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WHO, Borno Govt Set Up 488 Sites For Healthcare Delivery Across 27 LGAs
WHO, Borno Govt Set Up 488 Sites For Healthcare Delivery Across 27 LGAs
By Francis Okoye
The Borno state government yesterday said it has in collaboration with the World Health Organisation ( WHO ) set up 488 sites across the state for health services in the first round of the 2024 Maternal, Newborn and Child Health Week (MMCHW).
The executive secretary, Borno Primary Health Care Development Agency (SPHCDA), Prof. Mohammed Arab, disclosed this during the launching of the MMCHW week held at Mala Kachallah Primary Healthcare Centre in Maiduguri on Monday.
He said that the essence of the health week was to accelerate the delivery of a minimum package of high-impact interventions that would contribute to the reduction of maternal, neonatal and child mortality.
“It’s a bi-annual campaign that takes place in the 1st 6 months (Round 1) and the 2nd 6 months (Round 2) of the year respectively. This year’s Round 1 activity will run consecutively for five days from 10th to 14th June,” he said.
According to him, services to be provided include antenatal care, deworming, HIV testing and counseling, vitamin A supplement, health promotion, immunisation and birth registration.
“There is also distribution of Sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine and long-lasting insecticide net and iron folate for pregnant women,” Mr Arab further said.
Speaking on behalf of WHO and other partners, the organisation’s public health officer, Maiduguri office, Dr Aisha Kadai, urged all stakeholders to take the week as an opportunity to increase coverage and update services across Borno.
Ms Kadai said that WHO had mobilised human resources to support the outreach in hard to reach areas as well as medical and pharmaceutical supplies to fill in the gaps in commodities required for the first round exercise.
“WHO is working with Borno SPHCDA in prioritisation of maternal, newborn and child health.
“In addition, the World Health Organization with funding support from the United States Agency for International Development/Bureau for Humanitarian Aid (USAID/BHA) donated assorted medical consumables including 50 kits of IEHK Basic Malaria Module, 50 Tin of 200,000 International Unit of Vitamin A (25,000 doses), among others . This is part of the efforts to ensure quality services are provided to the people including those in hard to reach locations.
“These activities are instrumental to achieving the state 25 years Development Framework, the 10 years Strategic Transformation Plan as well as the SDGs,” Ms Kadai said.
In his remarks, the commissioner of health, Prof. Baba Mallam, said that the MNCHW was not a substitute for the regular health activities but a measure to complement and intensify ongoing efforts to provide high-quality healthcare services.
“These interventions are designed to significantly increase the coverage of preventive and curative services, thus ensuring that we meet the needs of mothers and children effectively and efficiently.
“This initiative offers a unique opportunity for women and children to access crucial health services free of charge at their nearest health facility.
“The importance of this week cannot be quantified.
“It represents a concentrated effort to deliver interventions that can save lives and improve health outcomes,”Prof Mallam said.
WHO, Borno Govt Set Up 488 Sites For Healthcare Delivery Across 27 LGAs
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THE PROMISE WE MAKE TO TOMORROW
THE PROMISE WE MAKE TO TOMORROW
By: His Excellency, Vice President Kashim Shettima, GCON
Being the speech of His Excellency, Senator Kashim Shettima, GCON, Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, on the Golden Jubilee Celebration of the University of Maiduguri, held at the Muhammadu Indimi International Conference Centre, University of Maiduguri, on Saturday, November 29, 2025.
No heritage is greater than the gift of education, for we are the children of a civilisation built by words, refined by books, and elevated by ideas. We are products of generations of scholars and thinkers who lit the path before us, men and women whose quiet labour laid the foundation for every aspiration to progress and development in our society. Their contributions would not have endured without institutions that inspired their thoughts, debated their convictions, and preserved their wisdom in libraries for generations yet unborn. This is what the University of Maiduguri has meant to us, a cradle of intellect, a place of inquiry, and a custodian of the ideals that shape our world. And so, it is with profound honour that I join you today to celebrate the history of its excellence and the legacy it continues to build across time.
