The immediate past Governor of Benue State, Chief Samuel Ortom is scheduled to join other prominent Nigerians to speak at the 2015 Annual General Conference of the Guild of Corporate online publishers (GOCOP) in Lagos on October 9. Others who will speak, as discussants at the event include the Registrar of Baze University in Abuja, Professor Abiodun Adeniyi; Director of the Institute of Continuing Education at the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Professor Abigail Ogwezzy-Ndisika and the Director-General of the National Orientation Agency, Alhaji Lanre Issa-Orilu.
The immediate past Governor of Katsina State and former Speaker of the Federal House of Representatives, Right Honourable Aminu Bello Masari is scheduled to deliver the keynote address. A statement by the Publicity Secretary of GOCOP, Ogbefi Remmy Nweke said that the theme of the Conference is: “Reconciling Campaign Promises with Governance Realities: Challenges and Prospects.” The conference will take place at the Radisson Blu Hotel, Ikeja, Lagos.
“As you return to the Red Chamber, I encourage you to Heal and Build Bridges. Politics thrives on relationships. While you must remain courageous, finding common ground with colleagues — even those who oppose you — will strengthen your influence. Your mandate is not to fight endless battles, but to secure enduring victories for your people.”
Dear Distinguished Senator Natasha,
I was interviewed by RayPower 100.5 FM Abuja this morning concerning your ‘Resumption from suspension, your statements/comments on your resumption, its likely meaning and implications, and the way forward’, and I felt like sharing some of my views, thoughts and concerns with you. First, accept my warm congratulations on your return to the Senate after your recent suspension. It is never easy to walk through the valley of trials under the gaze of the public eye. The pains, the whispers, and the political storms you have endured are not lost on those of us who keenly follow your journey. As a woman, a mother, and a daughter of Kogi Central, you have borne the weight of representation with courage, and it is only right to acknowledge that resilience. But beyond the welcome and applause, this moment is a call — not just to resume, but to renew. The people who gave you their mandate did so not because the journey would be easy, but because they believed in your strength to champion their cause even in the face of resistance. Sustaining that confidence requires focus, patience, and a deep sense of purpose.
Sharing in Your Pains
Your suspension may have felt like an attempt to silence not just your voice, but the collective aspirations of the people you represent. Yet, history shows us that adversity can refine leaders for greater service. Nelson Mandela emerged stronger after 27 years of imprisonment; Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala rose higher after political pushbacks. Likewise, your story can become an emblem of resilience, if you let these trials shape your vision rather than weaken your resolve.
Advice for Forging Ahead
As you return to the Red Chamber, I encourage you to: Heal and Build Bridges Politics thrives on relationships. While you must remain courageous, finding common ground with colleagues — even those who oppose you — will strengthen your influence. Your mandate is not to fight endless battles, but to secure enduring victories for your people.
Focus on Tangible Development for Kogi Central
The people’s confidence will be sustained not by rhetoric, but by results. Priority areas call for your immediate attention: Infrastructure: Advocate for improved roads, electricity, and support for the Ajaokuta Steel dream. Youth Empowerment: Champion vocational training, digital skills, and entrepreneurship hubs. Our youth must see opportunities that keep them rooted in dignity. Healthcare & Education: Push for functional hospitals, maternal health projects, and modern learning environments that prepare Kogi Central for the future. Security: Work with local and national stakeholders to restore peace to communities plagued by insecurity. Without safety, development is impossible.
Remain Grounded in the People
Do not let Abuja swallow your closeness to the grassroots. Regular town hall meetings, open consultations, and visible constituency projects will reassure the people that their trust was not misplaced.
Champion Integrity and Women’s Leadership
As one of the few women in such a high political office, you carry the hopes of countless young girls who see in you proof that they too can lead. Lead with integrity, courage, and compassion — these will outlive any political office.
A Final Word
Distinguished Senator, your journey so far has been marked by trials, but every trial carries within it the seed of testimony. The mandate you carry is not just a seat in the Senate — it is the heartbeat of Kogi Central. To sustain the people’s confidence, you must now translate passion into policy, visibility into impact, and resilience into legacy. History will not remember how long your suspension lasted, but it will surely remember whether you rose from it with grace and vision. May this new phase be one of healing, building, and unshakable service to God and humanity through the people of Kogi Central. Once again, Congratulations. Forge ahead with courage. The people are watching, history is waiting, and destiny is calling.
