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Resident doctors threaten to resume strike

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The Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors on Monday warned that it would resume a total, indefinite, and comprehensive strike if the Federal Government fails to implement agreed-upon demands within four weeks.

The announcement was made in a communique issued at the end of NARD’s Extraordinary National Executive Council meeting, signed by its President, Dr. Mohammad Suleiman; Secretary-General, Dr. Shuaibu Ibrahim; and Publicity and Social Secretary, Dr. Abdulmajid Ibrahim.

The association had suspended its indefinite strike on Saturday after 29 days of industrial action, following the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding with the government.

The MoU committed the government to meet NARD’s demands within four weeks.

The communique stated, “The strike is suspended for four weeks to allow monitoring of implementation.

“Failure to fully implement agreements will result in the resumption of a total, indefinite, and comprehensive strike.”

It added that the NEC had reviewed progress on various agreements with the Federal Government.

On the seven-month arrears of the 25–35 per cent Consolidated Medical Salary Structure review, it noted that the Integrated Personnel Payroll and Information System had processed payments up to December 2023, except for some failed or omitted payments, which NARD will reconcile with IPPIS.

Regarding the 2024 Accoutrement Allowance, it said a significant portion has been paid, but reconciliation of failed or omitted payments is still required.

It stated that for the five disengaged resident doctors at Federal Teaching Hospital, Lokoja, the committee report has been submitted, and full implementation is expected within two weeks from November 27, 2025.

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On prolonged work and call hours, the communique stated that an advisory has been issued discouraging excessive duties, and a taskforce has been set up to develop a formal policy within two months.

To address manpower shortages, workload, and burnout, the communique noted that the Minister has instructed the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation to conclude one-to-one replacement, with feedback expected by November 28, 2025.

“On promotion arrears, the list is to be transmitted to the Budget Office and Ministry of Finance within one month. On House Officers’ Scheme of Service exclusion, the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission is to transmit benefits to the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria for implementation.

“On the Universal CONMESS application, the Ministry of Health is mandated to apply it universally across Ministries, Departments, and Agencies. The circular of the corrected professional allowances has been released. On casualisation of resident doctors, Chief Medical Directors and Medical Directors are to standardise locum engagement—minimum six months; preference in recruitment, and the committee is to produce a policy within two months,” it noted.

The communique further stated that regarding specialist allowances for resident doctors, an OHCSF directive has been issued, and the NSIWC is responsible for implementation.

It also noted that the downgrading of the entry point from CONMESS 3 to 2 has been resolved, with the Ministry tasked to liaise with the Accountant General of the Federation/IPPIS for smooth upgrading. The slow progress of the Collective Bargaining Agreement committee has prompted the Ministries of Health, Labour, and Employment to expedite action.

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The NEC emphasized that outstanding salaries and arrears in hospitals, including Otukpo, Owo, Ilorin, Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex, and Uyo, are to be transmitted by the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare to the Budget Office and Ministry of Finance for payment within one month.

It said local issues in State Teaching Hospitals and Institutions and Federal Health Institutions, particularly at Benue State University Teaching Hospital, require urgent intervention.

It highlighted that special pension benefits under the Nigerian Medical Association MoU will be addressed with a letter forwarded to the PENCOM DG as the committee resumes sitting.

The NEC also noted the government’s acknowledgment of deteriorating infrastructure and obsolete equipment; and the Consultant cadres for other health professionals will be handled under the CBA, and progress has been noted on other MoU demands.

The association emphasized that strict monitoring of the government’s compliance will continue, and failure to fully implement the agreements within four weeks will prompt the resumption of industrial action.

The NEC resolved that the five disengaged FTH Lokoja doctors be fully reinstated within two weeks, while the 25–35 per cent CONMESS arrears, accoutrement allowance, specialist allowance for CONMESS 5 doctors, promotion arrears, and outstanding salaries/allowances for affected hospitals be immediately compiled, transmitted, and paid within one month.

It also resolved that a Central Taskforce Committee will address duty hours and locum policies within two months, the CBA exercise must resume and be completed on time, and the one-to-one replacement will be implemented to tackle manpower shortages.

All remaining agreements from conciliatory meetings must be implemented immediately. The strike has been suspended for four weeks to allow monitoring, but failure to comply will trigger a total, indefinite, and comprehensive strike.

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“All STHIs/FHIs with unresolved issues should continue industrial action until genuine commitments are made, and immediate resolution of all remaining agreements from conciliatory meetings,” it highlighted

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TikTok restricts late-night live access for Nigerian users

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TikTok has temporarily restricted access to its LIVE feature for users in Nigeria during late-night hours, issuing an in-app notice to creators as part of what it described as an ongoing safety investigation.

