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Doctors’ Strike: FG To Begin Implementing Demands Monday

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The Federal Government says it will begin implementing an agreement it signed with Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) on Monday in efforts to end the indefinite strike embarked upon by the National Association of Resident Doctors (NARD).

 

Labour and employment minister Chris Ngige said on Saturday at the continuation of a meeting of all concerned stakeholders he summoned at the instance of President Muhammadu Buhari that the move was aimed at resolving the doctors’ strike.

 

The meeting, which started at about 2pm on Friday, spilled over into Saturday when the medical doctors maintained that they would not shift ground unless the government attended to their demands.

 

Ngige, who addressed journalists before the meeting went into a closed-door session, said they had reached agreements the previous night on all the 12 disputed issues, adding that implementation would start from the next working day (Monday).

 

UNPAID HOUSE OFFICERS

 

Speaking on the issue of non-payment of some house officers, the Minister said NARD is expected to submit the list of the affected 114 officers for further verification and when confirmed that they are genuine, and their IPPIS particulars and BVN are in order, they would be paid in September with the outstanding arrears.

 

He added that an agreement was reached on the Residency Training Fund outstanding for 2020 and 2021, after the Budget Office had explained that N617, 429, 121 was the outstanding to be paid in the 2020 [budget].

 

“There are reconciliations to be done here because the 2020 [budget] was done with some errors. Some people who are not supposed to benefit from the fund got money and because of that, the number of genuine people that were not paid also came to that quantum of persons.

 

“So, reconciliation is being done and some monies are being returned. We have given a timeline for this reconciliation to be done.

 

“And for the 2021, the money approved by Government is N4.802B. This money like I said earlier was contained in the 2021 Supplementary Budget, which the President signed on the eve of his departure to UK for the meeting and medical check-up.

 

“So, between that time and now, it became a money law. The funds have now been sourced and it has gotten from the CBN to the Budget Office where we expect it to be processed in one week as undertaken by the Government side,” Ngige said.

 

The minister disclosed that the meeting agreed that by next Friday, August 27, residents in institutions would have started getting their money, with each receiving about N542,000.

 

MINIMUM WAGE CUTS

 

He noted that the issue of consequential adjustment on National Minimum wage cuts across the health and educational sectors, which were both affected by the projection of N160 billion done in 2019, but which fell short of the people that were to benefit from this.

 

“The meeting agreed that we need to let this matter. Therefore, the Budget Office of the Federation should start from the 2021 service vote to start paying. And if we have any leftovers, we roll it into the 2022.

 

“Coming to hazard allowance, everybody agreed that the discussion is still ongoing and therefore government wants to finish it up. We agreed with NMA position to us that they don’t want to discuss holistically anymore as an association and that they have their own peculiarities that are not same with other health workers.

 

“We are going to do two meetings, one for NMA and affiliates and one for JOHESU. But we are taking the meetings concurrently so that we don’t run into troubled quarters. We are starting next weeks,” he said.

 

According to him, the meeting equally noted that the non-payment of skipping allowance cuts across the entire health sector and therefore agreed that it was going to be handled holistically, while awaiting the court judgment on the matter.

 

He said the NMA has been directed to submit a written position on the controversial withdrawal of NYSC doctors and house officers from the scheme of service to point out the anomaly in the circular, for onward transmission to Head of Service of the Federation.

 

The Head of Service is look at the inputs given by NMA to the circular and process it to either the Council of Establishment or handle it administratively, if the issues are not such of fundamental nature to further clarify it, adding that a two-month timeline has been set for this.

 

“We also agreed on the migration of doctors on GFMIS from some university teaching hospitals, like University College Hospital Ibadan, University of Calabar Teaching Hospital and University of Port Harcourt Teaching Hospital which have recruited doctors on GFMIS and were unable to pay them when GFMIS was tampered with.

 

“We can resume when we verify those people. They can be there until the recruitment is perfected in order to migrate them to IPPIS. In this wise, the Head of Service has granted waiver and revalidation of old waiver for University of Port Harcourt and waivers for University College Ibadan and Calabar but this is not without reprimand for CMDS who have flouted government regulations by recruiting people into the service without fulfilling the requirements of circular on this.

 

”We also have issue of hazard allowances for doctors in government hospitals that did not benefit from that 2020 payment. The Federal Ministry of Health has compiled a list and we said that the list should be forwarded back again to the Federal Ministry of Finance. For doctors in University Clinics and the rest of them, we said they should route their own through the Federal Ministry of Education, their parent Ministry and Employer.