With sincere goodwill, Dr. Juliet Okibayi Hassana Muoneme PhD mni.
Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan today, September 23, stormed the National Assembly, a few hours after her office was reopened for the first time in more than six months that she was on suspension from the Senate for violation of the Senate rules. On her arrival and entry into her office, she addressed some journalists during which time she vowed not to tender any kind of apology to the Senate for what she called “illegality.” Natasha, who is representing Kogi Central Senatorial District in the red chamber, stressed that if one of the conditions set for her to resume with them on October 7 is for her to apologize, “then I think we have a long dance to go.” She went on: “I read in the papers that the leadership meeting was held yesterday and the minority leader, Senator Abba Moro upon resumption on October 7 would read a motion calling on me to apologize. “So I am actually worried as to what apology they expect from me, you can’t apologize for an injustice. “So this is just one illegality upon the other and I think in Nigeria, we should reject such things. “I think it is actually appalling that such amount of illegality exists, so if they are expecting me to apologize, I am sorry, I don’t have those words. “And if that is the condition for opening this office, then I think we have a long dance to go.” Natasha said that it would amount to injustice, if she was not allowed to resume her legislative duties because the matter was pending in court. “I am still waiting for the letter because it is very important to understand the conditions that they might set illegally concerning this. She asked: “how much we have had to face and survive in the past six months and most of this happened to the full glare of Nigerians. “From the unjust suspension to the recall we survived, we survived the blockage of roads and waterways into kogi that we had to fly in through using the helicopter; we survived the blackmail from the so-called woman from US. “You know it is amazing that we had to survive. To God Almighty we give the glory. My deepest appreciation to the good people of Kogi Central, Kogi state and Nigeria at large. “My husband my love, I love you dearly and I pray all men support their wives as much as you have supported me and my children thank you for your sacrifices.” She assured Nigerians that the future is bright, calling on them not to give up on democracy. “let Nigerians know that the future is bright, we just can’t give up our hope, our democracy is evolving and I trust that every day leading into 2027, we will be able to put out actions that will be worthwhile because patriotically we have a country to save.”
The Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia and Head of the Council of Senior Scholars, Sheikh Abdulaziz bin Abdullah bin Mohammed Al Al-Sheikh, is dead. The Royal Court confirmed his death in a statement carried by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA), saying that he died today, September 23 at the age of 82 The statement said that his funeral prayer would be held today at the Imam Turki bin Abdullah Mosque in Riyadh after the Asr prayer. It said that by royal directive, prayers in absentia would also be performed simultaneously at the Grand Mosque in Makkah, the Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah and in mosques throughout the Kingdom. The Royal Court praised the deceased for being a scholar who devoted his life to serving Islam and guiding Muslims, leaving a lasting impact on religious scholarship.Islamic Book StoreIslamic Book Store Condolences were offered by Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who expressed sympathy to his family, the Saudi people and the wider Islamic world. Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz was born on November 30, 1943, in Makkah. Orphaned at the age of seven, he memorised the Qur’an at an early age and continued his religious studies despite losing his sight in his twenties. He later pursued advanced Sharia education and served on academic councils at Saudi universities.Islamic Book Store Appointed Grand Mufti in 1999, Sheikh Abdulaziz became the Kingdom’s highest religious authority, shaping jurisprudence and issuing rulings that influenced Saudi society for more than two decades.
