Health counselor, Certified Masseur, Bone Butcher, Fertility & Infectious Disease Expert || For consultation call or Dm: +2348032588110 JAGABAN STAND ACCOUNT.
@drpenking This is a serious topic
Not disputing the fact that miracle happens, but u see this infertility issue, most times the men are the reason cuz some shoot blanks...
In my years of practice I can tell you for a fact some of the celebrated miracle babies are products of adultery🎤🎤
🚨🎙️“Which team do you think deserves to win the World Cup apart from Spain?"
🗣️ Pep: "Messi deserves to win it, so Argentina”
"But Messi has already won a World Cup?"
🗣️ Pep: "He's the greatest player in history, he deserves to have 4 World Cups"
NIGERIA HEALTHCARE IMPACT DATA: Major Healthcare Milestones Under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (2023–June 2026)
Since the launch of the Nigeria Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative (NHSRII) in December 2023, Nigeria’s health sector has witnessed one of its most comprehensive periods of reform and investment.
From reducing maternal and newborn deaths to revitalising Primary Healthcare Centres, expanding immunisation, strengthening specialist care, growing the health workforce and unlocking investments in local pharmaceutical manufacturing, these achievements reflect the Federal Government’s commitment through the Federal Ministry of Health @Fmohnigeria to building a stronger, more resilient health system for every Nigerian.
Here’s a snapshot of some of the major milestones recorded so far:
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Every Nigerian deserves access to quality healthcare, regardless of where they live or what they earn.
Since assuming office, our administration, through the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, has embarked on one of the most ambitious and comprehensive transformations of our health sector in decades.
We are revitalising Primary Healthcare Centres, expanding health insurance, protecting millions of children through immunisation, strengthening our health workforce, upgrading specialist hospitals, improving maternal and child health, and positioning Nigeria to become a hub for pharmaceutical manufacturing and healthcare investment.
The progress is becoming evident:
- 6 million more Nigerians added to health insurance.
- 4,161 Primary Healthcare Centres under revitalisation, with 3,158 already completed.
- 14,283 PHCs, representing more than half of all PHCs in Nigeria, are now functional.
- More than 102 million children vaccinated against Measles-Rubella, and 17.1 million girls protected against cervical cancer through the HPV vaccine.
- 78,054 frontline health workers trained, and 20,000 health professionals recruited into our Federal Tertiary Hospitals.
- 503 health infrastructure projects delivered nationwide, alongside the development of 3 world-class cancer centres.
These reforms are about saving lives today while building a stronger, more resilient health system for generations to come.
The Nigeria Health Sector Impact Report below highlights some of the major milestones recorded so far under the Nigeria Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative (NHSRII). I encourage you to read it.
A healthier Nigeria is central to our Renewed Hope Agenda. We are building a healthier, stronger and more prosperous nation, one reform, one community and one life at a time.
Our work continues. The best days of Nigerian healthcare are still ahead of us.
Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
I welcome African policymakers, innovators, investors, entrepreneurs and private sector leaders to Lagos as Nigeria hosts the AfCFTA Digital Trade Forum 2026. @AfCFTA
This year’s Forum, themed “Digital Trade for a Connected African Market,” comes at a defining moment. Africa must now move from aspiration to execution, and from agreements on paper to prosperity in the lives of our people.
Nigeria is proud to serve as one of Africa’s AfCFTA Digital Trade Champions. We understand the responsibility that comes with this role, and we are matching it with action.
Through the National Single Window @NSW_Nigeria, we are building a faster, simpler and more transparent trading system that will reduce delays, improve compliance, lower costs, and support our importers, exporters, manufacturers and MSMEs.
Through B’Odogwu, the Nigeria Customs Service @CustomsNG is modernising customs administration, strengthening revenue assurance, improving cargo clearance, and reducing friction at our borders.