 

REMOVING DOCTORS IN ACADEMIA FROM CONMESS

 

“On the controversial issue of NSIWC circular, removing doctors in academia from CONMESS and also doctors who are doubling as honorary consultants/lecturers from CONMESS to CONUAS, we have even before their request treated one leg of it by obeying the court order already gotten by them and in spirit of dialogue, we said further discussions should continue with NSIWC.

 

“NMA has undertaken that they should tell the two members and their association to do an out of court settlement by withdrawing the matter from the industrial court until we finish the negotiation. We gave a time for negotiation.

 

”We have empanelled a committee with NMA leading including NSIWC, Federal Ministry of Health, Federal Ministry of labour and others in the team. The first inaugural meeting is Tuesday August 31st, we are hopeful that this meeting will give us suggestion on how to resolve the matter.

 

 

STATE DOMESTICATION OF RESIDENCY TRAINING

 

“On the issues relating to states, there is no way the Federal Government will start pulling the states on the issue of domestication of Medical Residency Training Programme by their various Houses of Assembly and Government and issue of Medical Training Residency Fund. We also have the issue of Non-payment of COVID-19 allowances by some state governments and consequential minimum wage adjustments.

 

“We have before now made contact with the Governors Forum on these matters and the onus is now on us as the Ministry of Labour to talk to the Governors Forum and impress on them on the need for this to be done. The Medical Residency Training and accompanying Fund is already in the Act which the Federal Government has signed.

 

”We will impress it on them as part of strengthening the health system so that we are not starved of specialist doctors. There is an urgent need for them to adopt that. This will also help us to stem the issue of brain drain. The Federal Government cannot employ everybody. We want state governments to pay more attention to secondary and tertiary health.”

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FG to train 18,510 Nigerians under Renewed Hope Vocational and Skills Training Programme — Doro

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FG to train 18,510 Nigerians under Renewed Hope Vocational and Skills Training Programme — Doro
Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Dr Bernard Doro

FG to train 18,510 Nigerians under Renewed Hope Vocational and Skills Training Programme — Doro

The Federal Government has launched the Renewed Hope Vocational and Skills Training Programme (VSTP), an initiative that will equip 18,510 Nigerians across the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) with practical vocational and entrepreneurial skills aimed at boosting employment, promoting self-reliance and reducing poverty.

The programme, a flagship intervention of the National Social Investment Programme Agency (NSIPA) under the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, is part of the Tinubu administration’s Renewed Hope Agenda, which seeks to empower vulnerable Nigerians through sustainable economic opportunities rather than short-term relief measures.

Speaking during the official launch of the programme at the Government Technical College, Area 3, Garki, Abuja, the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Dr Bernard Doro, described the initiative as a strategic investment in Nigeria’s human capital and a critical step toward creating long-term livelihoods.

According to a statement issued by the Minister’s Senior Technical Adviser on Information Systems and Data Analysis, Dr Abimbola Fasanu, the vocational training programme is designed to provide beneficiaries with practical skills that will improve their employability and prepare them to establish successful businesses.

“This programme is more than a training exercise; it is a strategic investment in Nigeria’s future. Under the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, we are moving from palliatives to pathways by equipping Nigerians with practical skills that create opportunities, restore dignity and build lasting prosperity,” Doro said.

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The minister explained that the initiative forms part of the ministry’s broader One Humanitarian–One Poverty Response System (OHOPRS), a reform framework created to integrate humanitarian assistance, social protection and poverty reduction interventions into a single coordinated national strategy.

According to him, linking the programme with the National Social Investment Programme ensures that beneficiaries receive support beyond classroom training through entrepreneurship development, cooperative structures, access to business opportunities and pathways that encourage long-term economic independence.

The two-week intensive training programme combines technical vocational education with entrepreneurship and business management, enabling participants to acquire practical skills and the knowledge required to start and sustain profitable enterprises.

To ensure participants can immediately put their new skills into practice, the Federal Government will provide every beneficiary with a starter pack tailored to his or her selected vocational trade upon successful completion of the programme.

Beneficiaries will receive practical training in 14 high-demand vocational trades, including Automobile Technology, Agricultural Technology (Agric-Tech), Baking and Confectionery, Carpentry, Catering and Cookery, Electrical Installation, Housekeeping, Jewellery and Bead Making, Masonry, Plumbing, Welding and Fabrication, Sewing and Fashion Design, Grinding Operations, and Vulcanising.

Doro said the government’s objective extends beyond issuing certificates, stressing that the real success of the programme would be measured by the number of businesses created, jobs generated and families lifted out of poverty.

