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The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria has announced the temporary closure of the Samuel Ladoke Akintola Airport, Ibadan, Oyo State. In a statement on Sunday, FAAN Director of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection, Obiageli Orah the Federal Government had approved the closure.


She said the closure was to facilitate extensive upgrade works to enhance infrastructure and operational standards. According to her, the move became necessary to enable the execution of critical improvements at the airport.


“The Federal Government of Nigeria has approved the temporary closure of Samuel Ladoke Akintola Airport (SLAA), Ibadan, due to ongoing upgrade works,” the statement read. “As part of the Oyo State Government’s initiative to upgrade Ibadan Airport from a domestic to an international airport, various improvements and remodelling works are currently underway.”


According to the statement, the Nigeria Airspace Management Agency has consequently closed the runway and suspended airport operations by the International Civil Aviation Organisation regulations. 



Troops of 6 Brigade, Nigerian Army/Sector 3 Operation Whirl Stroke, in collaboration with Sector 2 Operation Safe Haven (OPSH), have destroyed bandits’ hideouts in military operations in Taraba and Plateau States.


They also succeeded in arrested some suspected gunrunners who have been wreaking havoc in the states. The Acting Assistant Director of Army Public Relations, 6 Brigade, Captain Olubodunde Oni, disclosed this in a statement on Sunday.


He said the troops launched an offensive on March 22 at Achalle, a border community between Karim Lamido Local Government Area (LGA) of Taraba and Wase Local Government Area of Plateau. During the operation, the troops engaged and dislodged armed bandits, recovering a motorcycle before advancing to another stronghold.


“At the second location, which had over 70 huts, the troops met resistance but overwhelmed the criminals with superior firepower. Another motorcycle and an international passport belonging to one Muhammadu Dahiru, suspected to be linked to the syndicate, were recovered,” the statement said.


Oni stated that the troops later cleared the Dutsen Zaki high ground, neutralizing threats in the area. Similarly, on March 16, troops raided the residence of two notorious gunrunners, Irimiya Aboki and Tanko Adamu, also known as Arewa Mafia, in Mararraba Donga, Donga LGA. 



Rivers State Governor, Siminalayi Fubara, on Sunday, made his first public appearance since the declaration of a state of emergency in the state. He attended a church service at Salvation Ministries in Port Harcourt.



Dressed in an all-white outfit, Fubara received a warm welcome from congregants, with loud cheers as he arrived. His appearance comes amid ongoing political tensions in the state.


The governor, who has been at the center of a leadership crisis, has maintained his stance on defending the interests of Rivers people despite facing political challenges. 




Namibia swears in Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah as first female president

Namibia swears in Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah as first female president
Southern Africa’s desert nation of Namibia swore in its first woman president Friday after Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah won elections that extended the ruling party’s 35-year grip on power.

Nandi-Ndaitwah, 72, became one of the few women to lead an African nation in a ceremony attended by heads of state from several countries on the continent including Angola, South Africa and Tanzania.

Previously in the post of vice president, she is a veteran of the South West Africa People’s Organisation (SWAPO) that led the sparsely populated and uranium-rich country to independence from apartheid South Africa in 1990.



Outgoing president Nangolo Mbumba, 83, handed over power at a ceremony that coincided with the 35th anniversary of Namibia’s independence and was moved from the Independence Stadium to State House because of rare heavy rains.

Applause and ululations erupted as Nandi-Ndaitwah, popularly known as NNN, took the oath of office.

Before delivering her remarks, she called on previous women African leaders in the audience, including Liberia’s Nobel Peace laureate and former president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, to stand.

Tanzania’s President Samia Suluhu Hassan, the only other woman currently leading an African country, was also present.

Nandi-Ndaitwah said that while her election would encourage other women, it should be clear: “I was not elected because I’m a woman but on merit.

“As women, we should not ask to be elected to positions of responsibility because we are women, but because we are capable members of our society,” she said.


A member of SWAPO since she was 14 years old, Nandi-Ndaitwah last year became the first woman to lead the liberation movement. She entered the national assembly in 1990 and has held several senior posts, including deputy prime minister and minister of various portfolios.


She secured 58 percent of the vote in the country’s chaotic November elections, which were extended several times after logistical failures led to major delays.


