The University of Jos has called off exams scheduled for March 30 and 31 following bandits’ attack on Sunday night that left several residents dead at Angwan Rukuba in Plateau.
Emmanuel Madugu, deputy registrar and spokesperson for the university, announced the postponement in a statement on Sunday.
“In view of the late evening fatal attacks by unknown gunmen on residents of Angwan Rukuba (an area that hosts many staff and students of the university), and the consequential tensions it has generated in and around the area and environs, the vice-chancellor has directed that: All examinations scheduled to hold on Monday 30th, and Tuesday 31st March, 2026 are postponed, and will be rescheduled accordingly.”
“University management is actively liaising with the relevant security agencies and monitoring the situation to ensure the safety of the lives of members of the university community,” said the statement.
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President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has endorsed a United States dollar 75 million participation by the Federal Government in fintech company Flutterwave, in a move seen as a boost for Nigeria’s digital economy space.
The funding will be channelled via the Ministry of Finance Incorporated (MOFI) and forms part of Flutterwave’s plan to secure about $250 million through a public share sale.
The African payments company, currently estimated to be worth over $3 billion, reportedly approached the Federal Government in 2025 to take part in the capital-raising exercise as part of efforts to build investor trust and attract state-level confidence.
Prior to approval, authorities commissioned two of the globally recognised “Big Four” audit and advisory firms to scrutinise the company’s books and operations, ensuring full compliance and transparency in the proposed arrangement.
Officials familiar with the development said the decision is aimed at highlighting Nigeria’s tech innovation capacity internationally while opening additional funding channels into the digital sector.
They also noted that the share offering is expected to widen participation, allowing Nigerian investors greater access to ownership in one of Africa’s prominent financial technology firms.
Interest in the deal is already reported to be high, with current shareholders seeking to expand their holdings while new institutional investors position themselves for entry. Market observers believe the offer could attract demand far above expectations, given the company’s expansion trajectory.
Anthropic announced on Monday that Amazon has agreed to invest a fresh $5 billion, bringing Amazon’s total investment in the company to $13 billion. Anthropic, for its part, has agreed to spend over $100 billion across the next ten years on AWS, obtaining up to 5GW of new computing capacity to train and run Claude.
The deal echoes an agreement Amazon struck with OpenAI just two months ago, when it joined a $110 billion funding round — contributing $50 billion — that valued the ChatGPT maker at a $730 billion pre-money valuation. That deal, too, was structured partly as cloud infrastructure services rather than straight cash.
At the heart of this deal is Amazon’s custom chips: Graviton (a low-power CPU), and Trainium (an Nvidia competitor and AI accelerator chip). The Anthropic deal specifically covers Trainium2 through Trainium4 chips, even though Trainium4 chips are not currently available. The latest chip, Trainium3, was released in December. On top of that, Anthropic has secured the option to buy capacity on future Amazon chips as they become available.
We’ll see if this news is a teaser to Anthropic announcing a new funding round. VCs have reportedly been offering the AI company capital in a deal that would value it at $800 billion or more.