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Tinubu brokers peace as Fubara, Wike exit Villa together

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Rivers State Governor Siminalayi Fubara and Federal Capital Territory Minister Nyesom Wike departed the Presidential Villa in the same vehicle on Sunday night after a meeting with President Bola Tinubu, presidency officials familiar with the meeting confirmed to our correspondent.

According to the officials, although the two political rivals arrived separately, Fubara rode away with Wike after the President’s intervention.

They described it as a symbolic gesture signalling a possible end to their long-running political feud.

“Two of them did not come together. Fubara came first, then Wike came later. But at the end of the day, both of them left the Villa together in the same vehicle. Doesn’t that mean they both settled?” a source said.

Another source confirmed the meeting, saying, “Yes, he met them yesterday night. It is true.

The two of them settled. He talked to two of them. But I can’t tell you what he said.”

The Nation had first reported the meeting early on Monday, noting that Fubara accompanied Wike to his Guzape residence in Abuja afterwards.

The meeting marks a potential turning point in the Rivers’ political crisis, which has paralysed governance in the oil-rich state for over nearly two years.

The fallout between Wike and his political godson, Fubara, began shortly after the latter assumed office in May 2023.

Tensions flared in October when members of the Rivers State House of Assembly loyal to Wike initiated impeachment proceedings against Fubara.

The governor responded by demolishing the Assembly complex following a suspicious fire and relocated legislative sessions to temporary quarters.

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In the months that followed, the power tussle plunged the state into a governance crisis.

In December 2023, President Tinubu intervened, facilitating a fragile truce that led to a peace deal in which Fubara conceded several political appointments to Wike’s loyalists.

However, the arrangement broke down, and the conflict resurfaced, culminating in President Tinubu declaring a state of emergency on March 18, 2025.

Tinubu’s declaration suspended the governor’s executive powers for an initial period of six months, citing rising insecurity and administrative paralysis.

He then installed a sole administrator, former Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Ibok-Ete Ekwe Ibas (retd.).

The President again intervened and doused the tension, leading to the end of the emergency rule in September 2025.

Months later, both Fubara and the Martin Amaewhule-led House of Assembly have been at loggerheads, with the Assembly issuing an impeachment notice against the governor.

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Russia denies recruitment of Nigerians for Ukraine war

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Russia has denied any government-backed programme to recruit Nigerians to fight in the war in Ukraine, insisting that any such activity, if it exists, is not connected with the Russian state.

The Russian Ambassador to Nigeria, Andrey Podyolyshev, stated this on Tuesday in Abuja while responding to reports that Nigerians had been recruited to fight on the frontlines.

Reports and videos have alleged that some Nigerians and other Africans were recruited under the pretext of security jobs in Russia and later deployed to the war front after brief training.

Denying any official involvement in this, Podyolyshev said, “There is no government-supported programme to recruit Nigerians to fight in Ukraine. If there are illegal organisations or individuals trying to recruit Nigerians by unlawful means, this is not connected with the Russian state.”

He said Moscow was ready to investigate any credible information.

“If anybody has this information, we are ready to send it to Russian law enforcement authorities so they can investigate those cases,” he added.

Podyolyshev also questioned reports by Western media, including a recent CNN investigation, which alleged that some Nigerians were deceived into joining the conflict.

“You are receiving information from Western sources. Their main task is to demonise Russia. If you want to know the real situation, you should send journalists to Russia to understand what is really happening,” the Ambassador said.

While acknowledging that some Nigerians may be in the conflict zone, he maintained there was no official Russian policy behind it.

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“There are such Nigerians, I know, but there is no government-supported programme to recruit them. If there are agencies, including Russian agencies, violating Russian law, we are ready to transmit this information to our law enforcement authorities,” he said.

On Security and military cooperation, he said Russia and Nigeria were discussing closer defence ties, including arms supplies and training.