Every institution is defined not only by the strength of its research outputs but by the quality of the students it moulds. On this front, we have been fortunate to count the University of Maiduguri as a place where minds are empowered to imagine better futures. This is the true meaning of education, the belief that we are what becomes of our children, for they carry the light that guides us into tomorrow. No society that neglects education survives the attrition of time, for knowledge remains the only inheritance that grows in value through use. And so, as we gather to celebrate half a century of this distinguished institution, we are affirming the immortality of an idea, the idea that human beings, regardless of birth or class, can rise to their fullest potential through the power of learning. We gather to honour an institution that took root in the Sahelian sands and blossomed into a home for all, nurturing generations who now serve as contributors to the engines of our nation’s development and as torchbearers beyond our borders.
As an alumnus of this great institution, I feel the weight of those humble beginnings and the soaring ambitions that followed. I arrived here as a young man convinced that education is the brick with which a purposeful life is built, and I learned that truth within these walls, beneath the fine Sahelian skies of Maiduguri. But this education was never a pastime of cramming for exams; it was a calling. It was an invitation to use knowledge as the most potent tool in the service of humanity. Today, I return home with a heart full of gratitude for every lecture hall that shaped our thinking, for every laboratory that refined our curiosity, for every library that awakened our intellectual appetites, and for every challenge that sharpened our character.
I was trained here to believe that the greatest heritage one can inherit is knowledge and the greatest duty one can undertake is to pass it on. And no matter the office I occupy, I remain first and forever a student of this institution. For you, I will always be the boy who walked into these classrooms with nothing but a dream, leaving with a mission to serve. It is one of the quiet prides of my life that I stand before you not in violation of any code of conduct, not as one summoned to defend a failure in character, but as one who has tried, earnestly and consistently, to deploy his education in the service of the society that nurtured him.
That this institution still stands despite the storms of violence we have witnessed is owed to our collective belief in what truly matters, the conviction that nothing must come between us and our education. Perhaps it is this stubborn refusal to surrender the classroom to the merchants of fear, this insistence on preaching and promoting learning in a land where those who oppose it have waged a war against enlightenment, that defines the magnitude of your sacrifice. You have kept faith with the sanctity of knowledge in a place where doing so demanded uncommon courage. And in choosing to keep these gates open, you have proclaimed loudly that education is sacred, that it is non negotiable, and that its message must continue to echo across our communities no matter the darkness that seeks to silence it.
As individuals, we also owe it to ourselves to become symbols of the possibilities that well tailored education offers. Unless we strive to become the reference points for why this institution exists and why our teachers labour to prepare us for the uncertainty of tomorrow, we risk leaving the stage to the anarchists. We will not let them drag us back into the darkness that our ancestors devoted their lives to end, because we know the road that leads to damnation and the one that leads to redemption. We choose education because it is the antidote to the fear that fuels extremism. We choose it because it is the light that exposes the fake glamour of violence. Education is the shield that protects communities from forces determined to roll back centuries of progress. That is why we must be the light of humanity, the hope of the downtrodden, and the rhetorical motivation of the sceptics who doubt whether this nation can rise to its promise.
Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, fifty years in the life of an institution is enough time to test the quality of its products. It is enough time to see whether knowledge handed down in classrooms has been translated into innovation, into responsible leadership, and into lives devoted to service. Whether as economists or biologists, as computer programmers or medical doctors, as lawyers or engineers, our obligation extends beyond excelling in our careers. Without purpose, education becomes a grand exercise in self stimulation, a trophy polished only for personal admiration. Yet this university has never lacked purpose. The University of Maiduguri has paid its dues. It has produced scholars and specialists who have injected knowledge, competence, and moral character into the labour market and into communities far and near. This Jubilee is therefore a celebration of impact.
And although fifty years is young compared to ancient institutions such as al Qarawiyyin, the University of Bologna, and even the University of Oxford whose origins stretch into the mists of the ninth and eleventh centuries, we are reminded that purpose matters far more than age. Since 1975, when this university was conceived under the Third National Development Plan and began its academic programmes the following year, it has stood shoulder to shoulder with institutions twice its age and has shone with distinction. The journey of every alumnus gathered here today is proof that relevance is not measured in centuries but in the depth of vision that guided its founding fathers and the quality of minds that have sustained this legacy across time.