At midnight Nigerian time on Sunday, the platform sent a system notification to users stating,”LIVE⚫ Notices
TikTok LIVE Update in Nigeria
We’re temporarily limiting LIVE late at night in Nigeria as part of our investigation to ensure our platform remains safe and our community stays protected.”

File Copy: The notification gotten by the app users in Nigeria

Checks by PUNCH Online showed that LIVE sessions, which were active earlier in the night, became inaccessible between 11pm and 5am, with affected accounts displaying a “No Access” label.

The restriction also prevented creators from viewing LIVE broadcasts from other countries.

Only creators with at least 1,000 followers, the minimum requirement to host a LIVE session, received the notification.

Several confirmed that all LIVE activities had been halted overnight.

Despite the disruption, creators who earn through LIVE gifting have their balances and previous earnings intact, easing concerns of financial loss.

As of Monday morning, LIVE access had been restored, sparking discussions across social media as users speculated about the cause of the sudden, nationwide restriction.

Night-time hours are typically peak periods for Nigerian streamers who host matches, entertainment segments, trends and other interactive sessions that attract viewers and virtual gifts.

The development comes weeks after TikTok released updated safety statistics for West Africa.

During its West Africa Safety Summit in Dakar, Senegal, the company disclosed that in the second quarter of 2025, it took action against 2,321,813 LIVE sessions and 1,040,356 LIVE creators globally for violating its LIVE Monetisation guidelines.

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In Nigeria alone, 49,512 LIVE sessions were banned within the same period.

TikTok also reported removing 3,780,426 videos in Nigeria between April and June 2025 for breaching Community Guidelines, with 98.7% taken down before being viewed and 91.9% removed within 24 hours.

TikTok Live is an in-app feature letting users broadcast in real-time, fostering direct engagement with viewers through comments and virtual gifts, unlike pre-recorded videos, creating interactive sessions for Q&As, talent showcases, or just chatting.

To go live, you generally need 1,000+ followers (though sometimes less), be at least 16 (18 to earn money), have a clean account, and use the ‘+’ button to select ‘LIVE’, adding a title and effects before starting.

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Nnamdi Kanu acted like Awolowo by disengaging lawyers — Consultant

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Aloy Ejimakor, legal consultant to the convicted leader of the Indigenous People of Biafra , Nnamdi Kanu, has likened him to the late Premier of the Old Western Region, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, over his decision to represent himself in court.

In a conversation with our correspondent on Sunday, Ejimakor suggested that Kanu’s refusal to hire lawyers may be delaying the filing of his appeal against his life imprisonment by the Federal High Court in Abuja.

“MNK has not filed his appeal yet because he has refused to hire lawyers. You know he disengaged us as his lawyers, so we now act in the capacity of a consultant. I am a consultant to him,” Ejimakor said. “I don’t know why he does not want a lawyer, but I believe it is because he is a great man. Many great men are like that. They believe you can’t present their case like they can themselves. Even Awolowo refused to hire lawyers in his time. MNK wants to represent himself, and there are about four or five processes he has to follow to file the appeal before the Appellate Court.”

Ejimakor also backed Kanu’s request to be tranferred to Abuja from the Sokoto Correctional Centre.

He said, “The court already said he can’t be in Kuje prison, so that is fine, but he needs to be closer to Abuja, so if the court will grant his motion to be transferred to Suleja prison or Keffi. To me, there is nothing special about any prison in Nigeria. They are all the same, but MNK needs to be close to Abuja.”

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During his trial, Kanu opted to represent himself after disengaging his legal team, headed by a former Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Kanu Agabi (SAN).

On November 20, the court found him guilty on all seven terrorism-related charges brought by the Federal Government and sentenced him to life imprisonment.

Following his sentencing, Kanu was moved to the Sokoto correctional Facility due to concerns for his safety at Kuje, where previous prison breaks had been recorded.

He later filed a motion before Justice James Omotosho of the Federal High Court seeking a transfer from Sokoto to a custodial facility closer to Abuja, such as Suleja or Keffi.

In the motion, personally signed by him, Kanu asked that it be deemed moved in absentia and sought an order compelling the Federal Government or Nigerian Correctional Service to effect the transfer.

Citing eight grounds in the motion marked FHC/ABJ/CR/383/2015, Kanu explained that his detention in Sokoto—over 700 kilometres from Abuja—made it impracticable to prepare his notice of appeal and record of appeal.

He stressed that all persons critical to assisting him, including relatives, associates, and legal consultants, are based in Abuja.

