20 position, Federal Teaching Hospital Federal Teaching Hospital

Job Description

Job Titles:
Paediatrics
Surgery
Obstetrics & Gynaecology
Laboratory Medicine
Community Medicine
Psychiatry
Anaesthesiology
Radiology
Dentistry
Category C
Pharmacists
Physiotherapists
Occupational Therapists
Staff Nurses/Midwives

My mother will kill me if I go nude -–Lillian Okoli

It is normal to hear established actors tell you about how many years it took them to get to where they are currently but for Lillian Okoli, it is a different scenario.
In just one year, she has become the toast of Nollywood movie producers.
With over 30 movies to her credit and still counting, Okoli who is ‘crazy’ about tattoos studied cell biology and genetics and did not set out to become a movie star. But what started as a hobby has made her the most sought after actress in tinsel town.
In this interview, the ever busy and fair complexion beauty from Orlu in Imo State talks passionately about her foray into the industry as well as her private life, career and other sundry issues.
What influenced your going into acting?
I started from drama in the church. There was a movie they wanted to do and they needed someone like me

AU, EU Peace And Security Organs Hold Annual Consultation In Addis Ababa

In view of the need for continued cooperation to achieve common goals, the AU Peace and Security Council (PSC) and the EU Political and Security Committee will hold their sixth joint annual consultative meeting on Tuesday.
The meeting will focus on the search for peace in the remaining hot spots on the African continent.
The AUPSC said discussion at the one-day meeting would focus on Guinea Bissau, Mali/Sahel, Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic and the campaign against the Lord's Resistance Army.
Specifically, the consultation, which brings together the 15 African Ambassadors of the AU PSC and their

3.4m HIV positive Nigerians

The recent disclosure by the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) that 3.4 million Nigerians are living with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (HIV/AIDS) has underscored the need to strengthen the fight against the pandemic. The agency’s Director-General, Prof. John Idoko, who stated this at a recent Senate public hearing on a bill to prohibit discrimination against

Akande, Ikimi battle for APC chairmanship

National Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria, Chief Bisi Akande, and Chief Tom Ikimi are currently locked in the battle for the chairmanship of the All Progressives Party, findings by The PUNCH on Monday have revealed.
The battle to head the yet-to-be-registered merger party between Akande and Ikimi followed the ceding of the interim national chairmanship to the ACN by the stakeholders.
Curiously too, same scenario on Monday obtained in the Congress for Progressive Change, a major arm of the merger and to which the post of the National Secretary of the APC has been zoned.
A source at the top hierarchy of the APC who spoke to our correspondent on Monday night said the self-interest factor had set into the affairs of the new party which is set to announce its Interim Executive Committee on Tuesday (today).

JTF Sabotage: Shekau Narrowly Escapes Capture in Borno


The ongoing insecurity crisis in the northern region of Nigeria may have found its Achilles heel at the doorstep disloyalty and sabotage within the top ranks of the Joint Task Force [JTF] as it parades its security strength at the three hot spots of Adamawa, Yobe and Borno States under the new State of Emergency instituted recently by the President of the federal republic of Nigeria, Dr. Goodluck Ebelemi Jonathan.

Doctor Mutilates Baby’s Corpse, Removes Eyes, Tongue,Private Part


LAGOS — The Ogun State Police Command, Sunday, said it has arrested one Dr. Babawale Joshua who owned Ajike Medical Centre at 11, Adeyemi Street, Saka, Sango Ota, for suspected ritual activities and disrespect to the corpse of a 13-month-old baby who died in his hospital, Saturday.
According the Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, for the state, Mr Muyiwa Ogunjobi, the police discovered that the boy’s corpse was

