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Reps Launch Probe into $4.6bn Health Grants from Global Fund, USAID

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By Gloria Ikibah

The House of Representatives has commenced an investigative on the over $1.8 billion and $2.8 billion grants received by Nigeria from the Global Fund and United States Agency for International Development (USAID) between 2021 and 2025 for the fight against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, as well as for strengthening health systems.

The inquiry, launched at an investigative hearing in Abuja, is being led by the House Committee on Infectious Diseases, chaired by Rep. Amobi Ogah. The committee’s mandate is to assess how the funds were disbursed and utilised, and to promote transparency in Nigeria’s public health financing.

In his welcome address, Chairman House Committee on Infectious Diseases, Rep. Amobi Ogah, explained that the investigation was key to determine how the huge grants was used and ensure accountability in management of the funds which was to address infectious diseases affecting millions of Nigerians.

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Naijablitznews.com recalled that the investigation follows a resolution passed by the House on 21 October 2025, directing a comprehensive review of all donor-supported programmes under the health sector.

The newly restructured Committee on Infectious Diseases, which replaces the former Committee on HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Control, will now oversee a broader portfolio of public health issues, with an emphasis on accountability and improved delivery of health outcomes nationwide.

Rep. Ogah commended the Speaker of the House, Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbas and the leadership for renaming and expanding the committee’s mandate to the House Committee on Infectious Diseases, reflecting a broader focus on public health threats.

“Nigeria continues to be battered by the ill effects of a greater burden of HIV, Tuberculosis, Malaria and other numerous infectious diseasee.

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“It appears that while budgetary allocations and donor funds are mobilized for the response against these health challenges, there is no reprieve in sight as Nigerians are ravaged daily,” Ogah said.

He explained that the investigation was to know what had been done with the huge grants received, stressing that 90 percent of the country’s intervention funds for these diseases came from international partners.

Ogah warned that Nigeria would no longer accept being a “mere spectator” in the management of grants given to it, insisting that donor funds must henceforth be managed in line with Nigeria’s priorities.

“Any grant or assistance being given to us without us managing such grant is unacceptable. If they would not give us such grants and assistance on our terms, then let them keep their grants.

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“We must assert our capacity to take charge of our affairs, particularly in the response against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria”, he stated.

He instructed the Federal Ministry of Health and Social Welfare and the Country Coordinating Mechanism (CCM) to make certain that all principal recipients and implementing partners present their project implementation plans to the National Assembly for approval before any disbursement of funds.

“The era of spending Nigeria’s money without approval and accountability is over,” he cautioned.

Ogah further revealed that the House of Representatives was in the process of amending the NACA Establishment Bill to broaden the agency’s scope and transform it into a multi-sectoral institution. Once passed, it will be renamed the National Agency for the Control of AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (NACATAM).

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He explained that the ongoing hearing was designed to evaluate the degree of transparency and accountability surrounding the utilisation of donor funds since 2021.

With the eighth replenishment of the Global Fund anticipated later this month, Ogah underscored the need for Nigeria to shift away from dependency and inefficiency in managing donor resources.

“Anyone, whether state or non-state actors, must indeed account for every Nigerian kobo spent for the response against public health threats.

“We must maximise and efficiently utilise the resources at our disposal by cutting out all forms of duplication and wastage, while allocating domestic resources to areas that will present greater value for Nigerians,” he stressed.

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He added that the committee would collaborate with the EFCC and ICPC to ensure that all principal recipients and implementing partners render proper accounts of their stewardship to Nigerians.

“This is even more critical when you consider that some funding for terrorist activities has been traced to grants and donor funds,” Ogah added.

The committee chairman also called on implementing partners to brace for comprehensive parliamentary scrutiny, pointing out that several lacked verifiable office addresses. He noted that the committee would hold the Ministry of Health and the Country Coordinating Mechanism directly responsible for ensuring transparency from every entity receiving donor funding.

Ogah reaffirmed that the probe was not intended as a witch-hunt but rather as a necessary democratic process aimed at safeguarding transparency, accountability, and value in the nation’s public health spending.

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“This exercise is an essential ingredient of democracy and should not be seen as a vendetta or warfare.

“We are very clear in our vision to ensure that no Nigerian child dies before age five from HIV, Tuberculosis, or Malaria. We want to ensure that the advocacy and commitment that will lead to the elimination of infectious diseases in our country by 2030 are championed and owned by all relevant stakeholders”, he said.

Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Dr. Muhammad Ali Pate, called for a gradual end to Nigeria’s dependence on foreign aid in funding its response to HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

Dr. Pate said the country must take greater responsibility for financing its health priorities as donor funding declines after two decades of support.

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He described the probe as a welcome step toward transparency, accountability and domestic ownership of health programmes.

He further noted that while donor assistance has saved millions of lives through HIV, TB and malaria interventions, Nigeria’s health spending remains below 15 percent of the Abuja Declaration target, warning that underfunding threatens sustainability.

Declaring the session open, Speaker Abbas, who was represented by the HouseDeputyWhip, Rep. Ibrahim Isiaka, said the investigation reflects the parliament’s resolve to ensure transparency in health funding.

He added that it will produce an evidence-based report on how the grants were received, utilized and their impact on public health, while strengthening accountability and governance in the sector.

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Again, Dangote Refinery reduces fuel price

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Dangote Refinery has again reduced its gantry petrol price nationwide to N1,125 per litre from N1,175 per litre.

The spokesperson of Dangote Group, Anthony Chijiena, confirmed the latest reduction to DAILY POST on Thursday.

This means that the refinery dropped its petrol gantry price by N50 per litre.

“It is true our petrol gantry price was reduced by N50 per litre,” Chijiena told DAILY POST.

