Health care jobs now in high demand; vets, nurses, radiologists top list - Newstrends
Connect with us

Health

Health care jobs now in high demand; vets, nurses, radiologists top list

Published

on

Health workers

Health care jobs now in high demand; vets, nurses, radiologists top list

Healthcare jobs are in high demand for 2025, with several roles offering salaries up to $385,000.

According to job search siteĀ Indeed, healthcare positions make up six of the top 25 job opportunities for the year, driven by strong labour demand and competitive pay.

Indeed’s report highlights six healthcare roles in the top 25 for 2025, includingĀ veterinarian (No. 1), physician (No. 3), clinical psychologist (No. 8), radiologist (No. 14), registered nurse (No. 18), and director of clinical services (No. 22).

This marks the second consecutive year that health care leads the ranking of top jobs.

CNBC news cites that the ranking is based on job postings meeting three criteria: a minimum salary of $75,000, a 20% growth in postings over the past three years, and the availability of remote or hybrid roles for at least 5% of listings. Healthcare continues to dominate the list, outpacing other industries.

Strong job growth in the health sectorĀ 

The demand for healthcare workers has surged, with the U.S. economy adding 902,000 healthcare and social assistance jobs in 2024, more than double the number of government jobs added during the same period, according to CNBC.

READ ALSO:

The Bureau of Labour Statistics projects that healthcare employment will grow much faster than the average for all U.S. jobs through 2033.

Julia Pollak, chief economist at ZipRecruiter, explained the ongoing growth, saying,

ā€œIt’s extremely robust and consistent, and we don’t see any slowdown at all.ā€ā€ÆĀ 

Factors like an aging population and retirements in the workforce are contributing to the sector’s expansion.

High salaries and barriers to entryĀ 

As health care demand increases, so do salaries. Reports inform that Radiologists, for example, earn a median annual salary of $385,000, the highest-paying job on Indeed’s list. Physicians, who rank second, make around $225,000 a year.

Pollak noted that many health care jobs are ā€˜surprisingly high-paying’ due to strong labour demand. However, she pointed out that roles like radiology require extensive education, with a minimum of 13 years of schooling.

Impact of potential policy changes on healthcare demandĀ 

The healthcare sector’s growth could be influenced by changes in government policy. CNBC news cites a scenario that states that if President-elect Donald Trump’s administration cuts federal Medicaid spending or allows Affordable Care Act subsidies to expire, healthcare demand may decrease.

  • Conversely, mass deportations could worsen labour shortages, increasing wages in the sector, as immigrants made up 18% of the U.S. healthcare workforce in 2021, according to the Migration Policy Institute.
  • For those looking for high-paying jobs without long educational paths, Indeed also suggests sales representative roles, which offer salaries up to $182,000 annually and require a high school diploma along with relevant skills.

The healthcare sector remains a top option for job seekers in 2025, offering stable and high-paying opportunities in an industry with strong and sustained growth.

Health care jobs now in high demand; vets, nurses, radiologists top list

Source: CNBC

Loading

Health

VIDEO: Nigerian Doctors in Canada Have Become ā€˜Medical Agberos’ — Doctor Alleges

Published

on

VIDEO: Nigerian Doctors in Canada Have Become ā€˜Medical Agberos’ — Doctor Alleges
Canada-based Nigerian doctor,Ā Arinze Onwumelu

VIDEO: Nigerian Doctors in Canada Have Become ā€˜Medical Agberos’ — Doctor Alleges

A Canada-based Nigerian doctor,Ā Arinze Onwumelu, has stirred intense reactions online after alleging that someĀ Nigerian medical practitioners in CanadaĀ have turned into what he describes asĀ “medical agberos,”Ā accusing them of aggressively competing for patients in a manner akin to transport touts at Nigerian motor parks.

The doctor made the claim in a video shared on his Instagram page on Wednesday, where he lamented what he described as unhealthy rivalry among healthcare professionals, particularly within the Nigerian medical community in Edmonton, Alberta.

Drawing a comparison with transport touts commonly found at motor parks in Nigeria, Onwumelu said doctors now “drag” patients from one another in a manner similar to how touts lure passengers into boarding their vehicles. “This Canada where we are, Nigerian doctors have turned to medical agberos,” he said. Explaining his analogy, the doctor referenced the activities of transport touts at major bus terminals, where passengers are persuaded to abandon one vehicle for another with promises of cheaper fares and faster journeys. “Now we have doctors that do that here. They drag patients like there is no tomorrow. It has gotten to the stage that they kill themselves for patients,” he said.

