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3,715 PHCs inactive in 19 states and FCT

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Nigeria’s fragile healthcare system is facing renewed scrutiny following revelations that no fewer than 3,715 Primary Healthcare Centres across 19 states and the Federal Capital Territory are currently non-operational, raising concerns over access to lifesaving basic healthcare services for millions of citizens.

Findings from an analysis of the PHCs indicator dashboard of the National Primary Health Care Development Agency showed widespread inactivity of facilities meant to serve as the foundation of healthcare delivery, particularly in rural and underserved communities.

The data paints a troubling picture of Nigeria’s primary healthcare system, long regarded by health experts as the backbone of disease prevention, maternal care, immunisation and emergency first-response services.

According to the analysis, Katsina recorded the highest number of non-operational PHCs with 349 facilities lying dormant, while Osun followed closely with 326.

Other states with significant numbers of inactive PHCs include Kano with 279; Enugu with 268; Benue with 265; Delta with 246; Kogi with 230; Ogun with 227; and Adamawa with 225.

The dashboard also showed that Bauchi recorded 212 inactive PHCs, while Rivers had 205. Ondo recorded 198; Cross River had 172; and Yobe recorded 161.

Further analysis revealed that Edo had 146 non-operational facilities, while Borno recorded 120. Nasarawa had 115 inactive PHCs, Bayelsa recorded 100, while the FCT accounted for 62 dormant centres.

Primary Healthcare Centres represent the first point of contact for millions of Nigerians seeking medical attention, especially those in remote communities where access to general hospitals and specialist care is limited.

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The centres are expected to provide essential health services including antenatal and postnatal care, immunisation for children, malaria treatment, tuberculosis screening, management of common illnesses, family planning, nutrition support, health education and disease surveillance.

PHCs are also central to Nigeria’s response to infectious disease outbreaks and public health emergencies.

During outbreaks of cholera, measles, meningitis and COVID-19, PHCs served as frontline centres for vaccination, awareness campaigns and case referrals.

Nigeria’s PHC system has struggled for decades with chronic underfunding, a shortage of skilled health workers, weak infrastructure, and a poor maintenance culture.

Several previous reports by health sector stakeholders have identified abandoned projects, lack of medical equipment, irregular electricity supply, inadequate water facilities and poor road access as recurring factors crippling healthcare centres nationwide.

In many communities, PHCs reportedly exist only in name, with buildings either deserted, partially completed or operating without qualified personnel and essential drugs.

Insecurity has also compounded the crisis in some northern states.

In insurgency-affected states such as Borno, Yobe, and parts of Adamawa, attacks on communities and the displacement of health workers have disrupted healthcare services over the years.

Flooding and environmental challenges have equally affected health facilities in riverine states, including Bayelsa and Rivers, where difficult terrain often limits access to healthcare infrastructure.

The Federal Government, through the NPHCDA, has, over the years, introduced several programmes aimed at revitalising primary healthcare delivery.

Among them is the Basic Health Care Provision Fund, designed to improve funding for essential health services at the grassroots level, as well as the policy drive to ensure at least one functional PHC in every political ward in the country.

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Authorities have also launched periodic renovation and upgrade programmes targeting selected PHCs nationwide.

Despite these interventions, stakeholders say implementation gaps, delayed funding releases, poor accountability and inadequate monitoring continue to undermine progress.

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PHOTOS: Plateau attack: How gunmen k!lled my pregnant sister inside labour room – Survivor

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Daniel Nanle, a resident of Kawel community in Mushere District, Bokkos Local Government Area of Plateau State, has recounted how his younger sister was k!lled by gunmen during an attack on a Primary Health Centre in the area.

It was reported that gunmen attacked the community on Sunday night, while residents were asleep, k!lling 22 persons including health workers, security personnel and in-patients at the health centre.

During a visit by the Deputy Governor of the state, Ngo Josephine Chundung Piyo, to commiserate with victims, Nanle narrated to Daily Trust that his sister, Larai Danjuma, was rushed to the hospital in labour as she was about to give birth.

He said on arrival at the hospital, his sister was taken to the labour room to deliver, but the gunmen attacked the room and k!lled her alongside other patients and health workers.

“My immediate sister was married to Mr. Danjuma Damial. She was taken to the hospital because she was due for delivery. Unfortunately, the attackers came and k!lled her,” he said.

He appealed to the government at all levels to take urgent action to prevent further occurrence of such attacks.

“I am appealing to the state government and the Federal Government to intervene,” he said.

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Lagos issues 72-Hour quit notice to street traders and illegal occupants at Alaba Rago

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The Lagos State Taskforce has issued a 72-hour quit notice to street traders and illegal occupants operating along the Alaba Rago corridor of the Mile 2–Badagry Expressway, ahead of a planned enforcement exercise aimed at restoring environmental order in the area.

The exercise, which will be carried out in collaboration with other enforcement agencies, targets illegal trading activities on highways, walkways, road medians, and setbacks in line with the state’s environmental laws and ban on street trading.

Chairman of the Lagos State Taskforce, Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP) Adetayo Akerele, said the operation forms part of ongoing efforts to enforce the Lagos State Environmental Management and Protection Law and other regulations designed to maintain environmental sanity across the metropolis.

According to Akerele, persistent illegal trading and environmental violations along the corridor have generated complaints from motorists, pedestrians, residents, visitors entering the country through the Seme border, and environmental stakeholders.

