News
ABU professors write Tinubu over ‘looming energy crisis’

Your Excellency
Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR
President and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
The Visitor
Ahmadu Bello University
Zaria
Sir,
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE VISITOR, PRESIDENT BOLA AHMED TINUBU, GCFR, OVER THE LOOMING ENERGY CRISIS IN AHMADU BELLO UNIVERSITY, ZARIA
We, the undersigned Nigerian citizens and academic staff of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, wish to forward a complaint over the debilitating energy crisis bedeviling Ahmadu Bello University – given the centrality of electricity supply to university operations – and seek your intervention for its resolution. We take this action out of the conviction that, as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and Visitor to the University, Your Excellency is in a position to mediate over the matter especially because the crisis aggravated with the recent high increase in electricity tariff in the country, which ABU in particular, and Nigerian Public Universities in general, cannot afford due to their weak financial position resulting from chronic underfunding.
We also seek Your Excellency’s intervention because even where hard economic realities dictate recourse to commercialization of utilities, educational institutions should be safeguarded from the burden of meeting market-induced pricing, especially where their capacity to do so is highly constrained. As educational institutions of high value to public good, universities should be shielded from the extremities of commercialization.
The Ahmadu Bello University is a first-generation university established by Law [Cap A. 14 of the Federal Laws; The Universities Miscellaneous Provisions (Amendment) Act 2003].
Your Excellency, history and the Nigerian people will bear witness that for over sixty years ABU has served as a major organic driver and facilitator of national development through the production of quality and functional knowledge with sound moral content and the generation of skilled manpower through men and women of all races, nations, gender and creed for all sectors of the society, economy and culture at the national, continental and global levels. The University also attained eminence through its strong support of liberation struggles in Africa and beyond.
You are aware, Sir, that higher education is the backbone of any modern nation state and the marker of its performance, achievements, cultural standards, level of civilization and the prestige it commands in the comity of nations. It was Adam Smith who said that the true wealth of a nation is not gold or silver or a positive balance of trade, but rather its productive citizenry – its human capital in form of skills, knowledge and creativity.
Your Excellency, in today’s knowledge-based world, the Ahmadu Bello University, like other Nigerian universities, can exist, function, and execute its mandate only if such critical enablers of modern university – basic infrastructure for teaching, learning and research, including ICT[1]based substructure, quality manpower, unrestricted energy supply, and high-level funding, are firmly in place. For a developing nation that is yet to build a solid industrial base, the University is a significant national resource that requires the priority attention of government.
As an experienced public figure, Your Excellency knows that in the current knowledge, science and technology driven world, the acquisition of education is the minimal condition for survival and this makes education a basic need. The provision of basic needs to citizens or creating the conditions that enable citizens to meet their basic needs is a fundamental responsibility of government, a sign of good governance and for developing nations a sine qua non of governance.
Yet, it is common knowledge that the economics of education financing is unique, because it is not directly subject to the laws of supply and demand. Researches here in ABU, as elsewhere, have since established the truism that higher education, and indeed education in all its forms, is very expensive in its capital requirements, and exceptionally so in its recurrent expenditure, though very slow, but sure, in yielding returns.
The aforementioned facts imply that wise countries deploy today’s resources for the purposes of tackling the problems of tomorrow and answering the questions of today and of the future.
This is done through massive commitment of national social, financial and human capital. In this regard, no self-respecting nation will justify its education in pure economic terms or by the use of the profit motif argument. Sadly, the commodification of education has been the bane of the policies of successive Nigerian governments, especially since the imposition of the Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) in 1986. This trend has steadily negated the utilitarian value of education and demeaned its significance as a necessity in the current competitive world order and our deplorable level of underdevelopment.
Your Excellency, it is our candid view that your government has embraced the neo-liberal, market-oriented reform agenda with uncritical zeal and haste in spite of the high level of stagnation of our economy, the progressive decline of the purchasing power of the national currency, depressed wages, widespread indigence and poverty, stagflation and general insecurity. For educational institutions, other manifest corollaries of these policies include decay, in teaching, learning and research infrastructure, dysfunctional municipal systems and ruinous energy crisis characterized by inadequate supply of electricity coupled with the crippling effects of unsustainable high costs of electricity and of energy in general.