“We are discussing the possibilities of supplying Russian weaponry and training military personnel in Russia, maybe here in Nigeria. We are ready to develop cooperation with Nigeria in the military field to the extent the Nigerian side wishes.

“This strengthens Nigeria’s ability to fight terrorism and piracy,” he said.

The ambassador also called for stronger economic engagement between both countries, noting that the last session of the Russia–Nigeria Intergovernmental Commission on Economic Cooperation was held about 10 years ago.

“We need the support of our governments if we want to realise some big projects. Without that support, it is very difficult to move forward,” he added.

Podyolyshev also outlined Moscow’s broader foreign-policy view of Nigeria, describing the country as a strategic partner and a potential global centre of influence in a multipolar world.

“When we speak about Africa, we must speak about Nigeria. Nigeria is one of the key states on the continent and the leading link in West Africa. It has major political and economic weight in Africa and globally.

“Nigeria is the most populous country in Africa and one of the continent’s largest economies. It is a major OPEC member and a key regional energy player,” he said.

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On politics and security, he praised Nigeria’s leadership role on the continent.

“Politically, Nigeria is a regional leader, playing a pivotal role in security in West Africa and making a significant contribution to the work of the African Union,” he said.

“For Russia, Nigeria is a partner of strategic importance. Cooperation with Nigeria largely shapes our prospects in West Africa,” he added.

Podyolyshev also highlighted Nigeria’s influence within ECOWAS and the African Union, recalling its peacekeeping roles in Liberia, Sierra Leone and The Gambia.

“Nigeria showed readiness to take responsibility for regional stability. Within ECOWAS, Nigeria is the core of the organisation in terms of population, economy and military potential,” he said.

On bilateral relations, he said Russia–Nigeria ties, which date back to Soviet times, were entering a new phase.

“On November 25, 2025, we marked the 65th anniversary of diplomatic relations. Today, bilateral cooperation is entering a new phase, driven by our mutual wish to diversify international ties,” he said.

Education, he added, remains a key pillar of the relationship.

“Thousands of Nigerians studied in the Soviet Union in engineering, medicine and other fields, and this continues today. Each year, Nigerian students enter Russian universities on state quotas. Russian diplomas are highly valued in Nigeria,” Podyolyshev said.

In the energy sector, he disclosed that both countries were working on long-term projects, including nuclear cooperation.

“An intergovernmental agreement has been signed on building a Centre for Nuclear Science and Technology in Nigeria with a research reactor and, in the longer term, a nuclear power plant,” he said.

Looking ahead, Podyolyshev described Nigeria as a future global power.

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“Demography, resources and regional leadership give Nigeria a real chance to become one of the global centres of power in the multipolar world.

“Russia is interested in Nigeria’s rise, and as Nigeria’s influence grows, the scope for a global Russia–Nigeria partnership will expand,” he said.

Speaking further, he linked Russia’s foreign-policy vision to a broader push for a multipolar international order.

Stating that the essence of multipolarity is to ensure development without domination.

Adding that, “An international order free from dictatorship and neo-colonialism creates conditions for stability, development and security for all.”

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Natasha: Akpabio congratulates senators over Appeal Court judgment

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Senate President Godswill Akpabio has congratulated senators following the Court of Appeal judgment upholding the six-month suspension of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan in March 2025.

Akpabio made the remarks at the commencement of an emergency plenary session on Tuesday.

The Court of Appeal in Abuja ruled that the Senate acted within its constitutional powers in suspending Senator Akpoti-Uduaghan over alleged misconduct.

In a unanimous judgment, the three-member panel of the appellate court held that Akpoti-Uduaghan’s parliamentary privilege and constitutional rights were not breached by the suspension.

Addressing senators, Akpabio said, “Your rules derive from the Nigerian Constitution, and the Standing Orders of the Senate must always be adhered to.

“Any community without law and order will live in anarchy, and so the suspension that you handed over to one of your colleagues for unruly behaviour in the Senate was confirmed by the Court of Appeal.