The youthful opposition Independent Patriots for Change (IPC) mounted a strong challenge but took only 25.5 percent of the presidential vote, underscoring continued loyalty to SWAPO even as the popularity of other southern African liberation parties has waned.

A key issue at the ballot box was massive unemployment among the young population, with 44 percent of 18- to 34-year-olds without work in 2023 in a country of just three million people.

“We will increase investment in the development of infrastructure to open investment opportunities, enhance economic productivity, promote economic growth and improve the quality of life of our people,” Nandi-Ndaitwah said in her first address as president.

Namibia is one of the world’s leading uranium producers and also rich in diamonds, but has a high disparity between rich and poor.


Other priorities were improvements in the agriculture sector and addressing strong rural to urban migration, Nandi-Ndaitwah said. She also called to implement universal health coverage.

“We will continue to contribute to the international effort to address global challenges facing humanity today, such as environmental degradation and climate change,” she said, attributing the recent heavy rains to the “impact of climate change”.


Nandi-Ndaitwah also used her speech to voice support for the right of Palestinians and the people of Western Sahara to self-determination, and called for the lifting of international sanctions against Cuba, Venezuela and Zimbabwe.

The new president is a socially conservative daughter of an Anglican pastor and has taken a strict stance against abortion, which is banned in Namibia except in exceptional circumstances. Gay marriage is also illegal.

“We are living an historic moment. Super excited at the inauguration of a female president,” said businesswoman Monica Geingos, wife of president Hage Geingob, who died in office in 2024, as she arrived for the event.



About N1.7 trillion in revenue by the Federal Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) has been shared by the federal, state and local governments in February 2025. A statement by the Director (Press and Public Relations), Bawa Mokwa on Saturday, said a total sum of N1.678 trillion was shared in the month under review.


The revenue was shared at the March 2025 FAAC meeting held in Abuja. The meeting was chaired by the Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Wale Edun, and attended by the Accountant General of the Federation, Shamseldeen Ogunjimi.


The total distributable revenue of N1.678 trillion comprised distributable statutory revenue of N827.633 billion, distributable Value Added Tax (VAT) revenue of N 609.430 billion, Electronic Money Transfer Levy (EMTL) revenue of N35.171 billion, Solid Minerals revenue of N28.218 billion and Augmentation of N178 billion.


According to a communiqué issued by the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC), total gross revenue of N2.344 trillion was available in the month of February 2025. The total deduction for cost of collection was N89.092 billion while total transfers, interventions, refunds and savings were N577.097 billion.


The communiqué stated that gross statutory revenue of N1.653 trillion was received for the month of February 2025. This was lower than the sum of N1.848 trillion received in the month of January 2025 by N194.664 billion. 



Lack of funding exacerbated by President Donald Trump administration’s cuts to foreign aid will affect the supply of lifesaving food to treat 80, 000 children suffering from acute forms of malnutrition in Nigeria within the next two months, the United Nations Children’s Agency said on Friday.


According to the organisation, a total of 1.3 million children under five suffering from severe acute malnutrition risk losing access to lifesaving support this year in Ethiopia and Nigeria. “Without new funding, we will run out of our supply chain of Ready-to-Use-Therapeutic-Food by May, and that means that 70,000 children in Ethiopia that depend on this type of treatment cannot be served,” Kitty Van der Heijden, UNICEF’s deputy executive director, told reporters in Geneva via video link from Abuja on Friday. 


“Interruption to continuous treatment is life-threatening.”


In Nigeria, UNICEF said it may run out of supplies to feed 80,000 malnourished children as soon as the end of this month. Van der Heijden described recently being in a hospital in Maiduguri with a child who was so malnourished that her skin was falling off. Reuters reports that international donors have in recent years reduced contributions to UN agencies, including UNICEF. Its funding woes were accelerated when the United States, its top donor, imposed a 90-day pause on all U.S. foreign aid on the first day of President Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January.


That action, and ensuing orders halting many programmes of the U.S. Agency for International Development worldwide, have jeopardised the delivery of lifesaving food and medical aid, throwing into chaos global humanitarian relief efforts. “This funding crisis will become a child survival crisis,” warned Van der Heijden, adding that the sudden nature of the cuts did not give the agency the ability to mitigate the risks. 

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