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FEC Approves Amendment Of ‘Obsolete’ Labour Laws To Align With International Standards

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The federal executive council (FEC) has approved the amendment of the country’s labour laws to meet the standard of the International Labour Organisation (ILO).

Chris Ngige, minister for labour and employment, said the council, presided over by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, granted its approval to the amendment on Wednesday.

The minister, while speaking with journalists after the weekly meeting, described Nigeria’s current labour laws as “obsolete” and not in tandem with international standards.

He said the proposed amendment would include the “occupational safety and health bill,” and “labour institutional bill” that would establish the industrial arbitration panel (IAP) into a commission, among others.

“The first memorandum was to seek the council’s approval for us to amend the labour laws of the country,” Ngige said.

“The labour laws of the country, as presently being operated are really obsolete laws. And the ILO has pointed out that we needed to bring our laws to be concurrent with international labour standards and conventions and principles at work.

“So, we had to do this. It is a long journey, which was started in 2001 by a previous administration, and at a point, the bills were sent to the national assembly for enactment into law in 2007/2008; only one came out after the five bills.”

‘We Consulted TUC, NLC, NECA On The Amendments’

Ngige said the ministry worked on the amendment based on the recommendation of ILO and also consulted with the Trade Union Congress (TUC), Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA).

He said the bills would be transmitted to the national assembly for a public hearing before going to the president for assent.

“The ILO provided us with technical assistance. And we did what we call social dialogue, and validation meetings. It was tripartite in nature, with the trade unions council, the Nigeria Labour Congress, the Employers Association (NECA) and the rest of them all. So we agreed that this should be the final product,” the minister said.

“We looked at it again last June 2022, because there were so many grey areas. And the final product is what we brought here now for council to approve.”

The minister said the goal is to “align properly with international conventions and statutes on labour matters”.

BIG STORY

Nigeria Now Respected Globally, Years Of Corruption Reversed By Reforms —- Tinubu

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President Bola Tinubu says the reforms implemented by his administration have restored Nigeria’s credibility abroad and curbed years of entrenched corruption.

Speaking on Tuesday at the State House while receiving the Soun of Ogbomosoland, Oba Ghandi Olaoye, and other traditional rulers, Tinubu said the country had regained global respect due to tough but necessary policy changes.

“Years of neglect, fake records, smuggling and other harmful practices denied Nigeria the revenue needed for development. The bleeding has stopped. The haemorrhage is gone. The patient is alive,” the president said.

Tinubu listed the removal of fuel subsidies and currency unification among reforms that he said were stabilising the economy and opening Nigeria to foreign investors. He added that the federal government would continue to focus on education, citing the Nigeria Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) as a tool to ensure no student drops out due to poverty.

The president insisted that the challenges facing the nation were not insurmountable, stressing that transparency and fiscal discipline would remain central to his government’s agenda.

Officials and foreign observers have in recent months echoed similar sentiments, with international rating agencies revising Nigeria’s outlook upwards and global institutions such as the World Bank commending the country’s policy direction.

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Judge Orders Reversal Of Trump-Era Harvard Funding Cuts, Citing Academic Freedom

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A federal judge in Boston has ruled that the Trump administration must restore more than $2.6 billion in federally supported research funding to Harvard University, calling the cuts retaliatory and unconstitutional.

U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs delivered the ruling on Wednesday, concluding that the administration’s decision violated Harvard’s First Amendment rights and was ideologically motivated. The court found that accusations of antisemitism were used as a pretext for the cuts, stating the university’s research had “little connection to discrimination against Jews.” The judge emphasized that while combating antisemitism is vital, it cannot serve as a justification for suppressing academic freedom.

The funding freeze—later escalated to complete termination—put hundreds of Harvard research projects at risk and formed part of a broader campaign that included threats to the university’s tax-exempt status and international student enrollment. Judge Burroughs’ ruling reverses all such funding actions since April 14, 2025, and bars future unconstitutional cuts.

Reactions and Next Steps

Despite the ruling, the immediate restoration of funds is uncertain, as the administration has already signaled plans to appeal. A White House spokesperson criticized the judge’s ruling, calling her an “activist Obama-appointed judge,” and reiterated that Harvard does not have a constitutional right to federal funds.

Harvard President Alan Garber welcomed the decision, describing it as a boost to academic freedom and affirming the university’s resolve to continue its mission despite the evolving legal landscape. Meanwhile, faculty expressed concern over lingering political attempts to disrupt research funding.

 

Credit: AP

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NAF Air Strikes Kill Over 15 Terrorists In Sambisa Forest

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The Nigerian Air Force (NAF) has confirmed that precision air strikes killed more than 15 terrorists in a newly identified enclave near Zuwa in the Sambisa Forest, Borno State.

According to Air Commodore Ehimen Ejodame, Director of Public Relations and Information for the NAF, the operation was executed on September 3, 2025, under Operation Hadin Kai, based on credible intelligence and surveillance.

Ejodame explained the mission targeted fighters and commanders responsible for recent attacks in the Bitta area. The air strikes “proved devastating, neutralising over 15 terrorists and demolishing key structures critical to their operations.”

He added that the successful precision mission underscores the NAF’s professionalism and its commitment to supporting ground forces in dismantling terrorist networks and restoring peace in the Northeast.

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