“So, I will say it was judicially confirmed by the Court of Appeal as the court went forward to say that you have the powers to discipline any erring officer of government.

“So, I said I should just mention that; congratulations, and that we also applaud the judiciary for their firmness.” (NAN)

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Reps urge teaching hospitals to prioritise research

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The House of Representatives has called on Nigeria’s tertiary health institutions, particularly university teaching hospitals, to urgently refocus on medical research, warning that the sector’s continued neglect of research undermines national health security and preparedness for public health emergencies

The call was made on Tuesday during the 2025 budget defence session involving federal university teaching hospitals, federal teaching hospitals and federal medical centres.

The Chairman of the House Committee on Health Institutions, Patrick Umoh, expressed concern that most teaching hospitals have drifted from their statutory mandate as centres of medical research, innovation and specialist training, and are now functioning largely as general hospitals.

Umoh criticised Chief Medical Directors for allocating less than one per cent of their annual budgets to research, describing the figure as unacceptable for institutions meant to drive evidence-based medicine and policy.

“Teaching hospitals are supposed to be centres of research. Yet you have never raised the issue of research funding during budget preparations. Instead, you focus almost entirely on infrastructure. That makes you part of the problem,” he said.

He noted that Nigeria’s health system was exposed during the COVID-19 pandemic, when the country relied heavily on external research and foreign solutions.

“The pandemic caught us all unprepared. Let me mock you a little by saying that traditional medicine practitioners appeared to be doing better. I have carried out several oversight visits, but no teaching hospital has ever taken me to a facility and said, ‘This is our research centre,’” Umoh added.

Teaching hospitals occupy a critical position in national health systems worldwide, serving as hubs for clinical research, disease surveillance, innovation and the training of health professionals.

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In countries with resilient health systems, breakthroughs in diagnostics, vaccines and treatment protocols are often driven by sustained research activity within teaching hospitals.

In Nigeria, however, chronic underfunding, weak research infrastructure and limited political prioritisation have constrained the ability of teaching hospitals to fulfil this role.

As a result, the country remains heavily dependent on foreign research outputs, even for diseases prevalent within its borders.

Health experts have repeatedly warned that without deliberate investment in research, Nigeria risks being perpetually reactive to health crises, rather than proactive.

Responding on behalf of the Committee of Chief Medical Directors, the Secretary of the Committee and Chief Medical Director of the Jos University Teaching Hospital, Prof Pokop Bupwatda, acknowledged the poor funding of research but blamed systemic budgetary constraints.

According to him, although teaching hospitals make provisions for research, usually around one per cent of their budgets, these allocations are often removed during the final stages of the budgeting process.

Bupwatda appealed for increased overall funding for the health sector to enable adequate recruitment of skilled personnel and improved staff welfare, which he said are essential to curbing the growing “japa syndrome.”

He disclosed that many federal health institutions are severely understaffed, particularly with medical doctors, noting that even when recruitment approvals are granted, few doctors apply. Despite these challenges, he said existing personnel have continued to provide quality healthcare services and deserve recognition.

He also expressed concern that public discourse frequently highlights isolated failures in the sector while overlooking progress that has attracted foreign patients to Nigeria’s health facilities.

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Bupwatda further lamented that only about 30 per cent of the 2025 budget allocation has so far been released to federal tertiary health institutions, despite interventions by the House of Representatives to improve funding levels.

He identified power supply as a major operational challenge, explaining that hospitals require uninterrupted electricity to run life-saving equipment and provide effective patient care.

He noted that most federal hospitals are currently on Band A electricity tariffs, significantly increasing their operating costs, alongside heavy spending on diesel for generators.

He welcomed proposals to deploy solar mini-grids in teaching hospitals and federal medical centres, describing the initiative as a critical intervention.

He further appealed to the committee to approve take-off grants for about seven newly established federal health institutions, warning that without such support, they would struggle to commence effective operations.

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