Hollywood icon James Handy stabbed to death

Veteran actor James Handy, known for his role in Top Gun: Maverick, was fatally stabbed at his home in Tarzana, California, on Wednesday, June 3.

According to a statement from the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), Handy, 81, was discovered in the front yard of his residence suffering from a stab wound to the chest. He was transported by paramedics to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Police identified Michael Gledhill, 44, the son of Handy’s girlfriend, as the prime suspect. Authorities said Gledhill called 911 to confess to the killing before law enforcement arrived at the scene. In the call, Gledhill reportedly told dispatchers, “I am the son of man, I just killed the man of sin.”

Gledhill was arrested and charged with one count of murder. He is being held at Van Nuys Jail with bail set at $2 million. Law enforcement also carried out door-to-door inquiries in the neighbourhood following the incident.

Handy, a native of New York City, had a career spanning decades, with supporting roles in blockbuster films and popular television series. His credits include Jumanji, Arachnophobia, Unbreakable, Logan, NYPD Blue, Rizzoli and Isles, Alias, NCIS: Los Angeles, and Criminal Minds. His final on-screen appearance was in Top Gun: Maverick in 2023.

The LAPD continues to investigate the circumstances surrounding the stabbing. Neighbours described the area as quiet and were reportedly shocked by the violent incident.

Read about ‘Trionda,’ the AI-powered 2026 World Cup official football

By Kayode Adebiyi

At every FIFA World Cup, one of the eagerly anticipated subjects has been the design of the official football.

From the Telstar at the FIFA 2018 in Russia to the Brazuca at the 2014 edition in Brazil, the official ball has always been a talking point.

Who will forget the famous Jabulani when South Africa hosted the tournament in 2010? It was despised by goalkeepers but loved by attackers, especially Uruguay’s Diego Forlan!

It was at the Qatar tournament in 2022 that the official ball assumed even more curiosity, with Al Rihla becoming the first World Cup ball infused with semi-AI performance functions.

If football enthusiasts think that Al Rihla (meaning the journey in Arabic) impressed with offside technology, life data sharing, etc, then, they are in for a surprise at the performance of the 2026 World Cup ball.

Designed by Adidas, Trionda is a high-tech masterpiece which stakeholders have described as more than just sporting equipment.

During its unveiling, Adidas said Trionda “is a connected piece of engineering designed to handle the unique physics of North American altitudes while celebrating a historic three-nation host union”.

The name was derived from a linguistic blend into the prefix “tri” to represent the three host nations of Canada, Mexico and the U.S. and “onda”, the Spanish word for wave.

Thus, Trionda, or Three Waves, symbolises the fluid unity of the host countries and the three coastline (Atlantic, Pacific and the Gulf) framing the tournament.

Unlike the balls used previously, Trionda has fewer and lighter panels but remains stable with its aerodynamic features.

Its four panels are the fewest ever used on a World Cup match ball. This reduces the number of seams, making the ball’s surface more consistent.

It also features intentionally deep seams that act like the dimples on a golf ball, ensuring stable air drag and a predictable flight path, with a surface embossed with subtle iconography of the three host nations.

However, Trionda’s most mind-blowing feature is that it requires a charging station! A full 90-minute-charged ball runs for up to six hours.

Its motion sensor, suspended at the centre of the ball, tracks every touch, kick and deflection in real-time, sending data 500 times per second to the VAR centre!

FIFA said the technology allows for Semi-Automated Offside Technology, identifying the exact point of kick with millisecond precision to resolve tight offside calls in seconds rather than minutes.

Trionda also has some symbolic and aesthetic features, such as each host country having its unique ball colour; Canada (red), Mexico (green) and the U.S. (blue).

It is also made entirely with water-based glues and inks for sustainability, featuring a maple leaf, golden eagle and five-pointed star.

Finished with gold embellishments that pay homage to the FIFA World Cup Trophy itself, Adidas said it is their most visually playful ball yet, designed with both infield and broadcast visual considerations. (NAN)(www.nannews.ng)

KIA/JPE

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Transforming a developing nation into a developed one -Part I

Transforming a nation from developing to developed status is one of the most ambitious undertakings any Government can pursue. For a country like Sri Lanka, rich in human capital, strategically located, and endowed with natural beauty, the potential is immense. Yet potential alone does not guarantee progress. Citizens in a democracy have both the right and the responsibility to expect certain standards of governance, policy direction, and national vision from their elected leaders.

This article outlines the core expectations citizens should have of a democratically elected government, which is NPP now in Sri Lanka, aiming to elevate a developing nation to developedcountry status. My representation of people’s expectation is supported by citing real life examples from around the world.

I am not a blind supporter or a blind critic of NPP.