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Similarly, the coastal petrol supply price of Dangote Refinery decreased from N1,495,215 per metric tonne to N1,428,165 per metric tonne.

The development comes as crude oil prices dropped significantly to $69 and $73 per barrel, the same rates as pre-Middle East crisis times.

Recall that on June 16, the Dangote Refinery had reduced its gantry petrol price by N75 per litre, triggering a nationwide retail fuel reduction days later. This brought the total price reduction by Dangote Refinery in two weeks since global prices eased to N125 per litre.

Currently retail fuel prices stand at between N1,241 and N1,305 per litre in Abuja and its environs.

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However, Nigerians are clamouring for a further drop in retail fuel to around N800 and N900 per litre, the rate before the Iran-United States-Israel war, which escalated on February 28, 2026.

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Court defers hearing of appeals by ADC, four others over parties deregistration

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The Court of Appeal, Abuja, has deferred until July 7, the hearing of substantive appeals seeking to set aside the judgment that ordered the Independent National Electoral Commission to deregister the African Democratic Congress (ADC) and four other political parties.

A three-member panel of the appellate court, led by Justice Abba Mohammed, agreed to a full-blown hearing of the appeals after house-keeping proceedings that enabled parties in the matter to identify and regularise all the processes they filed in the matter.

Aside from the ADC, the other parties seeking the nullification of the Federal High Court judgment are the Action Peoples Party (APP), Action Alliance (AA), Accord Party (AP), and Zenith Labour Party (ZLP).

The appellate court panel held that all the appeals would be heard on the scheduled date.

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The court had on June 16 ordered the stay of execution of the high court judgment, even as it slammed the trial judge for disrespecting the judicial hierarchy.

The panel berated Justice Peter Lifu of the Federal High Court in Abuja for disobeying an order it made on May 22, which directed him to stay proceedings in the case pending the outcome of an appeal by the parties.

According to the appellate court, even though the trial judge’s attention was drawn to the order for stay of proceedings, he intentionally flouted it and went ahead to deliver the judgment.

It held that Justice Lifu’s action was “a form of judicial impertinence,” stressing that the Supreme Court had previously held that a judge who acted in such a manner “is unfit for the bench, as the conduct amounts to judicial rascality”.

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The high court had directed INEC to deregister the five political parties it said failed to meet the constitutional requirements to warrant their continued existence and participation in future elections.

It also barred INEC from further according recognition to the parties, accepting nominations of candidates from the affected parties, or giving effect to their activities for the purpose of participating in the 2027 general elections.

Justice Lifu ordered the defendants to stop parading themselves as registered political parties in the country, saying he found merit in a suit that was filed against them by the National Forum of Former Legislators (NFFL).

The NFFL had, in the suit, prayed the court to determine whether INEC has a constitutional obligation to remove political parties that fail to meet the electoral performance thresholds set out in Section 225A of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), as reinforced by the Electoral Act 2022 and INEC’s regulations.

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It was the position of the plaintiffs that the five political parties listed as defendants had persistently failed to meet the constitutional benchmarks required to retain their registration.

The former legislators stressed that the requirements included winning at least 25 per cent of votes in a state during a presidential election or securing at least one elective seat at the national, state, or local government level.

They told the court that the ADC and the four other parties performed poorly in both the 2023 general elections and the by-elections conducted by INEC, thereby failing to win seats across key tiers of government.

However, dissatisfied with the trial court’s verdict, all the defendants, including INEC, urged the appellate court to set it aside.

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State Police Will Not Address Insecurity Without Tackling Poverty — Falana

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Human rights lawyer, Femi Falana, SAN, has warned that the creation of state police will not resolve insecurity in Nigeria unless the government addresses poverty and unemployment.

Falana, who appeared on Channels Television’s Politics Today on Thursday, said the country’s insecurity challenge was often narrowly reduced to questions of security architecture, without adequate attention to social security and the conditions driving young people into crime.

“We always reduce the problem of insecurity to security architecture, in fact structure. How do we have more police stations? How do we employ more policemen and women without considering social security?” Falana queried.

“Why are more young men taking to criminality? Why are we not talking about creating employment for young people? Why are we not giving assistance to Nigerians that are vulnerable, extremely poor or dimensionally poor? And unless you address these problems holistically, creating a state police or local government police will not address the crisis of insecurity in the country.”

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His comments came after President Bola Tinubu on Tuesday transmitted to the Senate a bill seeking to amend the 1999 Constitution to provide for the establishment of state police services across the federation.

The Senate passed the bill on Wednesday after Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele presented its general principles. The bill subsequently scaled second reading, was considered clause-by-clause and passed third reading, with more than two-thirds of senators voting in support.

When assented to by the President, the legislation will replace the existing Nigeria Police Force framework with a dual structure comprising a Federal Police Service and State Police Services.

A key provision of the bill empowers state governors to appoint commissioners of police for their respective states, subject to confirmation by the state Houses of Assembly.

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Lawmakers also incorporated safeguards aimed at protecting political freedoms and civil liberties, in response to concerns about possible abuse of the proposed policing structure.

Falana said regional police was not new to Nigeria, noting that the country operated a decentralised policing system during the First Republic.

However, he said the system was abolished due to what he described as the gross abuse of police powers by regional leaders.

He said Nigeria must address the issues that led to the abolition of the dual policing system if it intends to return to it.

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“If we now want to go back to the status quo ante bellum, we must ask questions. The fears that were entertained, the problem that led to the abolition of the dual policing system, have they been taken care of? I haven’t seen any signs. I have seen the bill passed by both chambers of the National Assembly, the bill is so sketchy,” he said.

Falana also raised concerns about checks and balances in the operation of state police, as well as the ability of some state governments to fund the proposed police services.

He said some state governments could barely pay salaries and pensions.

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