Report just reaching us at Greenbarge Reporters online newspaper indicated that the Senate has thrown open, the office of the suspended Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan and allowed her free access to the premises of the National Assembly. This has been seen as a positive move to end the six month long head-on-collision between the Senator who represents Kogi State Central Senatorial District and the Senate itself. Report just reaching us today, September 23, said that the Sergeant at Arms of the National Assembly, along with combined personnel of security organisations unsealed office number 205 of the Senate wing, belonging to Senator Natasha. It was learnt that the National Assembly now officially allows Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan access to her office and the National Assembly premises. It was further learnt that the new development indicates the possibility of her resuming legislative duties for her Senatorial District. A source hinted that the decision to unseal her office was arrived at during yesterday’s leadership meeting of the Senate, where a motion will be moved and barring any changes, the Minority Leader of the, Senator Abba Moro of the PDP, Benue South, will move the motion for her to apologise, then seconded, and it will be taken. Senator Natasha, who was Chairman of the Senate Committee on Diaspora and NGOs, was in March this year, slammed with a six-month suspension by the Senate, which also barred her from participating in all activities of the 10th Senate over her alleged misconduct when she protested against the reassignment of her seat on February 20, 2025. Natasha’s suspension ended in September 2025, but she has been unable to resume her duties due to ongoing legal issues and continued opposition from the Senate leadership. She took her case to the courts to vacate the suspension, as she was not successful, and the Senate, on its part, spoke through its relevant officers, insisting that the matter had nothing to do with sexual harassment allegations, but everything to do with her contravention of the Senate Standing Orders as amended. The Judge of the Federal High Court, Abuja, Binta Nyako in July, described the six-month suspension as excessive and unconstitutional, and thereafter suggested to the Senate to recall the embattled Senator, saying that suspending a Senator for such a long period would expose the constituents to non-representation. Thereafter, she attempted to return to the Senate but was denied access, and the Senate stood its ground, insisting that she had to serve her full six month suspension. Also the Clerk to the National Assembly, Kamorudeen Ogunlana, wrote her, through the Acting Clerk to NASS, Yahaya Danzaria, notifying her that her six-month suspension subsists until the Court of Appeal delivers judgment in the suit she instituted against the Senate. On September 11, Counsel to Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, Michael Jonathan Numa (SAN), wrote to the Clerk to the National Assembly, CNA, Kamorudeen Ogunlana, asking him to recall the Senator so that she could resume her legislative duties. According to Numa in the letter, the CNA should note that failure to comply by Monday, 15th September 2025, will leave them with no alternative but “to initiate proceedings against you personally and in your official capacity. Such proceedings will include, but are not limited to, committal for contempt, disciplinary action for breach of the Code of Conduct for Public Officers, liability for instigating a breach of the peace with potential implications for national security, and any other remedies available to our client under the law.” Responding to the letter from her lawyer, the CNA, Ogunlana, urged the public to remain patient and allow the appropriate institutions, including the Senate and the courts, to discharge their constitutional responsibilities in respect of the resumption of Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan. According to him, he does not possess the authority to review, reverse or interpret Senate decisions against the backdrop that his office serves strictly as an administrative arm, providing support to the Senate in accordance with their resolutions, Standing Orders and the provisions of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 (as amended). In a statement signed by the Director, Information for the Clerk to the National Assembly, Bullah Audu Bi-Allah, he said that Ogunlana is therefore not in a position to facilitate her resumption at this time, just as he noted that It must be emphasized that the determination of whether Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan can resume her legislative duties as of right without any further or fresh resolution of the Senate following the expiration of her six months suspension lies solely with the Senate and not with the office of the CNA.
“All those people protesting; I have told them to come and show where we awarded the contracts to them. If it is those civil servants’ contracts where they go and award N5 billion without approval and then incur debts of N20 billion, I will not pay. “If you like cry from morning till night, call me whatever thing you want to call me, say anything you want to say, as a politician, you should know that these are the things you will see. “If, as a politician, you think that people will not say something against you, then go and sleep.” The minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Nyeson Wike threw these challenges at the contractors who are threatening to go on demonstration to press for the payment of their money. The minister spoke today, September 22, while flagging off the construction of a strategic 3.4 km access road in Mabushi District. Wike acknowledged the right of the contractors to protest within a democracy, but stressed the importance of following due process in contract awards. He also stressed the need to award contracts only when the funds are available. He vowed to continue to do what is right for the FCT and will not be distracted by name-calling. “As a politician, one must not be afraid of being called names.”
He made it clear that he would only be worried when his principal, President Bola Tinubu, is not happy with what he is doing. “The only way I will be worried is when my principal is not happy with what I’m doing.”