Proscribing Boko Haram, Ansaru wrong, says ACN

Action Congress of Ni-geria, ACN, has said that the recent proscription order against Boko Haram and Ansaru, desirable as it may be in tackling the terrorist organisations, violates the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria by stifling the press and tampering with the fundamental human rights of Nigerians.
A statement in Ila-Orangun, yesterday, by ACN’s National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said the order also makes it easy for an increasingly intolerant government to clamp down on the opposition, which its sees more as an irritant .
In the alternative, ACN called on the Federal Government to clarify the knotty and vague areas of the open-ended order, that may end up punishing journalists and infringing on the civil liberties of the citizens more than it will curtail activities of the sects.
The party said: ‘’Against the background of insinuations in government circles, let us be clear that we do not condone the activities of these sects that have killed and maimed innocent Nigerians and turned a section of the country into a battle field.
“Terrorism in all its ramifications is condemnable, and no responsible government will allow any group, no matter its name, grievances or ideology, to carry out terrorist acts unchecked.
“But we believe that whatever action government takes— even in an emergency— must pass the constitutional test, especially since the relevant sections of the Constitution have not been suspended.”
It said the offensive section of the order is Section 5 (1), which prescribes a term of imprisonment of not less than 20 years ‘’for any person who knowingly, in any manner, directly or indirectly, solicits or renders support for the commission of an act of terrorism or to a terrorist group.”
ACN said “support,” as defined by the order, includes “incitement to commit a terrorist act through the Internet, or any electronic means or through the use of printed materials or through the dissemination of terrorist information.
“Is this subsection not in conflict with Chapter II Section 22 of the Nigeria Constitution which says ‘The press, radio, television and other agencies of the mass media, shall at all times be free to uphold the fundamental objectives contained in this chapter and uphold the responsibility and accountability of the government to the people?’
“By stifling the press, is the order not abridging a part of the fundamental human rights guaranteed every citizen under Chapter Four of the Nigerian Constitution in Section 39 (1), which states thus: ‘Every person shall be entitled to freedom of expression including freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart ideas and information without interference?’”
ACN said the Nigerian government must take a cue from what obtains in other countries, especially in the USA, which are also battling terrorism, adding that the media in those countries have continued to report freely on activities of the global terrorist organisation, Al-Qaeda, despite the horrendous attacks it has carried out in the US and Europe, among others.

MANDELA


Nelson Mandela, the revered anti-apartheid hero, spent a third night in hospital after South Africa prayed for him on Sunday amid calls for his family and nation to "let him go".
JOHANNESBURG: Nelson Mandela, the revered anti-apartheid hero, spent a third night in hospital after South Africa prayed for him on Sunday amid calls for his family and nation to "let him go".
Government officials have given no update on his health since announcing that the 94-year-old was admitted early Saturday and was in a "serious but stable" condition with a recurring lung infection.
"I've seen my father and he's well. He's a fighter," his daughter Zindzi told The Guardian newspaper on 

MANDELA


Nelson Mandela, the revered anti-apartheid hero, spent a third night in hospital after South Africa prayed for him on Sunday amid calls for his family and nation to "let him go".
JOHANNESBURG: Nelson Mandela, the revered anti-apartheid hero, spent a third night in hospital after South Africa prayed for him on Sunday amid calls for his family and nation to "let him go".
Government officials have given no update on his health since announcing that the 94-year-old was admitted early Saturday and was in a "serious but stable" condition with a recurring lung infection.
"I've seen my father and he's well. He's a fighter," his daughter Zindzi told The Guardian newspaper on 

S’Africans willing to bid Mandela bye, wait for family

SOUTH Africans are beginning to come to terms with the mortality of their first black president who is revered as the father of the “Rainbow Nation” multi-race democracy. They are ready to bid Nelson Mandela bye. But they also want his family to have the same disposition.
The ill-health of the Nobel laureate continued to spark worldwide concerns, with South Africans praying for the ailing peace icon following his second day in hospital yesterday over a lung infection.
Sunday in South Africa, Mandela’s latest health scare was splashed across the front pages of local newspapers. But government officials have released no updates since announcing he was hospitalised in Pretoria early Saturday in a “serious but stable” condition.

Inside Boko Haram evil camp

Prologue
When Brig. Gen. Christopher Olukolade, Director of Defense Information, Defense Headquarters led a crop of foreign and local journalists on assessment tour of military special operations against the Boko Haram sect in Borno last Wednesday, expectations were high among media men that they might at last visit the famous Sambisa forest, identified as a major operational base/camp of the sect. The journey rather turned to be northward of the state specifically Marte, a small community at the Nigeria-Chad border where the insurgents had not only established their camp but also sacked the local government administration and hoisted their red flag.

Kano Arms Bunker

On May 28, 2013, security operatives uncovered an underground armoury in Kano, following a raid on a building in the highbrow area of the ancient city.
The house, which belongs to one Abdul Hassan Taher Fadlalla, a Lebanese, turned out to store a huge cache of arms and ammunition allegedly meant for a planned attack on Israeli and western interests in the country.
Checks by Sunday Sun revealed the aftermath of the arms discovery, the peculiar life of the Lebanese community and its overwhelming influence in Kano state.