It is on the strength of this legacy and on the confidence it inspires that we turn our thoughts to the theme of this celebration, Education, Leadership, and National Development. It is an invitation for us to reflect on the connection between what we learn and the nation we aspire to build. It calls us to rethink the boundary between the knowledge we acquire and the measure of progress we hope to achieve. In societies like ours, true development depends on our ability to understand the relationship between what we teach, how we lead, and the collective vision we pursue as a people.
Today, there is a shared national understanding that education is the most reliable vehicle to development. It is the immune system of the nation. It fuels economic mobility, lifts families out of poverty, strengthens social cohesion, deepens democratic culture, and fortifies national security. It sustains every modern endeavour, from the construction of strong institutions to the building of a strong economy. An educated citizenry is more prepared to participate in civic life, to champion democratic values, to hold leaders accountable, to demand competence and fairness, and to stand as pillars of national stability.
This is why we have made it clear that we do not come to pay lip service to education. We recognise that the soul of national development lies in what our citizens know, what they can imagine, and what they can create. Because we understand the transformative power of learning, our budgetary commitments have been deliberately aligned with the broader goals of national progress. In the 2025 Budget, education received a total of 3.5 trillion naira, amounting to 7.3 percent of the national budget, an increase from the previous year. For the first time in many years, our universities are being supported to develop mechanised farming programmes. Grants have been introduced to strengthen medical education, and entrepreneurial initiatives have been expanded to equip students for the realities of a modern economy.
There is no doubt that a vision for a competitive and globally relevant education sector is beginning to take shape. The world is changing at a pace that leaves no room for complacency. Nations no longer rise or fall on natural resources but on the quality of their human capital. Nigeria cannot aspire to compete on the global stage while its universities remain underfunded, its teachers underpaid, and its classrooms ill equipped. We cannot hope to thrive in a knowledge driven world while preparing our young people with the tools of a bygone age. The 2025 allocation is therefore a declaration of intent and a clear acknowledgement that the future belongs to those who invest in their people.
Indeed, we are not blind to the challenges that have persisted. For decades, underfunding has weakened the foundations of our education system. International benchmarks recommend that between fifteen and twenty percent of national budgets be devoted to education, yet we have often fallen short. We have fallen short because we are compelled to balance competing national priorities such as security, healthcare, and infrastructure. The consequences confront us daily in the form of inadequate infrastructure, outdated learning materials, poorly motivated teachers, opaque management of funds, frequent strikes, and academic calendars that struggle to hold their rhythm. And for us in the Northeast, the most painful challenge has been the violence inflicted by insurgency. Our classrooms became frontline casualties in a senseless war against civilisation.
Between 2009 and 2021 in Borno State alone, more than five hundred schools were attacked. Between two thousand two hundred and forty six and five thousand classrooms were destroyed. Two thousand two hundred and ninety five teachers were killed, and nineteen thousand others were displaced. Children lost years of learning. Libraries were burned. Laboratories were shattered. Aspirations were silenced. These attacks were ideological in nature. They were designed to extinguish the light of knowledge that generations before us had struggled to keep alive. The attackers understood that an educated population cannot be manipulated, cannot be enslaved, and cannot be compelled to bow to tyranny. They understood that education is liberation, and that is precisely why they targeted it. When terrorists attacked schools, they were attempting to kill the future.
Yet the story of Borno is not the story of defeat. It is the story of a people who refused to let darkness define them. By March 2025, public schools in Borno State had registered 877,777 learners. Education received 70 billion Naira out of a 585 billion Naira state budget, while basic education received 12 billion Naira. More than 10 billion Naira in counterpart funding unlocked an additional 17 billion Naira for the sector. The state paid 530 million Naira in West African Senior School Certificate Examination fees for over 26,000 public school students, ensuring that no child missed examinations for financial reasons. The daily investment in school feeding stands at approximately 122 million Naira. These are evidence that even in adversity, leadership can rebuild, restructure, and reimagine society. Yet challenges persist, particularly in the availability of qualified teachers, in infrastructure deficits, and in enrolment gaps. These challenges mirror patterns across many northern states and remind us that regional disparities in education require systemic, sustained, and equitable interventions.
