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Sunday, 10 August 2025

NNPC Sanctions Pump Attendant In Ikorodu For Defrauding Customer

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Retail Limited has sanctioned staff at one of its filling stations in Ikorodu, Lagos, after a pump attendant was caught on video allegedly attempting to swindle a customer.

A man, in a viral video, had confronted the attendant for selling petrol below the amount paid by the customer.

In a statement via its official X handle on Friday, the company said the video, which has been circulating on social media, prompted an immediate investigation that confirmed the incident took place at its Ikorodu outlet.

Describing the conduct as “unacceptable” and contrary to its values of integrity, transparency and customer service excellence, NNPC Retail said it had taken decisive action in line with its sanction grid.

“The pump attendant involved has been disengaged, the station manager suspended, and a formal warning letter issued to the dealer,” the statement read.

The company thanked the public for its vigilance and urged customers to continue reporting such incidents via the customer service numbers and email addresses displayed at its stations.

It also promised to maintain strict enforcement of compliance with operational standards across its network nationwide.


 

Rebranding: 9mobile Is Now T2


Nigerian telecoms operator 9mobile has rebranded to T2 as part of a strategic push to revive its market position, expand its reach, and compete more aggressively in the country’s fast-growing digital economy.

The move marks the “Transformation” stage of the company’s four-phase recovery plan: Stabilisation, Modernisation, Transformation, and Growth, which was introduced following the 2023 acquisition of 9mobile by Lighthouse Telecoms, led by businessman and investor Thomas Etuh.

Since the takeover, the operator has overhauled its leadership team, reconstituted its board, and signed a landmark three-year national roaming agreement with MTN Nigeria in July. The deal, the first of its scale in the market, has allowed 9mobile subscribers to roam seamlessly on MTN’s nationwide network, improving coverage, capacity, and service quality in areas where 9mobile’s own network had been limited.

At the unveiling of the new brand identity in Lagos on Friday, Chief Executive Officer Obafemi Banigbe said the rebrand represented “a total evolution of who we are, why we exist, and how we deliver value” rather than a cosmetic exercise. “T2 is a symbol of our renewed commitment to innovation, resilience, and a deepened focus on customer experience,” he noted in a statement.

Etuh described the transition as a “rebirth” for the company after years of legal and operational challenges, crediting “faith and love for country” as his motivation for acquiring the business. He thanked the Nigerian Communications Commission and the company’s customers for their patience during a period marked by multiple litigations and operational difficulties.

“To our amazing customers, please accept my profound gratitude for believing in us,” he said. “We are rising together again. Together, with you, we are reclaiming all lost grounds.”

The Minister for Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Bosun Tijani, welcomed the rebrand but urged the company to translate it into concrete service improvements.

“Let this rebrand be more than a change of colours or new logo,” he said, calling for a “renewed commitment to innovation, to service excellence and to the millions of Nigerians whose lives and businesses depend on your network every single day.”

The Secretary to the Lagos State Government, Bimbola Salu-Hundeyin, representing Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, said T2’s focus on digital innovation aligned with the state’s ambitions for a robust and inclusive digital economy.

The transition to the T2 identity will be rolled out in phases to ensure uninterrupted service, with the new brand anchored on four pillars: Speed, Smart Living, Digital Lifestyle, and Trust. The company aims to position itself as a bridge between connectivity and culture, infrastructure and impact, as Nigeria’s telecoms market enters a new decade of transformation.


 

Saturday, 9 August 2025

How I Will Die - Pastor Adeboye


General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) Pastor Enoch Adeboye has predicted how he will die.

The cleric, who did not give the date, told millions of congregants that it will be on a Sunday after a Church service.

He was ministering at the Old Auditorium during evening session on Day 4 of the 73rd Annual Convention of the RCCG.

The week-long Convention tagged: “The Overcomers” opened on Monday the Redemption City of God on Kilometre 46, Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.

“It’s going to be on a Sunday. I would go to Church for service, dance very well and return home. I will eat pounded yam, then I will go”, he said leading members of the Church on series of prayers on the topic ” Possessing your Possession.”

He said nobody should bother to ask him how he knew the day of his transition.

Adeboye was telling members that nothing makes it compulsory for people to die only after illness. He was leading prayers on divine healing.


 

Five In Critical Condition As Petrol Tanker Runs Into Commercial Bus

Five passengers have been critically injured in Lagos State following a collision between a petrol tanker and a commercial bus.

The incident happened on Friday at the Toyota Bus Stop, directly opposite the Guardian Newspaper Headquarters, inward Oshodi.

Disclosing this in a statement on Friday, the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) called the incident a stark and sobering illustration of the grave consequences of roadway negligence.

LASTMA spokesman Adebayo Taofiq said the agency seamlessly coordinated the rescue operation in the aftermath of the accident.