Some Nigerians have a poor sense of history and an even shorter memory. This is why some of those who shamelessly took the centre stage during the move to secure a third term for former President Olusegun Obasanjo will keep quiet today in the face of denial by the former President that he never wanted a third term. Haba! As a Senate Correspondent at the time, who covered the Senate proceedings of that era and interacted with actors on both sides, I can say without fear of contradiction that it is a distortion of history for Baba Obasanjo to claim he never wanted a third term. If he didn’t, why did the then-ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) formally endorse tenure elongation? And who was the leader of that party at the time? None other than Obasanjo himself. Former Deputy Senate President, the late Ibrahim Mantu, who was the arrowhead of the project in the senate is no longer alive. However, three former senate presidents who were major players in the whole game, either for or against, are still alive. They are Adolphus Wabara, Ken Nnamani, and David Mark. If they speak honestly and true to their conscience, Nigerians would know without doubt that Obasanjo indeed wanted a third term. It simply failed. Senators Ben Obi, Lawali Shuaibu, Musiliu Obanikoro and former Deputy Speaker, House of Representatives, Hon. Austin Opara are all alive. Hon. Opara presided at the House on the day, the Senators struck. Apart from perhaps Senator David Mark, who openly declared that he owes no one an apology for supporting the infamous tenure elongation agenda, many others who were neck-deep in the project now conveniently and shamelessly deny their involvement in it. But I was at Savannah Suites, Area 3, Abuja, on the night before the debate began on the floor of the House. Lawmakers gathered there to put finishing touches to their plans, and raw cash was openly delivered to them ahead of the debate. Even Senator Florence Ita-Giwa, who served as Special Adviser on National Assembly Matters to both former Presidents Obasanjo and Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, cannot come out in the open to say she knew nothing about Third Term. In fact, on May 16, when the bill was killed, she wept. Once the bill was shut down, some of the reporters, including myself had rushed to the National Assembly lobby to observe what was happening outside the hallowed chamber. There, Mama Bakassi stood, unable to comprehend what has just happened, telling one of the senators who stood with her that “you guys have done your worst.” And as she was saying that, her eyes were red, filled with tears. Before Mantu died, he told some of us how the presidency mobilised against him, ensuring he lost his bid to return to the Senate in 2007, because it believed the then flamboyant Plateau-born federal lawmaker bungled the third term project. In fact, in the Villa, the then Chief of Staff to the President, Major General Abdullahi Mohammed (rtd), who had watched what transpired on the floor of the senate from the TV, was said to have called the then Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Chief Uffot Ekaette, saying “I hope you are watching AIT, dem don dabaru am o! (They’ve scuttled everything),” and went further to ask the SGF “how are we going to tell the man now?” The man being referred to here was Baba Obasanjo, who was on a one-day visit to France at the time. Although those Senators who held meetings behind closed doors cannot come out today to say ‘so and so were there.’ But the truth remains: they know themselves, and some of us also know them. That is why, instead of insulting the sensibilities of Nigerians, Baba Obasanjo should either keep quiet or apologise for putting the country through that avoidable and harrowing experience. He unleashed the late President Yar’Adua on us because we denied him a third term. The late Audu Ogbeh told me in 2010, shortly before Yar’Adua’s death that if they had known, they probably would have allowed Obasanjo do the third term. He acknowledged the fact that Baba Obasanjo’s capacity for work is unequalled. I know that the political arena is not a mosque or church, but a place where intrigues and half-truths prevail, a place where things are neither black or white, but all in shape of grey. But Baba Obasanjo can and should do better on this issue of third term. I rest my case for now.
Ismail Omipidan, a veteran journalist/Author, narrated this on his Facebook page.
The Enugu State Government has offered to give the sum of N10 Million to anyone who would provide information for the arrest of criminals that killed Rev. Fr. Mathew Eya of Nsukka Catholic Diocese on Friday, September 19. In a statement today, September 21, the Commissioner for Information and Communication, Dr. Malachy Agbo described the brutal murder of the priest as cowardly and cold-blooded. Father Eya was said to have been shot dead by a group of assailants along Alumona- Eha Ndiagu road in Nsukka Local Government Area of Enugu. Dr. Agbo made it clear that the state government would not negotiate the security of lives and property of the people in the state, vowing to bring the perpetrators to justice. He said that the government would not spare any resources within its reach, including technology and credible intelligence to track down the criminals and defeat the remnant agents of evil in the state. “Consequently, the Enugu State Government has placed a ₦10 million reward for anyone with credible information that could lead to the arrest of the perpetrators of the heinous crime. “Anybody with credible information about the perpetrators should quickly contact 07077451426. “The government also commiserates with the late priest’s immediate family, the Catholic Diocese of Nsukka, and indeed the Catholic faithful in general over the tragic incident, which occurred on Friday, September 19, 2025.”