The doctor further expressed concern over what he described as growing competition between older and younger practitioners, questioning why senior doctors would compete with younger colleagues for patients. “I don’t see any reason why a 70-year-old man would be dragging patients with a small boy. I don’t see any reason why a practice owner wouldn’t release a patient for a small boy,” he added. According to him, the situation could have long-term consequences for the medical community if not addressed. “But I have news for you, this city will be scattered in five years,” he warned. Describing the trend as embarrassing for the profession, Onwumelu said the conduct of some practitioners was damaging the image of doctors within the community and could adversely affect the chances ofĀ Nigerian doctors who plan to migrate to CanadaĀ to practice in the future. “This is disgraceful for our professionals as doctors. We’ve now become medical agberos and we would be the ones to damage this city,” he said.

READ ALSO:

His remarks quickly sparked debate on social media, with many users disagreeing with the comparison, while others questioned what exactly he meant by doctors “hustling” for patients. Several commenters argued that building a patient base is a normal part of professional practice and should not be compared to the activities of transport touts. Others, however, expressed concern that unethical competition could damage the reputation of Nigerian professionals abroad.Ā @labalingoĀ wrote: “I trust the system will root them out. Why I like the system abroad is they will give you a very long rope and allow the evidence to build up and then gbosa! You end up in jail.”Ā @ann_omatfĀ countered: “Calling medical professionals ‘agberos’ because they are building patient bases abroad is a stretch. They didn’t come to play.”Ā @rexzeeefied011Ā questioned: “How’s that so? Are they given target as to how many clients they must treat??”Ā @kelvinEda91Ā observed: “Anything wey Nigerians touch no worry e no fit be the same again. Especially the desperate ones.”Ā @PlacidChiefĀ added: “Nigerians have a value problem and tend to be stupid most times. Greed will be the end of a lot of people.”

The controversy comes amid a growing presence ofĀ Nigerian medical professionals in Canada. TheĀ Canadian Association of Nigerian Physicians and Dentists (CANPAD)Ā , a not-for-profit association registered in Ontario, Canada in 2001, recognizes and represents the professional and social interests of physicians and dentists of Nigerian descent living in Canada. CANPAD members meet annually across different provinces, and the organization offers scholarships providing financial assistance to students of African descent enrolled in Canadian institutions of higher learning. The association has approximatelyĀ 2,000 membersĀ across the country, reflecting the significant and growing Nigerian medical community in Canada.

Nigerian doctors in Canada have also faced significant challenges, including reports of unconscious bias and systemic discrimination. A Nigerian medical doctor practicing in Calgary recently shared insights on these challenges, arguing that black immigrants start at a significant disadvantage in the Western job market. “As a black person in the West, you already have minus 30 percent. If you’re going for an interview, you already have minus 30 percent just for being black,” the doctor stated, adding that having an African name or a pronounced accent further deducts from one’s initial standing. The doctor described how even after prescribing treatment, a white patient would leave his clinic and go to ask the receptionist if the prescription is okay. “People always question you when you look different. People always question you when you’re black. Is he really a good doctor?” he said. Another professional, Dr. Zoe, likened the experience to a Nigerian proverb: “You as a black guy, you have to work three times harder than the local guys to be where they are.” Before moving to Canada, one doctor struggled to secure interviews despite his qualifications until a supervisor advised him to “remove the Nigerian thing” from his CV. “The moment I did that, I had about seven interviews in one week,” he claimed.

The termĀ “agbero”Ā has gained international recognition. In 2024, theĀ Oxford English DictionaryĀ officially included “agbero” in its lexicon, defining it as “a person who works as a tout at car parks and bus stops, collecting money from passengers and drivers, and ushering passengers onto vehicles.” The word is part of a growing list ofĀ Nigerian English termsĀ now recognized by the prestigious dictionary, alongside “japa,” “419,” “eba,” and “suya,” among others.