We also understand that our tertiary institutions continue to grapple with inadequate funding, poor infrastructure, staff shortages, high student to teacher ratios, limited research opportunities, outdated curricula, and the painful haemorrhaging of talent through brain drain. We know that many of our finest academics have relocated in search of better opportunities, leaving behind overburdened departments and students deprived of the mentorship they deserve. The consequences have been unmistakable.
We recognise these constraints, and it is in response to them that we are pursuing reforms to modernise the sector. The National Education Repository and Database has strengthened coordination across institutions. The Nigerian Education Loan Fund, which provides interest free loans for tuition and upkeep, has already disbursed 110 billion naira to over three hundred and twenty eight thousand students. Digital transformation initiatives are expanding e learning and access to modern teaching tools. The Fourth Industrial Revolution programme is equipping students with competencies in artificial intelligence, robotics, and data analytics. Skills based learning reforms are shifting education away from rote memorisation toward critical thinking, emotional intelligence, problem solving, creativity, and enterprise. Curriculum reviews are embedding digital literacy, entrepreneurship, and citizenship education into the heart of learning.
Leadership is a responsibility to imagine, to inspire, and to build. More than ever, we are reminded that at the centre of every nation’s progress is the quality of investment it makes in its people. Education remains the womb of national transformation. Around the world, history affirms this truth. India under Jawaharlal Nehru built its scientific and technological identity on the foundation of education. Malaysia under Mahathir Mohammed rose to global relevance through deliberate investment in human capital. Botswana under Seretse Khama moved from poverty into stability through visionary governance. South Africa under Nelson Mandela reinvented itself by placing dignity, justice, and institutional strength at the heart of its national renewal. What these leaders understood is what we have equally embraced, that education shapes leadership and leadership in turn strengthens education. Our own history bears testimony to this. The Third National Development Plan from 1975 to 1980, which midwifed this very institution, was a distinguished example of forward thinking leadership. It gave birth not only to the University of Maiduguri but also to the Universities of Calabar, Ilorin, Jos, Port Harcourt, and Bayero University. It demonstrated that a nation can only rise to the height of the educational ambitions it sets for itself, and it is a vision that continues to guide our steps today.
For Nigeria to reach its full potential, we must build a genuine synergy across all stakeholders. Government cannot do it alone. The private sector, universities, alumni communities, civil society, international partners, and host communities must work together to create centres of excellence. The world has become a single interconnected labour market. Talent moves to where opportunities exist, and opportunities gravitate to where talent is nurtured. Our responsibility is to ensure that Nigeria is not merely a participant in this global contest but a competitive and confident player. This requires increased investment in education, the modernisation of infrastructure, the strengthening of research capacity, the continuous training of teachers, the adoption of new technologies, and a determined fight against corruption in educational administration. It requires systems that outlive individual tenures. Above all, it requires leaders with integrity and imagination, leaders who understand that nation building is an act of intergenerational responsibility.
Education is the foundation of human capital development. It is the engine that drives economic growth. It is the pathway to social mobility. It is the shield against inequality. It is the soil in which innovation grows. It is the thread that weaves national unity. It is the antidote to poverty. It is the armour of democracy. It is the womb in which the future is conceived. Yet for education to fulfil its mission, we must address persistent problems such as limited access in rural and conflict affected areas, poor teacher training, inadequate facilities, outdated curricula, and low investment in technology and research. We must accept the truth that the future belongs to nations that build schools, not prisons, that train teachers, not soldiers, that encourage inquiry, not conformity, and that see every child as a national asset, not a demographic burden.
His Excellency President Bola Ahmed Tinubu understands this charge. The Renewed Hope Agenda recognises that national development is impossible without highly skilled citizens and leaders of integrity. We are prioritising education funding, expanding infrastructure, improving teacher welfare, investing in digital skills, strengthening research capacity, and promoting institutional autonomy. We are reinforcing the synergy between education, leadership, and national development not as abstract ideals but as pillars upon which a new Nigeria must stand.
As we celebrate this Golden Jubilee, we are reminded of the immortal truth that the wealth of a nation lies not in gold or oil but in the minds of its people. Fifty years from now, may our children look back and say that we honoured the legacy of those who built this university in the heart of the desert. May they say that we did not waste the sacrifices of teachers who braved danger to keep education alive. May they say that we insisted on building a Nigeria where learning is stronger than violence, where hope is stronger than fear, and where education remains the greatest equaliser known to humanity.