“Friends are medicine for a wounded heart and vitamins for a hopeful soul.”
I have been under the weather for the past six weeks – a period during which I have not gone to my office. Though being visible almost always online may suggest otherwise, I do mean it in the literal sense. And ironically, what dipped me under the weather is the weather itself. There was a period when Abuja went rainless for about two weeks. Of course, it became a serious issue of concern to many, especially farmers and students of climate change. However, when the rains returned, it was not only to refill the emptiness its absence caused, but to overspill many times over. The rains came in torrents and were also incessant – night and day, mornings and afternoons. The sun was virtually veiled. Days that should have been filled with light were instead shrouded in half-light, with everything dim. Drivers had to turn on their vehicle lights to navigate the town. That type of atmosphere always comes with its own peculiar problems. I am not talking about just imprisoning people at home, flooding, erosion or the destruction of roads and houses. No, these are generally physical encumbrances. But physical challenges like these can cause, or aggravate, health issues. The dewy atmosphere, characterised by air containing a significant amount of water vapour, creates a moist environment with high humidity, resulting in a sticky or damp feeling on the skin. Everywhere becomes cold. You may not have heavy enough clothes to cover yourself up, or at least protect your chest, which houses your lungs, the primary target. Even at night, you may not have heavy enough blankets to cover yourself up. Worst of all, you may not have a room heater to warm your room, and even if you have one, you may not have electricity to power it. The effect of such on asthma patients is, sadly, enormous. An asthma attack, or flare-up, occurs due to inflammation and narrowing of the airways, leading to coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath, and chest tightness. During an attack, the muscles around the bronchial tubes constrict, the airways swell, and mucus builds up, making it extremely difficult to breathe. Believe it or not, this is a situation you don’t want to be in. Now, here’s the thing: triggers, among others, can include allergies, cold and flu. Treatment may involve using a reliever inhaler. For people battling with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) like me, such weather is a nightmare. Your prayer is always to come out of it with your feet firmly on the ground, not six feet below. The experience a COPD patient goes through is unimaginable, something that a man with a good heart wouldn’t wish on his enemy. By the way, COPD is a progressive lung disease characterised by chronic obstruction of airflow, leading to difficulty in breathing, chronic cough, and excessive mucus production. COPD encompasses conditions like emphysema and chronic bronchitis. The airways become swollen and scarred, making it harder for air to pass through. And this is because the air sacs in the lungs, called alveoli, can be damaged, leading to a condition called emphysema. And so the combination of inflammation, scarring, and damaged air sacs restricts airflow, especially when you try to exhale. Cold weather exacerbates COPD symptoms, such as cough, phlegm, and shortness of breath, by irritating airways, increasing the heart’s workload due to blood vessel constriction, and potentially leading to increased mucus production. Air pollution often accumulates during colder months, further stressing the lungs. Managing COPD is like managing asthma—only much more challenging, because while the latter is reversible, the former isn’t. And so I found myself surrounded by all forms of inhalers – bronchodilators and steroids alike. The cannula became my wristwatch, permanently (relatively) inserted into my veins, ready to deliver medications that would open up my airways and strengthen the necessary organs meant to expel phlegm. Oh, a cannula is a thin, flexible, hollow tube inserted into the body to deliver fluids or medications, remove bodily fluids, or gather samples. And you know where the name comes from? It is the Latin word for “little reed”. (By the way, with all the above, one would be forgiven if they mistook me for one heck of a medical expert.) Surely you may understand with me that such a condition can affect the psychological well-being, increasing the risk of depression, anxiety, panic disorder, and feelings of isolation. Physical symptoms, such as breathlessness, fatigue, and activity limitations, combined with the stress of breathing problems, fear of exacerbations, and difficulty with daily activities, can trigger negative emotions. And that was the condition I found myself in until some friends, Yusuf Iliyasu (Aston), Mohammed Idrissa Madaki (Anash), Bala Tiyande, and Rabiu Alkali, from my childhood years, came visiting. Their visit came a few days after some of my co-workers, worried and concerned, paid me a memorable visit at home, a visit that buoyed up my spirit. They were led by the Head of Admin, Mrs Lilian Hosea; there was the Editor-in-Chief, Cara Luckson; the Daily Editor, Maryam Sulaiman; and the Weekend Editor, Maryam Umar. Others were Mohammed Kukuri, Social Media Manager; Salim Sani, Chief Sub; Mercy Adaji, Office Assistant; Vivian Okafor, Photographer/Videographer; and Zara Ahmed. Aston, we knew ourselves in 1980-81. Our father, the late Alhaji Sulaiman