Onwumelu’s warning raises important questions about professional ethics, cultural integration, and the reputation ofĀ Nigerian professionals abroad. As more Nigerian doctors seek opportunities in Canada, the behaviour of a few could potentially impact the perception of the entire community. The incident also highlights the broader tension between building a successful practice in a competitive healthcare system and maintaining the professional decorum expected of medical practitioners in Canada. Whether Onwumelu’s allegations reflect an isolated phenomenon or a growing trend remains to be seen, but his video has undoubtedly opened a necessary conversation within the Nigerian medical diaspora.

VIDEO: Nigerian Doctors in Canada Have Become ā€˜Medical Agberos’ — Doctor Alleges

Loading

Continue Reading

Health

NARD Issues Federal Govt 21-Day Ultimatum Over Unpaid Allowances

Published

on

Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors

NARD Issues Federal Govt 21-Day Ultimatum Over Unpaid Allowances

TheĀ Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (NARD)Ā has issued aĀ 21-day ultimatumĀ to theĀ federal government, warning that industrial harmony in the health sector cannot be guaranteed if longstanding welfare and payment issues affecting doctors remain unresolved. The warning was contained in a communiquĆ© released after the association’sĀ Ordinary General Meeting (OGM) and Scientific Conference, which was held inĀ Kano from May 31 to June 5, 2026. The conference was themedĀ “Caring for the Caregivers: Mental Health and Emotional Resilience in Residency Training”Ā and brought together resident doctors, medical experts, government officials, and other stakeholders to discuss challenges facing healthcare workers in Nigeria. The communiquĆ© was signed byĀ NARD President, Dr. Mohammad Suleiman,Ā Secretary-General, Dr. Shuaibu Ibrahim, andĀ Publicity and Social Secretary, Dr. Abdulmajid Yahya Ibrahim. NARD said theĀ federal governmentĀ had repeatedly failed to fulfil commitments made to doctors despite several engagements and assurances. At the press briefing concluding the OGM, the association declared anĀ industrial disputeĀ with the government overĀ 14 unresolved demandsĀ affecting the health sector. “The association hereby declares an industrial dispute with the federal government of Nigeria on the outlined matters above and cannot guarantee industrial harmony after the 21-day window period given to address all the demands,” the communiquĆ© stated.

Among its key demands,Ā NARDĀ called for the immediate release and payment of theĀ 2026 Medical Residency Training Fund (MRTF)Ā to all eligibleĀ resident doctorsĀ nationwide within the next 21 days. TheĀ MRTFĀ is a statutory intervention fund specifically meant to support the training of resident doctors across accredited health institutions nationwide. Despite repeated assurances from the government, the fund remains unpaid, leaving many resident doctors struggling to finance their training. According to the association, the continued withholding of theĀ MRTFĀ has severely impacted the quality of medical residency training across the country, forcing many doctors to bear the financial burden of their specialization training personally. NARD has consistently maintained that the fund is not a privilege but a statutory entitlement that the government is obligated to disburse annually.

READ ALSO:

The association raised concerns overĀ unpaid salaries,Ā promotion arrearsĀ and discrepancies inĀ professional allowancesĀ reflected in members’Ā May 2026 salariesĀ across federal and state health institutions. NARD is demanding payment of outstanding arrears arising from theĀ 25/35 percent upward review of the Consolidated Medical Salary Structure (CONMESS)Ā , as well asĀ 19 months of unpaid professional allowance arrearsĀ owed to doctors across the country. The doctors further called for the immediate correction of discrepancies in professional allowances reflected in their May 2026 salary cycle and the settlement of all related arrears. Many members, the association noted, have continued to receive incorrect or incomplete salary payments despite multiple complaints and engagements with relevant government agencies.Ā House officers’ welfareĀ was another major issue highlighted. NARD cited persistentĀ salary delays,Ā unpaid arrears,Ā internship placement challengesĀ andĀ onboarding difficultiesĀ that continue to affect young doctors just beginning their medical careers. The association noted that excluding house officers from the civil service scheme means they cannot benefit from wage awards or reviews, and called for a clear system ensuring every adjustment on salary or allowance is immediately reflected. NARD President Dr. Mohammad Suleiman has previously stated that “whenever the Federal Government makes adjustments to wage awards, minimum wage, or even during the review of hazard allowance, these adjustments do not automatically translate to house officers,” leaving this vulnerable group of doctors perpetually disadvantaged.