The statement read: “The catastrophic incident, which unfolded amid the dense congestion of peak-hour traffic, involved a fully laden Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) tanker truck, registration number T28128LA, and a commercial Volkswagen T4 bus, bearing registration number GGE 526 YG.

“Preliminary findings by security operatives from Oloto Police Station revealed that the PMS-laden tanker, travelling at perilously excessive speed, suffered a sudden and catastrophic brake failure. In a desperate bid to avert impending disaster, the driver lost all operational control, resulting in a ferocious collision with the moving, fully loaded commercial bus — an impact of such violent intensity that it left multiple occupants grievously injured.

“The collision inflicted severe injuries upon five individuals — two males, three females, including the bus driver — all of whom were rescued alive through the decisive, swift, and highly professional intervention of LASTMA operatives.

“Acting with commendable precision, the rescue team secured the accident scene, extracted the injured, and mitigated the risk of secondary hazards.”

On his part, LASTMA General Manager, Olalekan Bakare-Oki, conveyed heartfelt wishes to the victims and wished them a speedy recovery.

He issued an unequivocal admonition to operators of articulated and heavy-duty vehicles, particularly tanker drivers, to maintain their machinery in flawless mechanical condition, with meticulous emphasis on the integrity of braking systems, to prevent avoidable tragedies of this magnitude.

Bakare-Oki condemned the brazen disregard for statutory speed limits, which are conspicuously signposted along Lagos highways, stressing that adherence could have significantly reduced the severity of the calamity.


 

Thursday, 7 August 2025

Pregnancy With Sickle Cell: What Couples Should Know - Prof Bosede Afolabi


In this interview with Sade Oguntola, Professor Bosede Afolabi, the Director of the Centre for Clinical Trials, Research, and Implementation Science at the University of Lagos, College of Medicine, and Head of the Experimental and Maternal Medicine Unit at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), discusses the information that women with sickle cell disease and their partners should be aware of in order to have safe pregnancies.

CAN women with sickle cell get pregnant? Does it carry any risk?

 Women with sickle cell disease, preferably referred to as sickle cell warriors, can get pregnant. In the few available studies, they do appear to have a higher risk of miscarriage. Also, from the studies that my team and I did, it appears that their ovarian reserve is lower, age for age, than their haemoglobin AA counterparts. However, they can and do get pregnant. And we look after a lot of pregnant women with sickle cell disease in the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), where I work.

Can they have healthy pregnancies, therefore?

They can have healthy pregnancies. However, at least two-thirds of them have complicated pregnancies. Pregnancy, unfortunately, is a situation where they have more frequent crises and more frequent complications, including acute chest syndrome. In pregnancy, they are more likely to have hypertensive diseases of pregnancy like preeclampsia, low birth weight babies and many other issues. They also have a higher likelihood of dying from childbirth, unfortunately. So yes, some pregnancies can be healthy; at least a third of sickle cell warriors in our environment tend to go through pregnancy easily or fairly easily. But a majority of them do have complications during pregnancy.

What are the challenges their babies are likely to face?

Their babies are more likely to be small in weight for their age at birth. They’re more likely to have growth restriction during pregnancy, which means their growth is not as optimal as babies of women who don’t have sickle cell disease. And also, they’re more likely to be born preterm. And finally, because of all these things, their babies do have a higher incidence of stillbirth and death, either during pregnancy or immediately after birth.

 How does sickle cell affect pregnancy and childbirth generally?

  Generally, it affects their pregnancy by causing them to have more frequent crises and more infections, including malaria. They stand a higher risk of having preterm delivery, ending up in a caesarean section, even though they can have normal vaginal deliveries, and a host of other complications. We prefer them, if possible, to have normal deliveries because it is less stressful on their bodies in total.

 However, sometimes, because some of them have had what we call avascular necrosis of the hip, they sometimes have difficulty with their gait and managing the position for a vaginal birth. Some of them have some other reasons, like preeclampsia or severe crises earlier than the ideal time for childbirth, in which case they may not be able to dilate quickly enough to have a normal delivery, and we may need to deliver them quickly. So, for some of these reasons, whether obstetric (i.e., pregnancy-related) or due to the sickle cell itself, we sometimes have to deliver them by caesarean section. But the ideal, if everything goes well, is to deliver them vaginally, and yes, they can push.

 What we try to do is to reduce the pain that they have during labour so that they are more comfortable. And when it comes to the second stage, that is, the time when they’re supposed to push, we also try to reduce their pain as much as possible and sometimes even assist them with the pushing by using instrumental delivery, i.e., forceps or vacuum, to help pull the baby out. Sickle cell definitely affects their pregnancy quite significantly.

They talk about painless childbirth; can they have pain-free labour?