Gimba Ahmed, had just resigned from the then Borno State civil service as a permanent secretary due to some irreconcilable differences with the drivers of the government, and returned to UAC, where he started work after school, as regional manager, North, for AJ Seward and Kingsway Chemists, with his base in Zaria. We had grown accustomed to Maiduguri, where we did our primary and secondary schools; it was the one place we knew and where our friends were. And so we preferred being there. The problem was where to hit the hay since we no longer have a house in Maiduguri. Having heard stories about Aston from the late Olusola Ogunmuyi, a primary and secondary school classmate, who prefers to call him Ba’aba instead, I went looking for him in their Bama Road, New GRA abode. I did not even know the name of his father, who was a very close friend of our father (I did not even know then). I just went there and asked our contemporaries for Ba’aba’s house. And I got it. I did not go to the main house to introduce myself. No. I went straight to the two-bedroom boys’ quarters and asked for his room. He was out, but I was shown his bed. I climbed his bed, the top of a double bunker, and just went to sleep. When he returned and our eyes jammed for the first time, we picked up as if we were born together. We have been friends since. Our friendship culminated in me nearly marrying his younger sister, which I missed by the whiskers; he got mine instead. He came along with Anash, technically our senior by a year, but being a humble chap, he has become our friend. It is this humility that is gradually shaping him into someone about to step into the shoes of his influential father, the late Madaki of Fika, Alhaji Idrissa Madaki. Bala Tiyande and Umar were also friends and great company. Despite the array of drugs around me, I was lethargic and downcast when they came. But by the time they left, I was a new soul, stronger in body and spirit, full of life and feeling great; not by scientific calibrations, my health had improved by not less than 20 per cent, which was a massive boost at a time a minimal boost was being craved. The experience of having true friends support you when you are “under the weather” and lift your spirits made me realise that “friends are medicine for a wounded heart and vitamins for a hopeful soul.” Indeed, you know true friendship during difficult times, not otherwise. And knowing is sweeter than the sweetest of honeys.
Hassan Gimba is the Publisher and Editor-in-Chief of Neptune Prime.
We at Greenbarge Reporters online newspaper wish Dr. Hassan Gimba quick recovery and long healthy life.
Mandate Secretary for Health in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Dr. Dolapo Fasawe has said that the FCT Administration has already employed 37 medical doctors to boost healthcare delivery in the nation’s capital city. She said that plans are in advance stages to employ about 300 other health workers for the same purpose. Dr. Fasawe, who spoke to newsmen on the resolution of the misunderstanding between the Administration and medical doctors in its service, said that already payment of health workers’ allowances has been approved. Dr. Fasawe said that before the payment of the allowances, necessary bureaucratic procedures would be followed. “In every organization, both public and private sectors, there is documentation, there is uploading, there is verifying, there is ensuring that the payment systems is not distorted and this is not a one-time payment. “The good thing about the approval by the minister, Nyeson Wike is that we will not have this agitation again. “For his approvals to be sustainable, we need time for administrative purposes. I cannot give you a definite time but I can tell you for example, the low hanging fruits like employing more doctors is already in effect. “As of today, 37 doctors have been employed and we are in the process of employing close to 300 healthcare workers. “In the shortest possible time, this is a priority to the minister; every allowance will be paid so that we do not come back to this agitation again next year. “We have to put in place sustainable systems to ensure that these people are paid automatically. “That is why it cannot be a quick fix and next year we are back to this table again discussing doctors’ strike.” Meanwhile, the President of the Nigerian Association of Resident Doctors (ARD), Dr. Osundayo Tope Zenith expressed gratitude to the FCT minister for acceding to the requests of the Association, saying that the recent strike action by his members was not politically motivated. According to him, the strike was aimed at drawing the attention of the minister to the challenges of the health sector in the FCT. “The essence of all that we are doing is to draw his attention. It is not that we are a political stooge or we are trying to fight the FCT minister or to fight anybody. Nobody is using us. “We are doing what is right to get his attention and his attention was gotten. “He attended to everything that was listed in our demand. “We want to appreciate him for being generous, for being a father and we also want to appreciate him because he’s taking matters of health as a priority. “He is been called Mr. Project and apart from the projects, he has also approved the demands from the Association of Resident Doctors (ARD), FCTA.” The President also appreciated the Mandate Secretary, FCT Health Secretariat for her role in resolving the contending issues of the health workers.