Today, I invite all of us, students and teachers, policymakers and alumni, friends and custodians of this university, to renew our commitment to be ambassadors of the values this institution has instilled in us. Let us dedicate ourselves to building a nation where every child, regardless of class or tribe, gender or geography, faith or circumstance, has access to the transformative power of education. And may this great University of Maiduguri continue to stand as a lighthouse in the Sahel, an institution whose story is defined not by the storms it has endured but by the light it continues to shine.
Once again, I congratulate the entire University of Maiduguri community on this Golden Jubilee, and I thank you all for your kind attention. May God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
THE PROMISE WE MAKE TO TOMORROW
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Leadership tussle: North East CAN backs Rev. Hayab
Leadership tussle: North East CAN backs Rev. Hayab
By: Inusa Ndahi
The Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) in the North East, Bishop Mohammed Naga has said that the entire members of the association in the region and by extension, North Central and North West are fully aligned with the leadership of Reverend, Dr. Joseph Hayab who was constituonally elected as Chairman of the 19 Northern States CAN and the FCT in February 2025.
He cautioned the so-called Sunday Oibe who is parading himself as Secretary alongside Rev. Yakubu Pam as Chairman to desist forthwith.
Bishop Naga who is also the General Secretary of the 19 Northern states CAN and the FCT disclosed this in a statement to newsmen on Saturday in Maiduguri, Borno state capital.
Bishop Naga who is the General Overseer of the Biblical Christian Church (BCC).in Nigeria, said, it has become imperative for him to speak out over the recent media hype sponsored by Oibe that, the recent federal high court ruling did not in any way affirm or legitimise Rev. Joseph Hayab’s claim to the chairmanship of the association.
His words: “On behalf of North East Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), I am the Chairman of North East Can and also the Secretary General of 19 Northern states and FCT CAN which we were duly elected in February 2025.
“The so-called Sunday Oibe who is parading himself as the Secretary has never been elected to such an exalted position, rather, he was asked to finish the tenure of Barrister Danladi who God called to Glory. Even the office of the Northern CAN that is going on, the election was conducted in 2016, so if you calculated it to 2025, you would know the number of years spent which has automatically shown that their tenure has elapsed since then.
“Therefore, Oibe’s office has expired, and all the Chairmen of Northern CAN gathered in Abuja and resolved constitutionally, conducted an election which hitherto brought into Leadership of Reverend Dr. Joseph Hayab as the current Chairman of Northern CAN, and we in the North East, we don’t recognize Oibe as our leader and they are no longer our leader. They should desist from parading themselves.
“Whether there was a Court Rule or No Court Rule, it is true that there is no constitutional backing for whatsoever to warrant them claim they are our leaders.
“This Northern CAN as far as we are concern is our legacy and heritage. Our forefathers left it for us on behalf of the entire Christedom in Northern Nigeria, and we have to protect it”. Naga stated.
He pointed out that, the whole thing was that, there was an advancement of crushing Christianity, but their forefathers struggled, fought for them and developed a resistant force where each one is expected to face his/her own religion.
Continuing: “This fight like the man Oibe taking people to Court when there was no legal backing is uncalled for. The Court has ruled on the matter, why should he be making noise, let him be assured that there are no people with him, we in the North East are not with him, even in the North Central, the Vice Chairman of Northern CAN, is the Chairman of North West zonal CAN, which is constitutionally constituted, and my humble self as the Chairman of North East. So if you look at it, all the Chairmen of North Central, North West and North East are all in this Northern CAN matter. In fact, the whole matter behind it is that, the acclaimed leadership of Oibe are no longer relevant, they dont carry everybody along, there is no tangible or viable evidence of what they have done for the North”. Naga further explained.
He noted that they have gathered several times as Chairmen of CAN in the Northern part and held fruitful deliberations on how to forge ahead peacefully.
” let Oibe be assured that his office has expired and he should not arraign himself as a leader again. I am speaking on behalf of Northern CAN Chairmen, that we are together, we are solidified, we are strong, vibrant and we are up to the task.