  An epidural is preferable if it’s available in a centre. In my centre – the Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), for example – we try to ensure that women going for vaginal delivery who have sickle cell disease have an epidural in labour so that they can deliver as pain-free as possible and smoothly. So yes, that’s the best for them if they are going for vaginal delivery so that the stress of the pain and duration of the labour will not trigger them into having more crises and more problems.

How will their sickle cell treatment plan change during pregnancy to ensure they have healthy babies, free of congenital malformations?

We do want to ensure that they are on the right medication, especially in the first three months of pregnancy. Some pregnant women with sickle cell disease have been on hydroxyurea, which is a drug that helps reduce crises. And when they get pregnant, we say that they should stop. However, it is a good thing to check if hydroxyurea affects babies in that way.

 Animal studies have been done that show that hydroxyurea can cause problems in the unborn foetus. However, these animal studies used doses of hydroxyurea that are 10 to 100 times higher than what human beings use. We know that hydroxyurea really helps these women. So, in the guideline that WHO just released, which I was privileged to be the chair of, we decided that we should consider recommencing hydroxyurea after the first trimester (first three months of pregnancy) in somebody who has been using it before, while making sure to balance the benefits versus the risks. This relates especially to women that the drug has helped in the past by helping to reduce their frequency of crises.

 The reason for this consideration is also because there was no increase in abnormalities with the offspring of women who were taking it during their pregnancies in other observational studies that examined this. Even though we are not 100% sure about it, as proper trials have not been carried out, it’s also important that the mother herself is well enough to be able to carry a pregnancy safely. So, sometimes, when you balance the benefits of avoiding severe crises, which can occasionally lead to the death of the mother from crisis-related complications, it may sometimes be advisable to prescribe hydroxyurea after laying all the cards on the table for the woman and her partner.

 Apart from that, all the other drugs that they may have been on before getting pregnant, like antibiotics that are not safe in pregnancy, may also need to be stopped or changed to other ones that are compatible with early pregnancy. Generally, in all pregnancies, we’re always very mindful of the foetus, but we must remember that the mother is also very important, and for the foetus to be well, the mother also has to be well. So it’s important not to say, Let’s cancel a particular drug. Instead, let’s find an alternative to it. If you don’t find an alternative, then you need to treat the mother. It’s very important. She can have other children. She has to be alive to be able to look after children and to bear children.

What are the signs of sickle cell crisis in pregnancy?

 It is like a sickle cell crisis even when you’re not pregnant. It is that you have the very painful bone pains, pains that are difficult to describe till you experience them. You’re suddenly feeling severe pain in different places. You find it difficult to breathe; you’re feeling uncomfortable, and you are feeling very unwell. It’s important, and that’s why, my warriors, I always say to them, You must drink water. You must have water with you everywhere so that you are not dehydrated. You must make sure you are not too cold or too hot at any given time. Anytime you have any small ache, complaint, pain, or feeling of unwellness, don’t wait like you would when you’re not pregnant. Come straight to the hospital to complain because things can change for the worse very quickly. We want to treat any complications as soon as they arise instead of having to wait.

In the case of sickle cell patients or women with sickle cell, when are they supposed to start antenatal?

 They need to start early. I would say as early as two months.

We talk about preconception care; is it helpful for them to be “cleared” before getting pregnant?

 Pre-conception care is very important for them. There are certain things that one has to check for. Sickle cell warriors sometimes have something we call pulmonary hypertension, which is raised blood pressure in the lung area. It is important to check for it even before the pregnancy. Some of them have sickle cell nephropathy, so they need kidney checks. Also, it’s important to check the eyes and the haemoglobin level. It’s important to know how many transfusions they’ve had in the past and if they have crises frequently so that you know how to modify their treatment and how frequently you have to see them. All these things are important. Before pregnancy, they should also be on folic acid and malaria prevention medicine before they get pregnant.

Are they fit to seek care in a primary health care centre?

 You cannot afford to register at a primary health facility if you are a sickle cell warrior, as it is a high-risk pregnancy condition. A tertiary centre would be ideal. They can, however, register for prenatal treatment at a general hospital in the absence of an accessible tertiary centre, which can then refer them to one, if necessary.

 The need for blood transfusion is common. Intravenous fluids and oxygen therapy are frequently required. Multidisciplinary care is required, including treatment from pulmonologists (respiratory doctors), microbiologists, infectious disease specialists, haematologists, and others. You cannot find all these specialists in a PHC and not even in some general hospitals, which is why we advise them as much as possible that, at the very least, they should register for antenatal care in a general hospital and, preferably, a tertiary centre. The PHCs do not have the resources to look after sickle cell warriors in pregnancy.

What are your parting words for their partners?