“Our vision is to see today’s trainee become tomorrow’s entrepreneur, employer and contributor to national development. This is how we will build resilience, reduce poverty and create inclusive economic growth for Nigerians,” he said.

He commended the National Social Investment Programme Agency (NSIPA), vocational training providers, development partners and private sector organisations supporting the initiative, urging them to ensure quality training, effective monitoring and sustained mentorship for beneficiaries after graduation.

The minister reaffirmed the Federal Government’s commitment to implementing reforms that empower Nigerians through practical skills development, entrepreneurship and sustainable livelihood opportunities in line with President Tinubu’s economic reform agenda.

The launch of the programme comes amid intensified government efforts to address youth unemployment, poverty and economic inequality through expanded social investment initiatives. Recent reforms have focused on strengthening transparency, digital verification, monitoring and accountability across the country’s social intervention programmes.

Development experts have consistently identified technical and vocational education as one of the most effective tools for reducing unemployment and stimulating economic growth, particularly among young people. By combining vocational training with entrepreneurship support, business starter packs and post-training assistance, the programme aims to help beneficiaries establish viable businesses, create jobs and contribute to local economic development.

Government officials said implementation of the programme would be closely monitored to ensure beneficiaries complete their training, receive their starter packs and gain continued support needed to build sustainable enterprises capable of improving household incomes and strengthening Nigeria’s economy.

FG to train 18,510 Nigerians under Renewed Hope Vocational and Skills Training Programme — Doro

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These Hands Can Build the World: Reframing Nigeria’s Youth Bulge

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These Hands Can Build the World: Reframing Nigeria’s Youth Bulge

These Hands Can Build the World: Reframing Nigeria’s Youth Bulge

A four-part series

Omobola Lana, Strategic Advisor Adara Foundation

Part 1: The Paradox of Two Plagues

The global economy is currently wrestling with two seemingly unrelated crises. Across Europe, and North America, factories, energy grids, and construction sites are stalling because there simply aren’t enough young hands to pick up the tools. An aging demographic and a decades-long societal push away from vocational education have left developed nations with a staggering structural deficit. Across Europe, the mathematics of the talent pipeline are broken: for every new apprentice entering the skilled trades, nearly three veteran professionals are retiring. The European Construction Industry Federation (FIEC) estimates a staggering deficit of 2.1 million construction and technical workers across EU member states.

Meanwhile, here in Nigeria, the crisis is perfectly inverted.

Nigeria is home to one of the youngest populations in the world, with nearly 60% of our population under the age of 25. Yet, according to data from the International Labour Organization and local economic metrics, youth unemployment and underemployment remain stubbornly high, leaving millions of energetic, capable minds trapped in low-paying, informal survivalist jobs.

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For decades, domestic policymakers and international observers have viewed Nigeria’s young population with anxiety, routinely branding it a ticking sociological time bomb. But this perspective suffers from economic short-sightedness. What the world treats as an isolated demographic problem could actually be the missing puzzle piece to a global labor crisis. Nigeria’s youth bulge is not a burden; it can be the ultimate supply-side solution to the global trade skills deficit.

The mismatch between global demand and Nigerian labor supply persists because our educational institutions are still preparing youth for a domestic corporate market that cannot absorb them, while ignoring a ravenous global market that needs them. If we shift our perspective—viewing our massive youth population not as a liability to be pacified, but as a high-value human capital asset to be strategically developed—Nigeria can position its youth to build both the world’s infrastructure and, concurrently, its own.

The path forward requires looking beyond standard university degrees and tech bubbles. The world needs builders, technicians, and operators. And Nigeria has the raw human energy to supply them.

This is Part 1 of a four-part series. Stay tuned for the next edition as we continue the conversation on unlocking the potential of African youth.

About Adara Foundation

Adara Foundation empowers women and young people to contribute to Africa’s socio-economic development through education, skills training, funding support for small businesses, and the promotion of African arts and culture. Investing in the economic empowerment of women and youth is at the heart of our work. Since 2017, the Foundation has reached more than 22,700 beneficiaries through education, skills development, SME support, financial literacy, market access, health initiatives, and humanitarian support.

This article is part of the Foundation’s commitment to advancing conversations that inspire action and unlock the potential of the African youth.

Learn more at www.adarafoundation.org and follow Adara Foundation on Facebook (@Adara Foundation), Instagram (@adara_foundation), and LinkedIn (@Adara Foundation).