” Let me also call on our members across the Northern States to remain calm, focused, prayerful, and to disregard the ongoing media distortions mainly sponsored by Oibe”. He concluded.
Leadership tussle: North East CAN backs Rev. Hayab
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FG Launches Biodiversity Finance Initiative to Safeguard Nation’s Ecosystem
FG Launches Biodiversity Finance Initiative to Safeguard Nation’s Ecosystem
By: Michael Mike
In a landmark move towards safeguarding the nation’s forests, ecosystems, and biodiversity that underpin livelihoods across the country, the federal government has launched the Biodiversity Finance Initiative (BIOFIN).
It is an important step towards bridging financial gap for biodiversity conservation while strengthening partnerships among government institutions, the private sector, civil society, and local communities.
Speaking at the launch of the initiative in Abuja, the Director of Forestry at the Ministry of Environment, Mrs Halima Bawa-Bwari, said BIOFIN will support sustainable forestry practices that balance ecological integrity with economic growth, while empowering communities as custodians of biodiversity.

She said: “The urgency to act has never been greater. The National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP) provides us with a clear roadmap to conserve, sustainably use, and equitably share the benefits of biodiversity.”
She noted that: “BIOFIN complements this vision by mobilising innovative financing solutions, ensuring that our commitments are not only aspirational but achievable.”
She said Nigeria has consistently demonstrated its commitment to biodiversity conservation, while explaining that through the NBSAP, “the country has pledged to integrate biodiversity financing into national development planning, strengthen institutional frameworks, and mobilise both domestic and international resources.”
She said that this commitment was already reflected: Increased budgetary allocations to forestry and conservation programme; Partnerships with development organisations to unlock innovative financing mechanisms; Mainstreaming biodiversity into key sectors such as agriculture, energy, and infrastructure; and community -driven initiatives that ensure local communities benefit directly from conservation efforts
She however called on all stakeholders to collaborate in strengthening Nigeria’s biodiversity agenda.
She said: “Let us commit to innovative thinking, collaborative action, and unwavering dedication to safeguarding our forests and biodiversity for generations to come.

“Together, we can ensure that the Biodiversity Finance Initiative becomes a beacon of hope and a model of sustainability, aligned with Nigeria’s commitments under the NBSAP and our broader national development and Renewed Hope agenda.”
While revealing that the organisation’s mission is to activate and accelerate the transition towards a nature-positive global economy, said: “Businesses in Nigeria are increasingly paying attention to nature as part of their broader work on sustainability, but they are not yet all aware of how their work contributes to national plans to protect, restore and sustainably use nature.”
She insisted that collaboration will help accelerate progress for nature in Nigeria by connecting private sector leadership with national biodiversity and climate priorities—turning global goals into national action.
She disclosed that: “In 2022, 196 countries made a historic commitment through the Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), a global plan to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030,” stating that the government cannot achieve this alone.
She noted that: “Businesses and financial institutions must play a central role in delivering the transition toward a nature-positive future. Through this partnership, the organisations will convene leading Nigerian companies and government representatives through a Business Advisory Group (BAG).”
On her part, the representatives of Natural Eco Capital, Rantiola Babatimehin, stated that the organisation remains commitment to strengthening sustainability by helping public and private bodies build resilient, eco-conscious businesses and economies.
She said: @As a member of the Capitals Coalition, we collaborate with governments, financial institutions, and investors to tackle issues around natural capital, climate change, low-carbon development, sustainable finance, and circular economy.”
The Director-General of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation, Dr Joseph Onoja, insisted that conservation of biodiversity is everybody’s business.
He said: “Every organisation and every individual involved in business should also play a role in safeguarding biodiversity. That is why we established the Business Advisory Group—so that together, we can develop a Business Action Plan for Biodiversity and identify practical steps to strengthen biodiversity conservation in Nigeria.”
The Ministry’s Biodiversity Desk Officer, Sikeade Egbuwalo, explained that BIOFIN and Nigeria’s NBSAP can be adequately financed by mobilising more public and private sector investments, unlocking new revenue streams, and aligning economic incentives with conservation.
FG Launches Biodiversity Finance Initiative to Safeguard Nation’s Ecosystem
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