Furthermore, the constant threats, and the actual brazen acts of disconnection of the universities from the national grid by the DISCOs pose an existential peril that the universities live with on daily basis now. The last time, Your Excellency, the DISCO here, in a fit of corporate impunity, disconnected the ABU, the system was left brutally traumatized, injured and paralyzed. The losses were beyond recount. A young doctoral scholar in the sciences, for instance, lost over 1000 painstakingly but systematically sampled bovine cardiac tissue research specimens.
Many other scholars and students had thousands of carefully cultured microbial samples in their laboratories wiped out. More than a thousand households had their precious little foodstuff destroyed. The ABU campuses, during the over one month of imposed total darkness, became desolate; staff, students and families lived like hunter-gatherers, scavenging for firewood and water from bushes, dirty wells and streams under heightened susceptibility to waterborne epidemies.
It is beyond dispute that Nigerian universities are not, by any law, statute, or ethical or socio[1]economic definition, profit-making or revenue-generating outfits. They are, however, now rendered unviable and unable to fend for themselves the potential for imminent collapse from mere electricity bills – and this being only one of the many fundamental concerns. Ahmadu Bello University, for instance, with an average total annual budgetary overhead grant of N150 million only, now requires an astounding but unaffordable N3.6 billion (monthly average of N300 million) to settle its annual electricity bill, at the cost of N206/kWh per unit of the so[1]called band A. For a university that requires about 7megaWatts of electricity, in addition to providing other energy costs per month, the financial implication is far beyond its capacity.
Your Excellency, even if the market-oriented principle of ‘cost-sharing’ between government and parents/wards is a viable option, the inability of the University to mobilize adequate financial and material support entails that it transfers the huge cost to students by hiking up fees and charges. If the N3.6 billion were to be transferred to the University’s 50,000 students, the current municipal charges alone will have to be hiked up by at least a rate of 500%.
Not only is this sum impossible to pay by virtually all students but it also negates the position of your government on the matter. You would recall, Sir, that at its inception, your government expressly forbade the Senates and Councils of Federal universities to hike up registration fees for the poor, beleaguered Nigerian students and their parents. Some of us hailed your government then as having the courage to acknowledge the suffering of the Nigerian parents and their wards. In any event, student charges are specifically meant to offset the cost of services in the learning and living campus environment and cannot be used to cover for these energy costs which justly belong to overhead grants that government should but has not, ironically, been responsible for.
Your Excellency, the Nigerian society, its developmental agendas and such of their key enablers as education, industrialization and national integration are in deep crisis and the country has reached a decision point that require critical and somber rethinking by the people and the nation, with you, as the leader. It is imperative that we decide if we truly want to have national public universities and the quality of universities that we want. But the one decision we cannot make at this existential moment is one of logical impossibility and delusion; that is, of having universities but not having to adequately fund or support them to thrive.
We need not remind Your Excellency, however, that the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, that you swore to uphold, had defined education, in unequivocal terms, as a public good, thus, prioritizing investment in public education is a cardinal constitutional objective.
In view of the foregoing, Your Excellency, we urge you, as the Visitor to all Federal Universities and the Head of State and Federal Government, to take an urgent and decisive action by making the Federal Government bear the cost of electricity supply as a form of overhead grant to all the Federal Universities in the country. Alternatively, Your Excellency, the Federal Government, as PART OWNER – with 49% stake in GENCOs and DISCOs and continually investing more in them – as well as being the guarantor of social balance and social security in the land, could direct the DISCOs to provide unrestricted supply of electricity to all Nigerian universities in return for some tax credits. On the other hand, Your Excellency, the government could also charge the DISCOs to create a new dedicated social tariff band with lower rates that universities can afford given their present funding realities.
We are convinced, Your Excellency, that your government could accomplish this with all the necessary exigency. This will not only not hurt any sector of the economy, society or national life but that it will constitute an important first step and a signal that your government can and will address the myriads of problems in our tertiary institutions.