 

These Hands Can Build the World: Reframing Nigeria’s Youth Bulge

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Presidency, Makinde clash over UN probe into Oriire school abduction

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Presidency, Makinde clash over UN probe into Oriire school abduction
Governor of Oyo State, Engr. Seyi Makinde

Presidency, Makinde clash over UN probe into Oriire school abduction

The rescue of 39 pupils and seven teachers abducted from schools in Oriire Local Government Area of Oyo State has sparked a fresh political disagreement between the Presidency and Governor Seyi Makinde, following the governor’s call for an independent international investigation into the circumstances surrounding the kidnapping and the victims’ prolonged captivity.

The victims, who were abducted by suspected Ansaru terrorists on May 15, 2026, regained their freedom on July 10 after spending 56 days in captivity in remote parts of the Oyo National Forest. Their release followed a coordinated intelligence-led rescue operation involving multiple Nigerian security agencies.

Although Nigerians have welcomed the safe return of the victims, Governor Makinde has insisted that the rescue should not mark the end of the matter, arguing that the incident raises serious questions that deserve transparent answers.

In a statewide broadcast after receiving the rescued pupils and teachers, the governor announced plans to seek an independent investigation involving relevant United Nations agencies, international human rights organisations and other accountability bodies.

According to Makinde, the objective is not to undermine Nigeria’s security institutions but to establish the full truth behind the incident and restore public confidence in the country’s security architecture.

“The reunion of these children and teachers with their families does not mark the end of this painful chapter. It marks the beginning of another responsibility—our collective responsibility to establish the truth,” the governor said.

He maintained that because the responsibility for national security rests with the Federal Government under Nigeria’s Constitution, Nigerians deserve a comprehensive explanation of how dozens of schoolchildren and teachers were abducted, held for nearly two months and eventually rescued.

Makinde called for a transparent investigation into whether there were institutional failures, operational lapses, negligence or any form of collusion that may have contributed to the incident or prolonged the victims’ captivity.

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He also announced plans to strengthen security across communities bordering the Old Oyo National Park, including tighter surveillance of access routes, improved intelligence gathering and stronger collaboration between local communities and security agencies.

However, the Presidency strongly rejected the governor’s proposal, describing it as unnecessary and politically motivated.

Reacting to Makinde’s comments, the Special Adviser to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, dismissed the governor’s position as baseless.

Speaking on the controversy, Onanuga questioned what the Federal Government would gain by allowing innocent schoolchildren and teachers to remain in captivity.

“What will any government or anybody profit from subjecting the children and teachers to such trauma for days?” he asked.

The presidential spokesman said it would take “a very bad mind” to suggest any conspiracy surrounding the rescue operation, adding that the successful mission should instead be celebrated as a major achievement by Nigeria’s security agencies.

“If somebody is reading any conspiracy into that, it is only somebody who has a very dark mind,” Onanuga stated.

The Presidency reiterated that the rescue resulted from weeks of painstaking intelligence gathering and close collaboration among the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), the National Counter Terrorism Centre (NCTC), the Nigerian Army, Nigeria Police Force, Department of State Services (DSS), Nigerian Air Force, Amotekun Corps, local hunters and other members of the Joint Interagency Task Force.

Security officials disclosed that investigators gradually dismantled the terrorists’ logistics network, monitored communication channels and cut off supply routes before successfully securing the victims’ release without a large-scale military assault that could have endangered their lives.

The operation, however, came at a heavy cost.

Among those who paid the supreme sacrifice was Lieutenant Felix Ademe Isaac, a Nigerian Army officer who was killed after his convoy struck an improvised explosive device during an earlier phase of the rescue mission.

The rescued victims have since narrated harrowing experiences in captivity, revealing that they survived mainly on cocoyam, noodles and water from a nearby stream, while children were beaten whenever they cried, male teachers were chained and blindfolded, and the group was repeatedly forced to embark on dangerous nighttime treks through thick forests whenever the kidnappers suspected security operatives were closing in.

Security analysts say the disagreement between the Oyo State Government and the Presidency reflects differing perspectives on accountability rather than the success of the rescue operation itself.

While some believe an independent inquiry could help identify security gaps, improve intelligence coordination and strengthen Nigeria’s response to future kidnapping incidents, others argue that existing constitutional institutions are capable of reviewing the operation without external involvement.

Political observers also note that the disagreement comes amid heightened political tensions ahead of the 2027 general elections, although both the Presidency and Governor Makinde have insisted their positions are driven by national interest rather than partisan considerations.

Meanwhile, the rescued pupils and teachers are receiving medical attention, trauma counselling and rehabilitation, while security agencies continue efforts to track down and prosecute all members of the terrorist network responsible for the abduction.

Presidency, Makinde clash over UN probe into Oriire school abduction

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