vertical programmes, not just in the health system broadly, but also in health insurance,” he added.

Despite broad consensus on the need for reform, participants warned that the global health space risks further fragmentation due to overlapping initiatives and the absence of a unified implementation roadmap.

World Health Organization Regional Director for Africa, Mohamed Yakub Janabi, urged that reforms be judged by their impact on populations rather than institutional redesigns.

He further said the sector must move “from promises to progress and from commitment to impact.”