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Stop Endless Battles: An Open Letter To Natasha, By Dr. Juliet Okibayi Hassana
“As you return to the Red Chamber, I encourage you to Heal and Build Bridges. Politics thrives on relationships. While you must remain courageous, finding common ground with colleagues — even those who oppose you — will strengthen your influence. Your mandate is not to fight endless battles, but to secure enduring victories for your people.”
Dear Distinguished Senator Natasha,
I was interviewed by RayPower 100.5 FM Abuja this morning concerning your ‘Resumption from suspension, your statements/comments on your resumption, its likely meaning and implications, and the way forward’, and I felt like sharing some of my views, thoughts and concerns with you.
First, accept my warm congratulations on your return to the Senate after your recent suspension. It is never easy to walk through the valley of trials under the gaze of the public eye. The pains, the whispers, and the political storms you have endured are not lost on those of us who keenly follow your journey. As a woman, a mother, and a daughter of Kogi Central, you have borne the weight of representation with courage, and it is only right to acknowledge that resilience.
But beyond the welcome and applause, this moment is a call — not just to resume, but to renew. The people who gave you their mandate did so not because the journey would be easy, but because they believed in your strength to champion their cause even in the face of resistance. Sustaining that confidence requires focus, patience, and a deep sense of purpose.
Sharing in Your Pains
Your suspension may have felt like an attempt to silence not just your voice, but the collective aspirations of the people you represent. Yet, history shows us that adversity can refine leaders for greater service. Nelson Mandela emerged stronger after 27 years of imprisonment; Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala rose higher after political pushbacks. Likewise, your story can become an emblem of resilience, if you let these trials shape your vision rather than weaken your resolve.
Advice for Forging Ahead
As you return to the Red Chamber, I encourage you to:
Heal and Build Bridges
Politics thrives on relationships. While you must remain courageous, finding common ground with colleagues — even those who oppose you — will strengthen your influence. Your mandate is not to fight endless battles, but to secure enduring victories for your people.
Focus on Tangible Development for Kogi Central
The people’s confidence will be sustained not by rhetoric, but by results. Priority areas call for your immediate attention:
Infrastructure: Advocate for improved roads, electricity, and support for the Ajaokuta Steel dream.
Youth Empowerment: Champion vocational training, digital skills, and entrepreneurship hubs. Our youth must see opportunities that keep them rooted in dignity.
Healthcare & Education: Push for functional hospitals, maternal health projects, and modern learning environments that prepare Kogi Central for the future.
Security: Work with local and national stakeholders to restore peace to communities plagued by insecurity. Without safety, development is impossible.
Remain Grounded in the People
Do not let Abuja swallow your closeness to the grassroots. Regular town hall meetings, open consultations, and visible constituency projects will reassure the people that their trust was not misplaced.
Champion Integrity and Women’s Leadership
As one of the few women in such a high political office, you carry the hopes of countless young girls who see in you proof that they too can lead. Lead with integrity, courage, and compassion — these will outlive any political office.
A Final Word
Distinguished Senator, your journey so far has been marked by trials, but every trial carries within it the seed of testimony. The mandate you carry is not just a seat in the Senate — it is the heartbeat of Kogi Central. To sustain the people’s confidence, you must now translate passion into policy, visibility into impact, and resilience into legacy.
History will not remember how long your suspension lasted, but it will surely remember whether you rose from it with grace and vision. May this new phase be one of healing, building, and unshakable service to God and humanity through the people of Kogi Central.
Once again, Congratulations. Forge ahead with courage. The people are watching, history is waiting, and destiny is calling.
With sincere goodwill,
Dr. Juliet Okibayi Hassana Muoneme PhD mni.