NEWS
Chief Medical Director Rates Benue FMC Low in Infrastructure
From Attah Ede, Makurdi
The Chief Medical Director (CMD), Federal Medical Center(FMC) Makurdi, Prof. Joseph Kortor on Monday said the hospital remains the least developed FMC in Nigeria despite being first among to be established in the country.
He further stated that the hospital can hardly compete with other sister FMCs in the country due to its bad state of infrastructure, stressing that the Center is not looking like a hospital where serious services can be rendered.
Prof. Kortor who revealed this during a chat with newsmen in his office in Makurdi, noted that while a lot of achievements were being recorded in other FMCs in the country, Federal Medical Center (FMC) Makurdi, had remained under-developed for decades.
He said: “Go to FMCs in Jabi, Lagos, Abeokuta etc, a lot of achievements are been done there. I can’t even bring my colleagues here (Makurdi) to come and see what is happening here in Benue; no way, because there is nothing here to be proud of.
“You bring people to your house when you build a new house, or your house is loose and you want your visitors to see. But when everything in your house is upside down, what actually are you going to show them? Is there anything special that you want people all over the country to come and see?
“We belong to a committee of CMDs, where we go round the states to discuss FMCs, whereby if you have any problem or issue, you discuss with your older colleagues who advise you. Last year we were supposed to be in Maiduguri, but because of insecurity in the area, we brought it to Abuja and by March 2025, we will be in another state. But because of the poor condition of FMC Makurdi, I cannot bring anybody here.
“We have no functional power plants to work with here .You can see how you (journalists) are sweating profusely due to the heat in my office. It is about budget padding and I do not have the capacity for such.
“When I was coming to assume office here, I came with a vision to turn around the hospital in line with the vision of the hospital to provide an effective and efficient foremost hospital in the area of research and training. As it is, not much is done yet. I have spent one year but we are still crawling” , Prof stated.
He maintained that despite the unfavourable condition of the hospital, he has been able to put one or things in place.
The CMD added that he has succeeded in relocating all the hospital services to its permanent site in Apir except for children and female wards that are still rendering services in the temporary site.
According to him, the hospital under his watch has successfully established a monocular laboratory for HIV testing and treatment and set up a Lassa fever laboratory unit.
“We have commissioned the Monocular HIV laboratory. The Nigeria Center for Disease Control(NCDC) has also upgraded our lab. Now we can successfully take samples of Lassa fever patients for lab tests and confirm the result here in Makurdi without taking the sample outside the State.
“Just recently, confirmed Lassa fever in the case when the disease broke out in one of the Idoma speaking areas of the State.
“Our major challenge now is electricity and power supply. We don’t have lights to run many samples. For instance, for you to test a sample and confirm the result, you need four to five hours of uninterrupted power. Because if you start the test and the power supply goes off, you will have to start all over again”, Prof. Kortor stated.
The CMD however called on the government to address the issue of power for more quality services in the hospital.
Foreign News
Poland Bans Smartphones in Primary Schools
Poland plans to ban mobile phones in all primary schools from next academic year under draft legislation approved by the government on Tuesday.
The proposal, which will now be submitted to parliament, would take effect on September 1, 2026.
In Poland, primary school education runs through the eighth grade.
The planned law would prohibit the use of mobile phones and other devices capable of recording audio or video during lessons and breaks.
The ban would apply to both public and private schools, the Education Ministry said.
Exceptions would be permitted when the use of a phone is required for teaching purposes, educational support, or for health and safety reasons.
Education Minister Barbara Nowacka said the measure is a response to calls from teachers for stricter rules on smartphone use in schools.
She said that more than half of Poland’s schools have already introduced similar restrictions on a voluntary basis.
The government also approved a package of measures aimed at strengthening child protection online, which must likewise be approved by parliament.
The proposals include tighter restrictions on minors’ access to websites containing pornography and measures designed to speed up the removal of illegal online material.
Under the plans, operators of adult-content websites would be required to verify users’ ages anonymously, without collecting browser data or personal information.
NEWS
Reps Minority Picks Ugochinyere as New Leader
By Ubong Ukpong, Abuja
Following the defection of the former minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Kingsley Chinda, the minority caucus has nominated Hon. Ikenga Imo Ugochinyere as their new Leader.
Sixty one out of the 81 minority members of the House on Wednesday, Select Hon.
Ugochinyere as Reps Minority Leader Designate, awaiting the Speaker’s announcement of the Opposition’s Decision.From the documents sighted by our reporter, majority of the lawmakers of the minority parties cutting across the entire minority bloc, namely ADC, NDC, APP, PRP, LP, APGA, APM, ACCORD and SDP, and across tribal, religious and zonal political lines voluntarily settled for Ikenga as their preferred choice.
From available information, the lawmakers today submitted the official nomination of the new Minority Leader designate, Ikenga, to the Speaker in line with the tradition of the parliament, which is stated clearly under the new Rule Book of the House of Representatives, Order 7, Rule 7, which provides that members shall elect among themselves the Minority Leader to lead them.The lawmakers, who spoke anonymously, expressed confidence that the Speaker of the parliament, as an unbiased leader, will swiftly make the announcement so that the minority can have its leadership in the next few days, and the parliament can be fully constituted with the minority fully represented. The lawmakers said they have also settled for nominees to fill the vacant positions of Minority Whip and Deputy Minority Leader, with one of the positions already taken by an NDC member from the North West. After ongoing harmonisation, the remaining list will be sent to the Speaker within the next few days for announcement.
The lawmakers said they settled for Ikenga because of his excellent legislative record, three years out of his four-year term, during which he sponsored and moved over 40 bills, motions and petitions, in addition to his four years as Senior Adviser to the Senate President, all of which have established him as a qualified candidate for the job. They said that the power to choose rests with the majority of the minority members, and that power has now been exercised, adding that any sentimental arguments will not change the decision of the minority lawmakers, who have overwhelmingly settled for one of their own.
They noted that, in the past, Sen. Akpabio was elected Senate Minority Leader after only three weeks in parliament, and that many others have been elected to top parliamentary positions with fewer years of experience. They added that even when the PDP zoned the speakership to the South West for Mulikat, the lawmakers elected Tambuwal and Ihedioha; when the APC zoned the Senate Presidency to the North East, the senators elected Sen. Saraki and Ekweremadu; and Dogara was elected after the position had been tipped for the South West. Parliament, they stressed, is rooted in the principle of majority decision and not sentiment. The lawmakers said their choice of Ikenga, with three years of legislative experience for a four-year job, is more than enough.
NEWS
Kano Revokes Private School Licences over Sexual Abuse
From Aliyu Askira, Kano
The Ungogo Local Government Area of Kano State has withdrawn the licences of all private schools within its jurisdiction following allegations that a teacher sexually abused four female pupils.
The decision was announced by the Education Councillor, Abdullahi Wakili, who said it followed a review meeting aimed at strengthening school oversight and addressing safety and moral concerns in the area.
Wakili explained that the council chairman, Tijjani Amiru Bilyaminu, has directed all private school proprietors to appear before a screening committee for fresh assessment before they can resume operations.
The action comes after the closure of Al-Hadeed Private School in the Inusawa area of Ungogo, where a teacher popularly known as Uncle Kamal was accused of abusing four underage pupils reportedly from the same family.
The suspect has been arraigned before a magistrate court in the Nomansland area of Kano on rape charges. The court ordered that he be remanded in custody and adjourned the case to June 9, 2026.
Authorities said the sweeping measure is intended to restore public confidence in private schools and ensure the safety of children across the local government.
“Our schools must be safe havens, not places of fear,” Wakili stated.