With regards,
Cc:ABU, academic staff, Open letter, Bola Tinubu, Looming energy crisis’
The President, Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
The Speaker, House of Representatives of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
Chairmen, Senate & House Committees on Tertiary Institutions
The National Security Adviser
The Hon Minister, FMOE
His Eminence, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Saad Abubakar III
His Highness, the Emir of Zazzau, Ambassador Ahmed Nuhu Bamalli
The President Inter-Religious Council of Nigeria
The Chancellor, ABU, Zaria
The Chairman & Members, ABU Governing Council
The Chairman, Committee of Pro Chancellors of Nigerian Universities
The Vice Chancellor, ABU, Zaria
The Chairman, Committee of Vice Chancellors of Nigerian Universities
The President, NLC
The President, TUC
The President, ASUU
The President, SSANU
The President, NAAT
The President, NASU
The President, NANS
This story’s headline has been updated to reflect that only professors are involved in the letter, not the academic staff
News
Pregnant woman found hanging from tree in Anambra

By Francesca Hangeior
Tension gripped residents living along the Uke/Ideani Road in Idemili North Local Government Area of Anambra State on Tuesday after the lifeless body of a pregnant woman was found hanging from a cashew tree near the roadside.
Although the circumstances surrounding her death remain unclear, it is suspected that the woman either committed suicide or was murdered on Monday night, with her body only discovered on Tuesday morning.
When our correspondent visited the scene on Tuesday, police operatives from the Ogidi Police Division, who had been alerted by local residents, had already evacuated the body and deposited it in the mortuary.
A resident, who identified himself as Ogbanna Uche, told our correspondent that no one could recognise the deceased before the police arrived to remove her body from the tree.
Uche said, “I own a shop along the road. We woke up this morning to see the lifeless body hanging from the cashew tree. We couldn’t immediately identify the deceased due to the position of the face.
“The incident might have occurred late at night because when people left for their various homes, there was no such sight. It could be a case of either suspected murder or suicide.”
Another resident, identified simply as Chinwe, said the nature of the incident suggested either suicide or murder, adding, “Incidents like this are rare in this area. That’s why people were shocked. No one could identify the deceased before the police arrived to evacuate the body.”
The Spokesman for the Anambra State Police Command, SP Tochukwu Ikenga, confirmed the incident in a press statement on Tuesday.
Ikenga said the Commissioner of Police had ordered a thorough investigation into the case.
He added that the police were working with residents of the area to uncover those responsible for the suspected murder.
He said, “The Commissioner of Police, CP Ikioye Orutugu, on May 6, 2025, called on stakeholders and community leaders in Idemili North LGA to assist with information to help identify those behind the suspected murder of a pregnant woman found hanging from a cashew tree along the Uke/Ideani Road.
“The CP described the incident as unfortunate and a stark example of ‘man’s inhumanity to man’, and he ordered a thorough investigation to identify and prosecute the perpetrators.
“To this end, the Command urges members of the public to help identify the deceased, as police operatives from Ogidi Division have recovered the body and deposited it in the mortuary.
“Further updates will be communicated as the investigation progresses.”
News
Two Abuja co-wives hospitalised after taking herb to s3xually arouse their husband who married third wife

By Francesca Hangeior
Two co-wives residing in Dakwa community, Bwari Area Council of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), have reportedly been hospitalised after they drank a herbal mixture with the intent to s3xually arouse
their husband, who recently took a third wife.
The herb, popularly called ‘kayan mata’ in Hausa language, is said to be taken in order to arouse greater s3xual desire in male partners.
According to reports, the women, names withheld, allegedly took the herbs three days after their husband wedded a third wife from his home town in Gusau, the Zamfara State capital.
The husband in the centre of the herbal arousal story, Musa Muhammad, while confirming the incident to the publication, said his two wives were rushed to a clinic in neighbouring Madalla town in Niger State, where they were diagnosed with damage in some of their organs allegedly caused by the herbs they consumed.
He revealed that the two women underwent surgery at the hospital and were discharged on Monday.
The husband further revealed that it was gathered that a herbalist usually supplied them with the liquid herb preparation which they mixed with milk before drinking, but that this time around, she gave them a different one, which was in powdered form.
“My attention was called from my main house that my two wives were not feeling fine because I passed the night at a different house where my new bride is residing,” he narrated.