The association further accusedĀ Motunrayo Omidiran, Executive Chairman of theĀ Federal Character Commission (FCC)Ā , of delaying the issuance of compliance letters to federal health institutions. According toĀ NARD, the delays have worsenedĀ manpower shortagesĀ and contributed to the growingĀ brain drainĀ in the health sector, as many qualified doctors and other healthcare workers are unable to be recruited into vacant positions. “The OGM demands the immediate issuance of a letter of compliance by the Chairperson of the FCC within the next 21 days to facilitate employment of healthcare workers and avert further worsening of the brain drain crisis,” NARD President Suleiman said during the press briefing. The association warned that the recruitment bottleneck created by the FCC’s delays has forced many young Nigerian doctors to seek employment opportunities abroad, further depleting an already overstretched workforce. With thousands of doctors leaving Nigeria annually for the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, Canada, and other destinations, NARD argues that addressing recruitment delays is a critical component of reversing the brain drain crisis.

The doctors also expressed grave concern over the rising cases ofĀ assault,Ā harassment,Ā intimidationĀ andĀ attacks on doctorsĀ while carrying out their duties. NARD President Suleiman described the trend as “barbaric, unacceptable and a dangerous threat” to the survival of the health system. “The OGM observed with grave concern the disturbing rise in cases of assault, harassment, intimidation and violent attacks against doctors across the country while discharging their professional duties,” Suleiman said. As part of its demands, the association urged theĀ federal governmentĀ and security agencies to develop and implement aĀ National Healthcare Workers’ Assault Prevention and Response ProtocolĀ within the 21-day period. It also called for the immediateĀ investigation,Ā arrest, andĀ prosecutionĀ of perpetrators of attacks on health workers. The association noted that many attacks on doctors and other healthcare workers go unreported or unpunished, creating a culture of impunity that emboldens violent individuals. NARD warned that if the trend continues unchecked, more healthcare workers will abandon the profession or seek safer working environments outside the country.

READ ALSO:

The communiquĆ© highlighted unresolved welfare issues in several major institutions, including theĀ Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH)Ā and theĀ Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospitals Complex (OAUTHC)Ā in Ile-Ife. NARD accused the management ofĀ OAUTHCĀ of persistentĀ intimidation of resident doctors, while alleging thatĀ LUTHĀ had continued to withhold the provision ofĀ call mealsĀ for doctors despite repeated demands. The association also demanded full implementation of outstanding provisions in theĀ Medical and Health Workers’ Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA)Ā and urged government action onĀ excessive workload,Ā prolonged call-duty hours,Ā casualisation of doctors, andĀ abusive locum appointments. Other welfare concerns were listed in various centres, including theĀ Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) hospitalsĀ andĀ Barau Dikko Teaching Hospital in Kaduna, where doctors reportedly face severe staffing shortages and poor working conditions.

The association reiterated its demand for the full implementation of outstanding provisions in theĀ Medical and Health Workers’ Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA)Ā . The CBA, which was signed between the federal government and health sector unions, contains several provisions aimed at improving the welfare and working conditions of healthcare workers. However, NARD noted that many of these provisions remain unimplemented years after they were agreed upon. Specific issues highlighted include excessive workload caused by severe manpower shortages, prolonged call-duty hours that violate safe working hour guidelines, the casualisation of doctors through irregular appointment practices, and abusive locum appointments that exploit young doctors. The association warned that these conditions are not only unfair to doctors but also dangerous for patients, as overworked and stressed physicians are more likely to make medical errors.

The association commended the governors ofĀ Kano and Osun states,Ā Abba Kabir YusufĀ andĀ Ademola Adeleke, for their efforts to improve doctors’ welfare and strengthen healthcare delivery in their states. According to NARD, both governors have demonstrated commitment to addressing the concerns of resident doctors in their respective states, contrasting their actions with what it perceives as the federal government’s sluggish response to the crisis. NARD specifically praised the Kano State government for hosting the association’s OGM and Scientific Conference and for its ongoing investments in healthcare infrastructure and workforce welfare. The association called on other state governors to emulate the examples set by Kano and Osun.

