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BREAKING: JOHESU Suspends Strike For 21 Days After Meeting Tinubu

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The Joint Health Sector Unions and Assembly of Healthcare Professional Associations have suspended its indefinite strike for 21 days.

The suspension was announced after the leadership of the unions held a meeting with President Bola Tinubu on Monday.

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The Acting National Secretary, Matthew Ajirotu, in a text message sent to our correspondent, said the president promised to approve their demands.

He said, “JOHESU has just suspended its strike with a caveat to review it after 21 days.

READ ALSO: BREAKING: Federal High Court Restrains NLC, TUC From Embarking On Strike

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“We met President Tinubu today at a 1-hour parley and he promised to give approval to the demands after further consultations with appropriate quarters in government.”

Details later…

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Shocking! Late Ohanaeze Ndigbo President Lefts Will That Bans Wife From Remarrying

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Late elder statesman and former Ohanaeze Ndigbo President -General, Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, has left behind a final Will that bans his wife, Lolo Frances from remarrying.

The document, released on June 16, 2025, and managed by Will administrator, Chief Chukwuma Ekomaru (SAN), outlines how the respected businessman and politician’s wealth is divided among his immediate family and select beneficiaries.

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Among the key highlights is the inheritance of the iconic “Legacy House” on Port Harcourt Road, Owerri, willed to his wife, Frances with a strict instruction that the house must never be sold.

In addition to the residence, Frances received ownership of Magil Furniture—once run by Iwuanyanwu’s late first wife, Eudora—and partial ownership of real estate holdings in Orji, Works Layout, and Naze in Imo State.

But the Will comes with a firm condition: “any move by Frances to remarry would result in automatic forfeiture of all these properties.”

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READ ALSO: My Husband Urinates, Defecates In His Clothes When He’s Drunk, Wife Tells Court

Their son inherits the Abuja residence, while the London property is slated for sale.

The proceeds from that transaction are to be divided with 60% earmarked for the education of Iwuanyanwu’s youngest son, 30% to his first son, Jide, and 10% to Ezinne, who currently resides in the property, to aid in securing a new home.

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A major philanthropic gesture within the Will is the decision to convert the “Glass House” near the Orji flyover into a public trust managed by an independent board, dedicated to charitable and community causes.

Meanwhile, other valuable assets located in Abuja, Imo, and across Nigeria were fairly allocated among his five children, who have collectively described their father’s final instructions as “honorable and just.”
(NDM)

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OPINION: Nigerian Electricity Lie And The Old Northern Folklore

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By Israel Adebiyi

There is an old Northern Nigerian folklore titled “Ali and the Angel: Tea Without Sugar.” In this tale, a man named Ali, sensing opportunity in a village too poor to afford sugar, disguised himself as an angel. He claimed he had brought “heavenly sugar” to sweeten their tea. The “sugar,” however, was nothing but ashes from a burnt hut.

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Desperate, the villagers bought into the trick. They stirred ashes into their tea and convinced themselves the taste had improved. Some even fell ill. But by the time they realized they had been drinking poison and praising a fraudster, Ali had vanished—along with their money, their health, and their hope.

This story may be folklore, but it mirrors Nigeria’s journey through power sector privatization since 2013.

When the Goodluck Jonathan administration signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with private Distribution Companies (DISCOs), it was heralded as a turning point. These companies were handed over the reins with clear expectations: to invest massively in infrastructure, provide meters to every Nigerian, improve supply, and run the sector efficiently and transparently.

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MORE FROM THE AUTHOR: OPINION: The Elephant Must Beware Of The Red Carpet

Twelve years later, Nigerians are still drinking bitter tea—no sugar, no light.

Instead of improvement, we now have a sector that is both privatized and parasitic. Citizens pay for everything—transformers, poles, cables, and meters—yet receive no reliable power in return. In many communities, residents pool money to buy equipment the DISCOs should provide. This defies both logic and law.

