@EnuguAirlines operated by @flyxejet has the most terrible customer service and unprofessional staff
I cancelled & applied for ticket refund on 21 Dec (7 days ahead). They were to deduct 25% of fare in line with refund policy, but refused to refund till date.
@fkeyamo@PNMbah
@EnuguAirlines@flyxejet@fkeyamo@PNMbah Have DMed the requested information. It feels like @flyxejet is fraudulently trying to keep the entire fare as they have not been able to provide any reason for the undue delay
@PNMbah @vdmempire
@EnuguAirlines Congratulations!
Ya gaziere #Enugu gaziere #Ndigbo. However, you have to deal with the abyssal customer service from your operator (Xejet)
Now that the #AkuRuoUlo message is widely accepted by #Ndigbo, it's time the #Igbo states legislatures & politicians work towards challenging & uprooting policies that requires entrepreneurs to travel to #Lagos or #Abuja for approvals or transfers revenue for economic activities
Back in the days when the trees were the home of squirrels.
If you went to school against all odds with happiness using this leave as umbrella, you deserve to be congratulated
Let's share our stories and congratulate each other. Congratulations!
Meet the 1st black African Director General of Legal Services in the United Kingdom (UK).
#Igboness Professor Grace Chidozie Ononiwu CBE is a solicitor and Chief Crown Prosecutor and Director General of Legal Delievery at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) in the UK.
Professional accountability procedure should be activated by the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria against individuals involved in this unprofessional conduct
#Nigeriamedical c
OPEN LETTER TO THE NATIONAL PRESIDENT, NIGERIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION (NMA)
Subject: Clarification on the Role of the NMA in Declaring a Patient Fit for Trial — The Case of Mr. Nnamdi Kanu
From:
Dr. Adefolaseye Adebomi Adebayo
ENT/Head & Neck Surgeon
FWACS, FMC-ORL
To:
Prof. Bala Mohammed Audu
National President, Nigerian Medical Association (NMA)
National Secretariat, Abuja
Dear Prof. Audu,
I write to you as a concerned and committed member of our great Association, the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA). Recent reports in the national media have attributed to the NMA the declaration that Mr. Nnamdi Kanu, currently standing trial in Abuja, has been found fit to stand trial and that his illness is not life-threatening.
While it is understandable that the courts may, from time to time, request professional medical input in cases where an accused person’s fitness to stand trial is in question, I must respectfully request clarification from the National Secretariat on what constitutional or statutory basis the NMA as a corporate body performs such a function.
To the best of my knowledge, and according to the NMA Constitution and By-Laws available to members, our Association’s functions are primarily professional, ethical, and advocacy-based. Nowhere, as far as I can ascertain, is there any provision empowering the Association itself as opposed to independent medical experts or panels appointed by the court to declare a defendant fit or unfit to stand trial.
Traditionally, and in line with standard medico-legal practice, the process has always been as follows:
1.When a person’s fitness to stand trial is in question, the court appoints qualified medical experts, often forensic psychiatrists or a multidisciplinary medical board, to assess the individual’s physical and mental condition.
2.The panel reports to the court, which then makes the legal determination of fitness to stand trial.
3.The NMA, as a professional body, does not issue such declarations in its institutional capacity unless the Association is merely acting as an administrative conduit to nominate experts — in which case, it should be clearly stated that the declaration emanates from individual medical practitioners and not the NMA itself.
Given this distinction, I, along with many colleagues, seek your kind clarification on the following points:
•Under what article or section of the NMA Constitution or By-Laws does the Association have the authority to constitute or endorse a medical panel for determining a person’s fitness to stand trial?
•Was the panel that examined Mr. Nnamdi Kanu constituted as a court-appointed body through the NMA, or was it presented publicly as an NMA-declared verdict?
•If the latter, how does this align with the professional and ethical boundaries of our Association as defined by its constitution?
Sir, as you would agree, clarity on this matter is necessary not only to uphold the integrity and independence of our profession but also to ensure that the public correctly understands the role of the NMA in sensitive medico-legal proceedings.
I therefore humbly urge the National Secretariat to issue an official clarification, citing the specific constitutional or statutory framework that underpinned the Association’s involvement in this particular case.
Thank you for your kind attention and continued leadership of our Association. I trust that your office will provide the needed transparency to reassure members and the public alike.
With professional regards,