NARDĀ has stated that its National Officers Committee will engage relevant stakeholders within theĀ 21-day window period. After this period, the association’sĀ National Executive Council (NEC)Ā will review progress and take further decisions, which could include aĀ nationwide industrial action. The doctors’ body said it expects concrete action from the government before the deadline expires, warning that failure to address the issues could trigger industrial unrest across the country’s health sector. A nationwide strike by resident doctors would effectively shut down tertiary healthcare services in federal and many state hospitals, as resident doctors constitute the backbone of clinical services in these institutions. The latest ultimatum adds to a long history of disputes between the country’s resident doctors and the federal government over remuneration, welfare, and training funding. Over the years,Ā NARDĀ has repeatedly threatened or embarked on industrial actions overĀ unpaid allowances,Ā salary arrears, and delays in the release of theĀ MRTF. Many of the issues highlighted in the latest communiquĆ© have remained recurring points of contention between the association and the government.

NARD Issues Federal Govt 21-Day Ultimatum Over Unpaid Allowances

Loading

Continue Reading

Health

Don’t add lies to the terrorist horror in Oyo, By Farooq Kperogi

Published

on

Tinubu proved me wrong in Kwara, By Farooq Kperogi
Farooq Kperogi

Don’t add lies to the terrorist horror in Oyo, By Farooq Kperogi

The kidnapping of schoolchildren and teachers in Oyo State is horrifying enough by itself. It does not need the embellishment of lies, half-truths, conjectures and opportunistic propaganda to make it more horrifying than it already is.

But that is precisely what appears to be happening with the viral, social-media-amplified list of ā€œdemandsā€ allegedly made by the terrorist bandits who kidnapped schoolchildren and teachers in Oyo State.

According to the social media version of the story, the bandits have demanded four things as preconditions for releasing the innocent people in their captivity: one billion naira to be paid into an account in the Republic of Benin, the release of bandits supposedly being held in Agodi and Abolongo prisons, two Hilux vehicles and the amendment of Oyo State laws to introduce Sharia.

This list has travelled far and wide because it has all the elements that make rumors combustible in Nigeria. It involves money, foreign conspiracy, terrorism, prisons, Sharia and the implicit insinuation that some local Muslims must know more than they are saying. It is almost a perfect specimen of panic engineering.

The problem is that it has no firm evidentiary foundation. The abduction is, of course, real. So are the communal grief and the horrors people in Oyo and the Southwest are contending with now. But the four-point demand list that is now being hawked across social media as fact is not supported by any credible reporting.

The source of the social media-fueled four-point demand list appears to be a vague statement attributed to the Speaker of the Oyo State House of Assembly, Debo Ogundoyin. He was reported to have asked whether anyone would negotiate with terrorists if they asked for weapons, money or concessions on future laws of the land as part of their ransom.

That is a general, hypothetical-sounding formulation. But some people somewhere with a predetermined agenda sat down and chose to stretch this conjectural formulation from the Speaker as evidence of disclosure of a precise list of specific demands.

There is a world of difference between saying terrorists asked for ā€œweapons, money or concessions on future lawsā€ and saying they demanded ā€œone billion naira into a Benin Republic account, two Hilux vehicles, release of detainees in Agodi and Abolongo prisons and the introduction of Sharia in Oyo State.ā€ One is vague, perhaps even rhetorical. The other is specific, explosive and politically loaded. You cannot responsibly move from the first to the second without foolproof evidence.

READ ALSO:

Even the few newspaper reports that published the more sensational version were cautious and guarded in their language. They said, ā€œreports indicate,ā€ ā€œreportedly attributedā€ and ā€œaccording to the reportā€ without once mentioning any ā€œreport.ā€ That is lazy journalism’s way of saying, ā€œWe have no facts for this story.ā€

But certain people on social media have laundered the uncertainty into certainty, the allegation into fact, the list as a means to attract and monetize eyeballs, and the rumor into a psychological weapon.

The Sharia claim is the most suspicious part of the whole thing. Where will the Sharia be implemented? In the classrooms from which the children were abducted? In the Old Oyo National Park where the homicidal, blood-stained criminals are believed to be hiding? In the kidnappers’ forest camps? Or across Oyo State through a ransom note from bandits? The absurdity should detain us before outrage overtakes our capacity for critical thought.

The demand is also historically and empirically incoherent. Bandits and terrorists (who, in my dictionary, are indistinct) have murdered Muslims in states where Sharia already exists. They have attacked mosques. They have killed imams while they are leading prayers in mosques during Ramadan, Islam’s holiest month. They have kidnapped Muslim women, Muslim children, Muslim clerics and Muslim farmers.