“The applicant’s continued detention in Sokoto renders his constitutional right to appeal impracticable, occasioning exceptional hardship and potentially defeating the said right, in violation of Section 36 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended),” the motion stated.

Kanu argued that transferring him to a facility nearer Abuja would enable him to effectively prosecute his constitutionally guaranteed right of appeal.

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U.S. Court Jails Nigerian Fraudster Oluwaseun Adekoya To 20 Years For Impersonation And 2M U.S.Dollars Fraud

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A U.S. federal court has sentenced Oluwaseun Adekoya, a Nigerian serial fraudster who operated under multiple aliases while running a sprawling nationwide bank-fraud and money-laundering enterprise, to 20 years in prison for masterminding schemes that stole and laundered more than $2 million through a network of impersonators, fake accounts, and coordinated withdrawals across several states.

Adekoya’s arrest and conviction capped years of sophisticated financial crimes that federal investigators say left a trail of victims stretching from New York to multiple U.S. states.

The case broke open after the State Employees Federal Credit Union (SEFCU), headquartered in Albany, New York, detected a pattern of suspicious impersonation transactions across Capital Region branches. SEFCU’s alert triggered a multi-agency federal investigation led by the FBI’s Albany Field Office, which eventually exposed Adekoya as the mastermind of an extensive identity-theft and bank-fraud ring involving at least 13 accomplices.

Investigators said Adekoya consistently reinvented himself with new identities, new roles, and new operational tactics, as he expanded the criminal enterprise. His run ended on December 12, 2023, when FBI agents executed a search warrant at his luxury apartment.

During the raid, Adekoya attempted to remotely wipe the primary cellphone used to coordinate the schemes. Agents nevertheless recovered a trove of incriminating evidence, including:

• Multiple burner phones
• High-end luxury items such as Rolex watches
• A $51,000 Tiffany engagement ring
• Designer handbags
• More than $26,000 sitting in a laundering account

All items have since been forfeited.

Following two superseding indictments that added charges and additional defendants, Adekoya was convicted on multiple fraud and money-laundering counts. He has remained in custody since his arrest.

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In addition to the 20-year sentence, he will serve five years of supervised release, pay over $2.2 million in restitution, remit a $1,100 special assessment, and faces removal from the United States upon completing his prison term.

Federal prosecutors said the ring relied on coordinated identity theft, impersonation of account holders, and strategic branch-by-branch withdrawals. Accomplices posed as legitimate bank customers, using stolen personal data to siphon funds, which were then laundered through controlled accounts, cash couriers, and luxury purchases.

The ring’s operations were “structured, disciplined, and highly adaptive,” investigators said, changing methods frequently to avoid detection.

Thirteen co-conspirators earlier pleaded guilty to roles ranging from impersonation to cash-movement, account manipulation, and logistical support. Their sentences include:

• David Daniyan, 61 (Brooklyn): 54 months’ imprisonment, one year supervised release, restitution over $2.2m.
• Kani Bassie, 36 (Brooklyn): 11 years’ imprisonment, five years supervised release; restitution pending.
• Davon Hunter, 27 (Richmond): 42 months’ imprisonment, three years supervised release, $469,499.18 restitution.
• Christian Quivers, 20 (Richmond): 42 months’ imprisonment, three years supervised release, $385,650 restitution.
• Jermon Brooks, 20 (Richmond): 36 months’ imprisonment, two years supervised release, $385,650 restitution.
• Akeem Balogun, 56 (Brooklyn): 21 months’ imprisonment, two years supervised release, $262,200 restitution.
• Victor Barriera, 64 (Bronx): Time served, three years supervised release, $203,352 restitution.
• Danielle Cappetti, 46 (Bronx): Time served, three years supervised release, $142,796 restitution.
• Jerjuan Joyner, 50 (Brooklyn): 12 months’ imprisonment, three years supervised release, $135,998 restitution.
• Gaysha Kennedy, 46 (Brooklyn): Time served, two years supervised release, $24,500 restitution.
• Crystal Kurschner, 44 (Brooklyn): Time served, three years supervised release, $220,850 restitution.
• Sherry Ozmore, 56 (Richmond): Time served, three years supervised release, $229,303.18 restitution.
• Lesley Lucchese, 53 (Manhattan): Pleaded guilty and awaits sentencing in 2026.

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U.S. prosecutors say the dismantling of Adekoya’s syndicate underscores the increasing sophistication of fraud networks operating across state lines, and the growing cooperation among federal, state, and local law-enforcement agencies to disrupt them.

Officials noted that the investigation required extensive coordination across jurisdictions and financial institutions, describing it as “a model of inter-agency effectiveness.”

Source: Newsmakerslive

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