The people of Obeagu Awkunanaw in Enugu South are upset because they say a company, Private Estates International West Africa Ltd. (PEIWA), took over their ancestral land illegally. The land is now part of the Enugu Lifestyle and Golf City project.
Author: John Asishana
The Onome Omobolaji Obada Foundation (OOF), ProHealth International, and Christ Livingspring Apostolic Ministry (CLAM), Ogba, have asked Nigerians to focus more on preventing sickness instead of only treating it.
Project Enable Africa, working with the National Commission for Persons with Disabilities and the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, launched Nigeria’s first State of Disability Inclusion Report for 2024 on Friday.
The Commodity Leaders Empowerment Network for School Feeding (CLENSFe), an NGO, has demonstrated its commitment to empowering smallholder farmers by connecting them with school feeding programmes
No fewer than 40,000 patients across Edo, Delta, Kogi, and Bayelsa States have benefited from the Rural Health Initiatives for Improved Living (RHIFIL) free medical services over the past 16 years.
A top healthcare center in Nigeria, the Bridge Clinic, said that 3,825 babies have been born at the clinic through IVF (In vitro fertilisation) in the last 25 years
General Overseer of The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), Pastor Enoch Adeboye, and his wife, Pastor Folu Adeboye, on Thursday donated a dialysis centre to Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital Complex (OAUTHC) Wesley Guild, Ilesa.
The Acting Chief Medical Director (CMD) of Kogi Specialist Hospital, Lokoja, Dr Oluseyi Folagbade, has announced the introduction of advanced endoscopic and reconstructive urological surgeries at the facility
The Global Prolife Alliance (GPA) has written to Nigeria’s National Assembly to oppose a new bill. This bill aims to protect women’s health, especially regarding surrogacy. GPA is against it, even though it is supported by a member of the Assembly.
Medical experts have warned that cancer cases in Nigeria are increasing. They say the rise is partly because better tools are now available to detect cancer and to keep better records, showing the true number of people affected.
