Abia top UTME scorer to get N.5m scholarship in memory of late Ukpabi
Nigerian law is against our fundamental rights – Gays
My mother’s last moment – Tinubu
Police trail ex-cop over attempt to murder wife
Child-trafficking booms:Ordeal of child-hawkers
Agony of a 21-month old baby losing both eyes
When the heart is not so smart
‘Our lives no longer the same after Dana crash’
Residents commend Fashola over roads to Cenotaph
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SubscribeWidows will no longer drink bath-water of their dead husbands in A/Ibom
The custom allowing the seizure of deceased husbands properties and subjecting their widows to inhuman practices such as shaving of the head and making them drink the water used to bath their husbands, among others, have now become illegal in Akwa Ibom State.
How 8-yr-old orphan was crushed by falling trees
…*Help came late, aunt laments *…6,000 victims cry for help
The rains lasted only a quarter of an hour but the devastating effects reverberated in virtually all the villages of Boki, located some four hundred kilometers away from Calabar, the Cross River State capital.
‘Pains on Ayobo-Ipaja Road to end in November’
The slow pace of work on the reconstruction of Ayobo-Ipaja Road project, awarded by Lagos State to Plycon Construction Company, an indigenous construction firm, has become a source of worry to road users and residents of Ayobo and Igbo-Ilogbo, in Ipaja-Ayobo Local Council Development Area, LCDA. The road links over 10 communities in the area in Alimosho Local Government Area.
Sorry state of Nigerian child
Going by a report of the United Nations Children Fund, Nigeria is among the 24 countries with large number of undernourished children in the world. Inadequate nutrition in childhood undermines the ability of individuals to develop their full capabilities. Lack of essential minerals like iodine and iron can impair brain development.
If we don’t hustle, we don’t eat – Street Kids
Now that the annual Children’s Day celebration has come and gone,the question of what happens to the average Nigerian child after that one day jamboree?, still lingers in the hearts of concerned parents and education stake holders.
As a matter of fact, it appears that the Nigerian child is only celebrated once in a year, May 27.
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