“So, I rushed there and found them rolling on the ground, complaining of stomach pain. Initially, I invited a nurse from within the community who placed them on drip, but without any improvement. So, I took them to a clinic in Madalla town where they underwent a test and surgery.
“They were discharged after about a week there,’’
Muhammad further disclosed that a search to locate the female herbalist was on to get her investigated and save others from being her next victims.
A medical doctor, Mrs Taiye Anifowose, has warned women to desist from consuming such herbs, saying they could be dangerous to their organs.
Taiye, who is a gynaecologist, said such herbs could also affect their reproductive system in the long run.
She called for proper enlightenment by the relevant government agencies, families and communities’ leaders on the dangers associated with such herbs.
News
Midwives critical to reducing maternal, newborn deaths in Africa – WHO

By Francesca Hangeior
The Acting World Health Organisation Regional Director for Africa, Dr Chikwe Ihekweazu, has commended the lifesaving work of midwives across Africa, describing them as the frontline guardians of maternal and newborn health.
In a message to commemorate the International Day of Midwife on Monday, Ihekweazu stated that midwives were critical actors in every health crisis and decried the 6.1million health worker shortfall.
The 2025 theme is “Midwives: Critical in Every Crisis.”
He decried the maternal and newborn death rates in the region, further emphasising that the efforts of midwives have been important in reducing maternal mortality.
The WHO noted that over one million newborns and 178,000 mothers die every year in the region.
While South Sudan accounts for the highest maternal mortality rate in the world, Nigeria ranks third with 512 deaths and 100,000 live births.
In a message on the WHO website, Ihekweazu said, “Aligned with the momentum of World Health Day 2025 and its theme, Healthy Beginnings, Hopeful Futures, this year’s celebration calls for greater recognition and investment in midwives, the people who make healthy beginnings possible.
“In the African Region, where over one million newborns and 178,000 mothers die each year, midwives are a lifeline. They deliver skilled, compassionate care across the entire continuum of reproductive and maternal health, often in the most difficult and resource-limited settings. Their efforts have been pivotal in reducing maternal mortality, with the regional average dropping from 727 deaths per 100,000 live births in 2000, to 442 in 2023.”
He noted that the 2025 theme reflects a challenging reality, stating that midwives serve in fragile health systems, conflict zones, and through natural disasters and pandemics.
“In many cases, they are the only providers of sexual and reproductive health services in their communities,” he added.
The Acting Regional Director further noted that despite a projected shortage of 6.1 million health workers in the African Region by 2030, important progress has been made.
He stated that between 2013 and 2022, the number of midwives nearly doubled, from 173,269 to over 334,000, noting that this growth reflects what is possible with political will, coordinated investment, and focused strategies.
Despite the growth in the region, Nigeria is currently facing a mass exodus of medical practitioners.
PUNCH Healthwise reports that over 7,500 nurses and midwives left the country in five years.
In 2023, the National Association of Nigeria Nurses and Midwives stated that to close the gap caused by the mass emigration, the country needed about 70,000 midwives.
Continuing, Ihekweazu stated that WHO continues to work closely with Member States to expand competency-based midwifery education, improve workforce density, and embed midwives in national health and emergency preparedness strategies.
“In 2024, Member States endorsed the Africa Health Workforce Investment Charter, a shared commitment to long-term investment in health workers. Zimbabwe’s new Investment Compact, for example, will mobilise an additional $166 million annually for three years to strengthen its health workforce, with midwives at the centre.
“Still, too many midwives work without proper tools, pay, protections or opportunities for advancement. Their voices are often excluded from the policy decisions that affect their work, and the lives of the people they serve,” he added.
He urged governments to ensure midwives were integrated into emergency preparedness plans, protected in crisis response and supported with mental health resources and fair working conditions.
“Education must evolve to equip them with skills in trauma-informed care, conflict sensitivity and leadership.
“When midwives are trained, respected and empowered, health systems grow stronger, and every mother and child has a better chance at life.
“WHO stands with midwives, today and every day. Let us move beyond symbolic recognition.
“Let’s act, because midwives are not only critical in every crisis. They are essential to every solution,” the acting regional director said.
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