 Their partners need to know that these women are very special, and they must help look after their health and care about them. Don’t try and get them to have too many children. I always advise at the very most two children. After two, have some permanent, irreversible contraception like tying your tubes or your husband having a vasectomy, or at least a long-acting contraception like the levonorgestrel intrauterine system implants or the progesterone-only pills. Those progesterone-only family planning methods are good for them, as it has been demonstrated that these can lessen the amount of blood lost during menstruation. In general, the most important thing is that their partners be there for them constantly, make sure they accompany them to the hospital, make sure they get prompt care when they feel unwell, take special care of them, and—most importantly—make sure they limit their family size.


Culled from the Tribune Newspaper 

 

Sanwo-Olu Unveils New Badagry Roads, Boosts Infrastructure


    
Lagos State Governor, Babajide Sanwo-Olu, has pledged continued state-wide infrastructure development as he unveiled a network of roads in Badagry Local Government Area and Olorunda Local Council Development Area on Wednesday.

Addressing residents during the event, the governor commended them for their support in the last local government election and restated the administration’s commitment to grassroots development.

He said, “Beyond the electoral process, we commend the continuous understanding, patience, and cooperation shown by the people of Badagry throughout the entire construction period of these road projects.

“Your willingness to accommodate the challenges that often accompany such large-scale infrastructure works—such as temporary disruptions and inconveniences—has been instrumental.

“This spirit of partnership and community support has provided us with the crucial leverage needed to overcome obstacles and ensure the successful and timely delivery of these transformative road projects that will positively impact your daily lives and the future growth of the region.”

He emphasised the broader goals of the projects, saying, “As we promised, we are using improved road infrastructure to enhance trade and commerce, stimulate the tourism sector, and, most importantly, open up remote areas.

“We are convinced that infrastructural development remains the foundation for a vibrant tourism sector.”

Sanwo-Olu explained that the administration remained committed to ensuring all areas of Lagos benefit from development.

“Whether through roads, drainage systems, or other essential amenities, we are committed to reaching every nook and cranny of the state. True and sustainable development can only be realised when it touches the lives of all citizens,” he said.

He also assured the residents that prior commitments on project delivery had been fulfilled.

The inaugurated roads include Samuel Ekundayo/Toga Road and Hospital Road, both aimed at improving interconnectivity and supporting tourism around historic landmarks such as the General Hospital, Agiya Tree Monument, and Slave Trade Relic/Town Hall.

Speaking on the roads, the governor said Samuel Ekundayo/Toga Road provides an alternative route to a section of the Lagos-Badagry Expressway, connecting Badagry Roundabout to Limca/Ibereko.

“The completion of Phase II has significantly improved interconnectivity among communities in Badagry.

“Hospital Road is a critically strategic route situated in close proximity to Badagry Marina, which serves as a vital hub for water transportation connecting Badagry to Lagos Mainland, Lagos Island, and even to various neighbouring West African countries,” he added.

Sanwo-Olu concluded by advising residents to protect the new infrastructure.

“Finally, I urge all community leaders, the people of Badagry, and all road users to guard jealously the infrastructure being handed over today, ensuring its preservation for generations to come,” he said.


 

Flooding: Fish Farmers In Ikorodu Appeal To Sanwo-Olu

    More than 50 fish farmers in the Ikorodu area of Lagos have appealed to Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu for urgent assistance following the devastating impact of Monday’s torrential rainfall, which they say has cost them over ₦50 million in damages.

The affected farmers, under the umbrella of the Lagos State Catfish and Allied Farmers Association (LASCAFAN), Ikorodu Zone, said the heavy downpour destroyed ponds, washed away fish stocks, and rendered inputs such as feed and fertilisers useless.

Speaking on behalf of the group, President-elect of LASCAFAN, Mr Olatoye Fajinmi, described the loss as overwhelming, warning that the incident could trigger fish scarcity in the coming weeks if urgent steps are not taken.

He said the most affected communities include Mowo Kekere, Mowo Nla, Elepe, Igbe, Maya Fish Cluster, and Ibeshe, where farmers are now left grappling with empty ponds and huge financial burdens.

“This rain, rather than being a blessing, has brought sorrow to our members. Many of us are still servicing loans taken for business expansion. Without government support, the economic and emotional impact may be unbearable,” Fajinmi said.

He called for a financial bailout from the Lagos State Government, along with support from the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), especially in the supply of fish feed to enable affected farmers to restart operations.

Fajinmi also disclosed that some members are willing to relocate their farms to safer grounds but would require assistance in the form of collapsible tarpaulin ponds to resume fish farming in non-flood zones.

While appreciating the Lagos State Government and the Commissioner for Agriculture and Food Systems, Ms Abisola Olusanya, for their consistent support, he appealed to the Ministry of the Environment to assess the affected areas and consider constructing proper drainage channels to prevent a recurrence.