First of all, it is people’s right to select a government. As a professional of chosen disciplines, I try to educate people with my opinions what kind of government would be suitable to move forward a country economically and socially? I may be right or wrong. It is up for debate. After people made their decision, irrespective of my liking of not about the decision, my job is to support the elected government when they do right things and criticise the things I believe they got wrong.

As a citizen, I want the NPP Government do the best which I am yet to see. As apolitical person who does not like party politics, I will try to analyse the present Government activities constructively.

Ideally, after appointment as a Government, NPP should have openly declared this is a Government for all and invite public, in particular all professions across the country to shed their political affiliations temporarily for five years and come forward to join the national effort to develop the country and suggest going back to their political affiliations at the end of five years to elect the next government or support another five years term for NPP, guarantying treatment of all merit basis, not based on any political affiliations including NPP and JVP. You may say I must be kidding.

In my personal circle of friends and family members, I argue with blind supporters of NPP on its poor performance and defend NPP against blind haters of NPP on its good but slow actions. I strongly believe that if NPP succeeds in its national endeavour it would be because of people like me rather than blind supporters. I hope NPP strong men and women understand it and listen to critics objectively.

Why NPP was elected

Sri Lanka’s traditional right-wing political movements have promoted various forms of capitalist aspirations. For over seven decades, many ordinary citizens repeatedly supported these parties, hoping that economic growth would improve country as well as their own circumstances. Instead, many perceived a widening gap between the wealthy and the poor.

Recognising these realities, the JVP understood that it would be difficult to attract broader electoral support without presenting a more moderate socio-economic vision. The NPP emerged as a front capable of appealing beyond the JVP’s traditional base. It gradually expanded by attracting professionals, middle-class voters, and individuals seeking cleaner governance and institutional reforms.

When the NPP sought national support, it offered a compelling vision of good governance and social transformation. However, appealing to a diverse electorate required more than a reform agenda alone. To gain widespread support, the NPP combined realistic policy objectives with highly attractive public promises that resonated across different social and economic groups.

This approach should not necessarily be viewed negatively. Political change often requires working within existing systems rather than attempting to transform them from outside. Many educated middle-class supporters understood that not every campaign promise would be fully achievable and viewed some of the rhetoric as part of a broader strategy to secure electoral victory and create an opportunity for reform. This strategy ultimately contributed to the NPP’s success in both the presidential and parliamentary elections.

The Journey so far and the General Reading of the NPP

Electoral success did not automatically translate into governing capability. While the NPP demonstrated a genuine commitment to changing political culture and improving governance standards, good intentions alone are insufficient. Effective governance requires robust systems, competent institutions, experienced professionals, and clearly defined implementation pathways.

A successful reform agenda requires a structured framework encompassing strategy, policy development, legislation, regulation, enforcement, monitoring, and continuous review. Such a framework must be supported by expert knowledge, professional administration, transparent decision-making, and extensive public consultation. In many respects, this is where the NPP appears to have struggled during its first year in office. It appears NPP is treating symptoms.

Mistake 1- Disproportionate representation of real voters of NPP in Parliament

The origins of the National People’s Power (NPP) can be traced to the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP). Historically, the JVP’s core support base represented only a relatively small segment of the electorate like three percent. Many of these supporters were attracted by socialist ideals despite operating within a predominantly capitalist economic system. However, the NPP’s electoral success was achieved not through the support of traditional JVP voters alone, but through a much broader coalition of citizens, including many who neither identified with the JVP nor subscribed to its ideological foundations.

These voters supported the NPP because they believed in its promises of reform, good governance, and institutional change. Consequently, many expected that parliamentary candidates, regardless of their personal political backgrounds, would collectively pursue the policies and objectives presented by the NPP during the election campaign.

A key concern, however, is whether the current parliamentary representation adequately reflects the broad cross-section of voters who supported the NPP. There is a perception that many elected representatives and appointees continue to reflect the traditional JVP constituency more than the wider electorate that enabled the NPP’s victory. Similarly, many voters expected appointments to positions such as ministry secretaries, board directors, chairpersons, and other senior leadership roles to be made primarily on merit rather than political affiliation. Looking back at appointments made thus far, questions naturally arise as to whether the most suitable individuals have always been selected.

One possible explanation is that the NPP leadership, having limited practical experience in governing complex state institutions, may have preferred appointing individuals with whom they felt politically comfortable and who were easier to manage. While such appointments may strengthen political control, they do not necessarily guarantee administrative competence or policy delivery capability. The consequence has been an apparent difficulty in developing, reforming, and implementing policies, processes, and institutional frameworks capable of achieving the ambitious goals promised during the election campaign. As a result, meaningful governance reform and broader social transformation remain largely unrealised aspirations.