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Even more disturbing is the fact that government at national and sub-national levels continue to pump public funds into infrastructure for these private firms. Federal and state budgets routinely allocate billions for electrification projects, transformer procurements, and rural access—for a sector that is supposedly privatized.

This is an anomaly that turns logic on its head. In no sane privatization model should the public be the one enabling the private investor to function. The DISCOs were meant to invest, but instead, they have turned the system into a cash cow—earning trillions while hiding behind estimated billing and technical excuses.

MORE FROM THE AUTHOR: [OPINION] The Cry Of The Waters: When Flood Became A Funeral

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Even as darkness deepens, tariffs are being raised, and there is now a push to remove electricity subsidies entirely. This is not reform; it is daylight robbery. You do not fix a leaky roof by tearing off the entire ceiling—you hold the builder accountable.

The President Bola Tinubu administration must act with urgency. A surgical probe is needed into the operations of the DISCOs. Nigerians need to know where the trillions went, why investments were not made, and why, a decade after privatization, over 60% of Nigerians still live in darkness.

It is time to review the MoU. Any DISCO that has failed to meet its obligations must face revocation of license. The government must chart a new course—one that aligns with public interest, not private greed.

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Electricity is not just about light; it is about life—health, education, industry, and dignity. As it stands, the system is rigged against the people. It is as though someone promised them sugar, but sold them ashes—and made them pay for the spoon, the cup, and the tea as well.

Until something changes, Nigerians will continue to stir their bitter tea and pretend it’s sweet. But the deception must end. The fraud must be unmasked. The “angel” must be exposed.

Enough of power without light.

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Tinubu, Akpabio, Abbas, Diri, Makinde, Eno, Labour Leaders, Others To Grace NUJ @70 Celebration

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President Bola Tinubu and Senate President, Godswill Akpabio are amongst dignitaries to grace the 70th anniversary of the Nigeria Union of Journalists.

The event, with the theme: ‘Redefining Media Practice in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.’ is scheduled to come on Saturday, June 21, 2025, at the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, Abuja.

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Other dignitaries expected at the event are governors of Akwa Ibom, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Oyo, Imo, Kano, Imo, Gombe, Borno states, Minister of Information, Alhaji Mohammed Idris Malagi, former governor of Kogi State, Yahya Bello and President of the Nigerian Labour Congress, Comrade Joe Ajaero, his counterpart from the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Comrade Festus Osifo.

A statement signed by Dr. Abimbola Oyetunde, Chairman, Organising Committee, and made available to INFO DAILY, said Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas is expected to be the Keynote Speaker.

READ ALSO: NUJ @70: Planning Committee Headed By Deputy President Inaugurated

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Oyetunde, who is also the Deputy National President of the NUJ, added that national officers of the Union, past NUJ presidents and secretaries, members of the Central Working Committee and NEC, and leaders of NAWOJ, have been penned down for honour for their contributions to the union.

The Organising Chairman said, the occasion will not only honour its historic journey but also confront the pressing realities shaping modern journalism.

“This is a celebration of the NUJ’s 70 years of unwavering commitment to protecting media freedom, advancing professionalism, and defending democracy.

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READ ALSO: Dignitaries From All Works Of Life To Grace NUJ, OSBC Chapel’s Hijrah 1446 Ramadan Lecture

But it is also a time to reflect deeply on the disruptive changes in media practice, especially with the rise of artificial intelligence and digital manipulation,” Oyetunde stated.

According to her, major highlight of the celebration will be the unveiling of a commemorative book titled “70 Years of the NUJ: From Struggle to Strength,” authored by former NUJ National Secretary, Mr. Shuabu Lehman, who has devoted over three decades to the Union.”

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She added: “The NUJ @70 celebration underscores the union’s pivotal role in safeguarding press freedom, holding power accountable, and navigating the complexities of a fast-evolving media ecosystem. It promises to be a defining gathering of stakeholders shaping the future of journalism in Nigeria.”

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