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BREAKING: APC’s Tinubu Declared The President Elect Of The Federal Republic Of Nigeria

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The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has declared Asiwaju Ahmed Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress (APC) as the winner of 2023 presidential election.

Tinubu defeated 17 other candidates who took part in the election. He scored a total of 8,794,726 votes, the highest of all the candidates, thus meeting the first constitutional requirement to be declared the winner.

He also scored over 25 per cent of the votes cast in 30 states, more than the 25 states constitutionally required.

INEC Chairman Mahmood Yakubu, who announced the final results in the early hours of Wednesday in Abuja, said Atiku Abubakar of the PDP came second in the election.

Atiku polled a total of 6,984,520 votes in the election.

Peter Obi of the Labour Party came third in the election with a total of 6,101,533 votes while Rabiu Kwankwaso of the NNPP came fourth with 1,496,687 votes.

Only the top four candidates won the presidential election in at least one state. Each of Tinubu, Atiku and Obi won in 12 states while Mr Kwankwaso won only in Kano.

Tinubu won the election in Rivers, Borno, Jigawa, Zamfara, Benue, Kogi, Kwara, Niger, Osun, Ekiti, Ondo, Oyo and Ogun states.

Atiku won in Katsina, Kebbi, Sokoto, Kaduna, Gombe, Yobe, Bauchi, Adamawa and Taraba states. He also won in Osun, Akwa Ibom and Bayelsa states.

Obi won in Edo, Cross River, Delta, Lagos, FCT, Plateau, Imo, Ebonyi, Nasarawa, Anambra, Abia and Enugu states.

Kwankwaso won in only Kano State.

 

FINAL RESULT OF THE 2023 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION AS PRESENTED BY THE INEC CHAIRMAN AT THE COLLATION CENTRE ON WEDNESDAY 1ST MARCH, 2023

 

TOTAL REGISTERED VOTERS 93,469,008

ACCREDITED VOTERS 25,286,616

A 61,014

AA 14,542

AAC 14,608

ADC 81,919

ADP 43,924

APC 8,794,726

APGA 61,966

APM 25,961

APP 12,839

BP 16,156

LP 6,101,533

NNPP 1,496,687

NRM 24,869

PDP 6,984,520

PRP 72,144

SDP 80,267

YPP 60,600

ZLP 77,665

 

TOTAL VALID VOTES 24,025,940

TOTAL REJECTED VOTES: 939,278

TOTAL VOTE CAST 24,965,218

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Health

Residents decry shortage of doctors, infrastructure in Taraba hospitals

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Residents of Taraba have decried the shortage of qualified doctors and the infrastructure deficit in the state’s general hospitals.

Some residents told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Jalingo that the situation was affecting the quality of service delivery.

Yerima Ato, a resident of Wukari town, particularly said that there was no qualified doctor stationed at the general hospital in Wukari.

Mr Ato, who alleged that doctors were being hired from other places to provide skeletal services at the general hospitals, noted that such arrangements were gravely affecting service delivery.

“To my knowledge, doctors are being hired from the Federal Medical Centre, Jalingo, to cover up for the shortage of doctors in the general hospitals.

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“There was a time I was scheduled for surgery at the general hospital, but I had to wait for the doctors to come from the FMC.

“So, the same doctors you find at the FMC that you find in the general hospitals,” he said

Speaking, Hajara Thomas said that the situation was not different in general hospitals in Takum, Ussa, Gassol, Takum, Gashaka, Bali, among other local government areas of the state.

READ ALSO: PT HEALTH WATCH: Delayed treatment of childhood cataracts can lead to irreversible vision loss – Expert

She called on the state government to recruit more doctors to enable residents to access quality services at the general hospitals and primary healthcare centres.

On his part, a health expert, John Mayo, decried the infrastructure deficit in most of the hospitals.

Mr Mayo noted that the dilapidated condition of facilities at the public hospitals in the state was not motivating to medical workers.

He, however, commended Governor Agbu Kefas for the renovation of some general hospitals in the state.

(NAN)


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How Grassroots Academies Are Powering Nigerian Sport

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Across dusty estate pitches, school fields and floodlit five-a-side cages, a quiet revolution has been reshaping Nigerian sport. Grassroots academies, once informal gatherings run on passion and little else, have grown into structured talent factories that feed clubs at home and across Europe.

The Nigeria Football Federation now treats them as serious partners in player development, and the proof is turning up on team sheets from the NPFL to the Premier League.

That rise has not gone unnoticed beyond the touchline. As more academy graduates break into top leagues, the global audience following Nigerian talent has swelled, and supporters tracking those players abroad increasingly lean on comparison and review platforms such as Betiton to size up the best betting sites covering the Premier League and European football. The interest underlines a simple point: the pipeline starts on Nigerian soil, long before any scout or online betting market takes notice.

From street pitches to structured academies

Football arrived in Nigeria during the colonial era and never let go. For decades the country produced talent the hard way, on uneven streets and bare patches of ground where ball control was a survival skill. What has changed is the scaffolding around that raw ability. Academies such as the Pepsi Football Academy, Real Sapphire and Lagos-based Mavlon FC turned street culture into something organised, with age-group teams, qualified coaching, fitness work and a clear pathway toward professional contracts. The shift has been less about discovering talent, which Nigeria has never lacked, and more about keeping it, shaping it and giving it somewhere to go.

A new academy model built on data and education

The best academies now look nothing like the kickabouts of a generation ago. Many integrate video analysis, performance data, structured mentorship and partnerships with overseas clubs, while pairing football with formal schooling so players have a future even if they never turn professional. International programmes have taken note of the depth of Nigerian talent: UK-based outfits such as FCV International Football Academy have run scholarship-backed trials in Lagos and Abuja that channel young Nigerians into European football, as reported by THISDAY. The emphasis has moved from producing raw ability to developing the complete athlete, technically, physically and mentally.

The talent the system is producing

The results are increasingly hard to ignore. Defender Benjamin Fredrick, born in 2005, is a textbook product of the modern Nigerian academy system. Discovered by the Simoiben Academy Foundation in Kaduna, he sharpened his close control on rough surfaces before a move to Brentford, where he won the club’s B-team Player of the Season award and earned a senior Nigeria call-up. He is one name among a growing list of Nigerian players plying their trade abroad, many of whom passed through a local academy before a single European scout learned their name. For every graduate who reaches the Premier League, dozens more strengthen the NPFL and the national youth teams.

The challenges still facing grassroots academies

Progress has not erased the obstacles. Funding remains tight, and infrastructure is uneven: talent-rich regions such as Kano still struggle for proper pitches, equipment and coaching support. Administration is another hurdle, with calls for clearer regulation and recognition so academies meet consistent standards. NFF President Ibrahim Musa Gusau has stressed that effective grassroots structures are vital to the country’s football future, and has pushed for a recognition process that aligns sporting development with education. Until that framework matures, much of the system will keep running on the dedication of individual coaches and founders.

Why grassroots academies matter for Nigerian sport

The stakes reach well beyond football. Strong grassroots academies give thousands of young people structure, mentorship and a route out of difficult circumstances, while feeding the talent that powers Nigerian sport on the continental and world stage. Their reach is now tracked everywhere, from professional scouting databases to comparison sites like Betiton, where fans follow the leagues these graduates join and weigh up live betting markets around them. Where betting features in that global interest, it remains strictly an adults-only activity, and responsible play matters. With a World Cup year on the horizon and a steady flow of academy graduates emerging, the foundations laid on Nigeria’s roughest pitches have rarely looked more important.

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