He noted that the planned operation would tackle the proliferation of makeshift shops, illegal structures, mini brothels, used plastic depots, indiscriminate waste disposal, unregulated trading activities, and other environmental infractions affecting the area.

The enforcement exercise is being coordinated under the supervision of the Lagos State Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources, led by Commissioner Tokunbo Wahab.

Akerele, who addressed traders and occupants during a sensitisation and public enlightenment campaign on Wednesday, urged those affected to voluntarily vacate the area within 72 hours to avoid sanctions.

“Lagos State cannot pretend or look the other way over the level of illegal activities and environmental hazards here. This situation does not reflect the status of a modern megacity. The time has come to enforce the laws and correct these abnormalities,” Akerele said.

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He added that the state government had adopted a stakeholder-engagement approach by carrying out sensitisation and consultations before commencing enforcement.

“Everyone knows that trading on highways, walkways and setbacks is illegal. However, because of the Lagos State Government’s people-oriented approach and inclusive governance policy, we have engaged all relevant parties before taking action.

“After this, enforcement will commence against anyone who continues to violate the laws of the state,” he said.

The taskforce chairman warned that after the expiration of the 72-hour notice, goods belonging to violators would be confiscated and offenders prosecuted in accordance with the law.

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FG unveils poverty intelligence hub to target 140 million poor Nigerians

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The Federal Government on Wednesday launched the National Poverty Intelligence Hub, a data-driven platform designed to strengthen the targeting, monitoring, and evaluation of poverty-reduction programmes, as it seeks to address the plight of an estimated 140 million Nigerians living below the poverty line.

The initiative, unveiled by the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Dr. Bernard Doro, is expected to serve as the central intelligence and evidence-gathering hub for the government’s anti-poverty interventions.

Speaking at the opening of a three-day workshop on the operationalisation of the lab in Abuja, Doro said the country could no longer rely on assumptions and fragmented interventions in tackling poverty.

According to him, Nigeria’s poverty challenge requires a new approach anchored on data, evidence and accountability.

“Recent estimates indicate that approximately 140 million Nigerians live below the poverty line. The scale and depth of the challenge is staggering, but it is surmountable,” the minister said.

“What this moment demands is not more of the same. It demands systems, intelligence, evidence-driven leadership and, above all, coordinated and accountable action.”

The workshop was organised by the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction in partnership with Innovations for Poverty Action.

Doro described the National Poverty Intelligence Lab as the “intelligence backbone” of Nigeria’s poverty reduction architecture, saying it would provide the analytical support needed for policy formulation, programme implementation, resource allocation and performance assessment.

“For many years, our interventions have been driven by assumptions rather than evidence, sometimes by politics rather than data, and by silos rather than systems,” he said.

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“The NPIL changes that. It gives us the analytical infrastructure to ask the right questions, find credible answers and hold ourselves accountable for results.”

The minister explained that the lab would support the implementation of the One Humanitarian One Poverty Response System (OHOPRS), a framework developed by the ministry to harmonise humanitarian assistance, social protection programmes and poverty reduction initiatives under a unified structure.

According to him, the objective is to ensure that government interventions are coordinated and capable of permanently lifting vulnerable households out of poverty.

“Every household we reach through OHOPRS is a household we intend to graduate from vulnerability—not just today but permanently. That is the ambition. And the NPIL is the engine that will tell us whether we are getting there,” he added.

Doro said the establishment of the lab represented more than a technological innovation, describing it as a governance and accountability reform that would improve transparency and effectiveness in poverty reduction efforts.

He also reaffirmed the commitment of President Bola Tinubu’s administration to implementing sustainable measures aimed at improving the living conditions of Nigerians.

Earlier, the Country Representative of Innovations for Poverty Action, Mrs. Fumi Ayeni, said the collaboration with the ministry would help policymakers better understand the needs of poor and vulnerable populations while reducing duplication in intervention programmes.

“Getting people out of poverty starts with everybody. This collaboration will help policymakers build a legacy that can significantly reduce poverty in Nigeria,” she said.

Ayeni noted that the workshop would provide stakeholders with an opportunity to develop strategies for designing and implementing more impactful poverty reduction initiatives.

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Also speaking, the Senior Technical Adviser to the Minister on Information Systems and Data Analysis, Dr. Abimbola Fasanu, stressed the importance of reliable data in shaping public policy.

“Data is not just a bureaucratic requirement but a strategic national asset. Globally, government policies and programmes are informed by data,” she said.

She explained that the initiative would enable government agencies and development partners to make informed decisions and measure the impact of interventions more effectively.

Fasanu added that the Monitoring, Evaluation, Learning and Data Systems Diagnostic Exercise being undertaken by the ministry would identify institutional strengths, expose gaps and provide a roadmap for building an integrated national evidence system.

Nigeria has continued to grapple with rising poverty despite decades of government intervention programmes. Over the years, successive administrations have introduced initiatives such as the National Poverty Eradication Programme, Conditional Cash Transfer schemes, the National Social Investment Programme, N-Power and various humanitarian support projects aimed at reducing poverty and improving livelihoods.

However, concerns have persisted over poor coordination, inadequate data, weak monitoring systems and the inability to accurately identify beneficiaries, leading to questions about the effectiveness of many interventions.

The launch of the National Poverty Intelligence Lab comes amid increasing pressure on the government to address worsening economic conditions, high inflation, unemployment and the rising cost of living affecting millions of households across the country.

Officials say the new platform is intended to bridge longstanding data gaps and ensure that poverty reduction policies are guided by credible evidence, measurable outcomes and real-time intelligence.

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