These reforms sit alongside our broader digital public infrastructure agenda: digital identity, interoperable payments, data governance and the growth of platforms that allow Nigerian businesses to serve African and global markets. With Nigeria, Kenya and Morocco now piloting the AfCFTA’s ADAPT framework, we are moving from policy to practice in connecting our national trade systems across the continent.
The AfCFTA gives Africa the market. Digital trade gives that market speed, scale and reach.
Nigeria will continue to work with our African brothers and sisters to build a continent that trades more with itself, creates more value for itself, and competes with confidence in the world.
The future of African trade is digital, connected and full of promise.
Bola Ahmed Tinubu
President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
A young boy texted a man on TikTok, asking him to teach him Yahöo
The man agreed, and the 20-year-old traveled from Bayelsa to Asaba to meet him.
They met at a hotel, and the man asked him to freshen up in the bathroom.
While he was in the bathroom, the man støle his iPhone 12, power bank, and money
“Look at all the properties I'm leaving behind here in South Africa as I relocate back to Nigeria.”
A South Africa-based Nigerian made the remark as he returned to Nigeria with his family.
In another moment, the man prostrated before his elder brother after discovering that he had faithfully completed every project he sent money for while he was living in South Africa. In appreciation, he gifted his brother a plot of land.
South Africa: Let Us Be Measured In What We Say
Actually, no Nigerian media ought to have given this mindset, depicted in the attached screenshot, any publicity. Saying that "South Africans are very lazy, they don't work. They don't do anything" is not just false, it is an unfair generalisation of a fellow African nation, and all media in Nigeria ought to be aware that Africa is the cornerstone of Nigeria's foreign policy.
No matter what is currently happening, at the end of the day, there must be reconciliation. And there, the media have a role. But they will make such rapprochement difficult if they allow their networks to be used to broadcast such offensive messages.
And I can assure our media that these soundbites will be played in South Africa and will make a bad situation even worse.
The xenophobic rhetoric and actions by some South Africans are regrettable, and it is something that the South African government should look into.
Having said that, there must have been something good about that brother African country and its people for it to have attracted millions of migrants from all over the world, particularly other sister African nations.
The issues surrounding the repatriation of some Nigerians for their own safety are better handled on a government to government basis, and the media should partner with the government by promoting a responsible coverage of this unfortunate incident that is fact driven rather than a reportage led by mass hysteria.
Again, xenophobia is bad. Whether when done to you in a foreign country that you have emigrated to, or presented as tribalism or ethnic prejudice in your own country, when you move from your region of your nation to another area of your land.
But one way to reduce xenophobia is to understand that you are a guest or a visitor in a foreign country, and a resident citizen, rather than a native citizen, in other parts of your country.
When you have such realisations, you understand that you have a duty to be amenable and respectable and to understand the sensibilities of your hosts in the case of a foreign country and the culture of the native citizens of the part of your country that you move to.
One way you demonstrate this is by refusing to pass negative judgment on their way of life and their culture as a people.
Such a mindset will create an awareness that guides your behaviour and makes you feel welcome and cherished by those in the countries and regions you were drawn to.
But when you insist on airing negative judgments of their quotidian lifestyles, feeding ethnic and racial stereotypes that are the result of over generalisations, throwing your weight around, being indifferent to the feelings of those whose ancestral lands you moved to, or looking down on them and taking liberties either by your words, conduct, demeanour or actions, you may trigger resentment, which when built up over time can result in you overstating your contributions to their civilisation and culture, which will lead to you overstaying your welcome.
Whether in our countries or in foreign lands, it is important that, wherever we as Nigerians go, we go to add value to their culture, integrate into their society, and assimilate with them to the extent that we do not lose our own identity in its entirety.
However, when we relocate nationally and internationally, and then want locals and natives to adjust to us, rather than we acculturating to them, we invariably communicate to the indigenes that we are not visitors, partners, and potential long term residents, but invaders who have come to dominate, exploit, and takeover.
And that, naturally, will bring out the worst in our hosts.
Therefore, whatever the case, it always helps to be amenable when we relocate.
Reno Omokri
Ambassador Designate to Mexico