They have devastated Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto, Kebbi, Niger, Kaduna and other Muslim-majority communities such as Kwara North. Just last week, these insensate beasts abducted the wives and children of the Emir of Yasikiru in my natal local government of Baruten. Not done, they also burned the emir’s palace. This happened only a few months after murdering nearly 300 people and abducting nearly 300 women and children, most of whom are Muslims, in neighboring Kaiama Local Government.

To suddenly believe that the same species of criminals has discovered the virtues of Sharia and are championing its enshrinement in Oyo State’s laws is to suspend judgment in the service of prejudice.

READ ALSO:

The Benin Republic bank account story is also suspicious. Of course, no banking system is immune to criminal manipulation. Criminals use ā€œmule accounts,ā€ stolen identities and corrupt intermediaries everywhere. So, the existence of KYC and anti-money-laundering rules does not make the claim impossible. But it does make it evidentially demanding. If anyone claims that kidnappers asked for one billion naira to be paid into a named or unnamed Benin Republic account, the burden of proof should be higher than ā€œaccording to reports.ā€

The danger of this rumor is not merely that it is false or unverified. It is that it has already acquired a social function. It is being used to suggest that Yoruba Muslims, especially those who have advocated the introduction of the civil aspects of Sharia to adjudicate issues like marriage and inheritance among Muslims, are somehow complicit in the crimes of these bandits.

It is also being used to imply that the abduction of Yoruba schoolchildren is part of an Islamic plot that local Muslims either endorse or secretly facilitate. This is how societies descend into self-sabotaging moral idiocy. Criminals commit crimes and innocent people who share a religion, ethnicity or language with the imagined identity of the criminals are made to bear the brunt of unjustified transferred aggression.

It bears stressing that Yoruba Muslims are not responsible for the abduction of schoolchildren in Oyo State. Muslim communities in Yorubaland are not accessories to banditry merely because a rumor says kidnappers demanded Sharia. The mere mention of Sharia in a viral post does not convert every Muslim in Oyo, Osun, Ogun or Lagos into a suspect. To argue otherwise is to accept the same collective guilt logic that has poisoned Nigeria’s intergroup relations for decades.

Terrorists murder Muslims, Christians, traditional worshippers and non-religious people. They murder Hausa, Fulani, Yoruba, Igbo, Tiv, Berom, Nupe, Baatonu and everyone else when doing so advances their greed, sadistic urges, murderous impulses or tactical objectives. They are not equal-opportunity humanists, of course. They often manipulate religion and ethnicity. They sometimes speak the language of faith while practicing the ethics of beasts. But their victims are not drawn from one religious community alone.

The fight against terrorism is weakened when we isolate innocent groups for demonization. It dissipates much-needed moral energy and produces enemies where allies are needed. It also encourages communities to hide behind siege mentalities instead of cooperating across religious and ethnic lines to expose criminals. The people who should be angry together are made to be angry at one another.

The people who kidnapped children in Oyo State are reprehensible, homicidal outlaws. The state must rescue the victims, punish the perpetrators, expose their collaborators and secure schools and forests. That is the task, and it is immense, urgent, ever-present and already morally overwhelming. It should not be complicated by people who are eager to graft their pre-existing animus onto other people’s pain.

Someone I discussed this issue with yesterday told me that the rumors of the list of demands are activated by an unusually heightened sense of vigilance. I get that. There is nothing wrong with vigilance. In fact, vigilance is now a condition for survival in Nigeria. But vigilance without verification can provoke self-annihilating hysteria and mob psychology.

The children and teachers in captivity deserve our full attention. Their families deserve empathy unpolluted by propaganda. Oyo State deserves security, not rumor-fed religious suspicion. Nigeria deserves a serious conversation about the collapse of state protection, the spread of kidnapping economies, the mass helplessness in the face of terror and the ungoverned spaces that have become refuge for terrorists and bandits.

What Nigeria does not need is another lie added to an already unbearable tragedy.

Don’t add lies to the terrorist horror in Oyo, By Farooq Kperogi

 

Kperogi is a renowned Nigerian columnist and United States-based Professor of Journalism.

Loading

Continue Reading

Trending