Mistake 2 – The inability to shed ‘Opposition’ mindset

Equally concerning is the inconsistency in public messaging and the body language projected by various sections of the Government. Even after assuming power, the NPP often appears to behave as though it remains in opposition. Still NPP members talked about past Government mistakes and corruption. They were appointed because people did not approve past mistakes. This is a Government which has very clear two-third parliamentary majority enabling them to change the constitution, outdated and polarised laws and introduce governance reforms. NPP Government has all the power to remove any obstructions excreted by influential groups in society to enable progress.

Still, the energy of current NPP government is used to criticise opposition politicians rather than doing the job in hand. In Cricket, we say let the bat and ball talk.

With a clear collective change management plan, even if a referendum is required, NPP can win it now. People would support them wholeheartedly if a Court decided the change requires a referendum. However, that possibility would not be a reality if they continue the way they do now after one more year without having a clear plan seeking approval.

Mistake 3- Taking long to make the right decision

A government elected on a platform of change should demonstrate its commitment to good governance by clearly differentiating itself from previous administrations. This requires objective decision-making on time, equal treatment of all citizens, and the consistent application of the law without favouritism toward political, religious, or social interest groups.

When the former speaker was accused of faking his professional qualifications, until the matter is resolved, he should have been asked to resign immediately. It took so much time to do it and by that time indelible damage has happened to NPP brand which will never be recuperated. When cabinet spokesman or other NPP members addressed public and expressed anything to damage the NPP brand, the leadership should have the guts to declare they were wrong and removed them from making public announcements on behalf of Government. NPP Government if fear of English language. English is only a tool. It is not a symbol of prestige or importance. If a Government Minister needs to attend an international forum, he or she should not be fear of taking a language translator. If the last USSR leader Mikhail Gorbachev or the current President of China Xi Jinping use a translator, why cannot our parliamentarians do this? By the way, it is said that both these leaders could and can speak English well and used the time of translation for preparing for a well-rounded answer. However, I am of the strong opinion that Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minster should be a high calibre, politically and socially matured, multi-language skilled person with high negotiation powers. When an internationally embarrassing incidents happened due to poor English language skills, the top leadership should accept the mistake and make necessary changes to avoid repeating of the mistakes. People love to see accepting mistakes and taking swift actions. The list of mistakes goes on: Coal purchasing, international monetary transactions, public tendering, slow actions on alleged crimes committed by influential public figures. It took unbelievably long time to take right actions. It says justice delayed is justice denied.

The Government should not govern with the primary objective of securing the next election by appeasing own political friends and associates or influential constituencies. Rather, it should be prepared to uphold the principle that all individuals are equal before the establish procedure, regulations and the law, regardless of status, influence, or public popularity. If the NPP can maintain discipline within its own ranks and prevent elected representatives from becoming captive to external influences, it is likely to retain the support of a substantial portion of the electorate over the longer term.

Mistake 4- Wrong learning strategy and poor governance

Beneath the political leadership sits the public governance structure, the leadership of which is, in most cases, appointed by political authorities. Effective governance depends not only on political direction but also on the competence, experience, and professionalism of those entrusted with administrative leadership.

Organisational learning generally occurs through three primary mechanisms: practical experience, observation of others, and formal guidance from subject-matter experts. The governance leadership appointed under the NPP has understandably sought to learn through direct experience. However, this situation is largely a consequence of placing significant emphasis on political affiliation rather than professional capability, technical expertise, and administrative experience when making appointments. As a result, much of this learning appears to have occurred without the benefit of appropriate institutional structures, adequate preparation, or expert support. This is reflected in contradictory public statements, policy inconsistencies, and communication shortcomings when responding to public concerns and inquiries.

On numerous occasions, Government representatives have commented on complex policy and technical matters without sufficient subject knowledge or professional verification. Consequently, senior leaders have often been compelled to spend valuable time and resources managing controversies and correcting public misunderstandings rather than focusing on strategic governance priorities and reform implementation.

At the same time, opposition parties, despite their relatively limited parliamentary representation, have effectively capitalised on these weaknesses. Through selective presentation of facts, political narratives, and, at times, the introduction of racial or cultural dimensions into public discourse, they have succeeded in creating uncertainty among sections of the electorate.

Many middle-class voters who supported the NPP on the basis of its promises of professionalism, accountability, and reform have become increasingly frustrated by what they perceive as inconsistent responses and inadequately professional communication. As a result, only one year into a five-year mandate, the NPP finds itself at a critical juncture: possessing a strong electoral mandate and genuine reform aspirations, yet continuing to grapple with the practical challenges of governance, institutional transformation, and effective policy execution.

A significant concern is the apparent absence of a clearly articulated national action plan that establishes short-, medium-, and long-term objectives, accompanied by measurable performance indicators, transparent progress reporting, and independently verifiable outcomes. The publication of periodic progress reports, supported by factual data and a comprehensive public communication strategy, would enable citizens to assess achievements objectively and strengthen public confidence. In the absence of such a framework, misinformation can more easily gain traction, forcing the Government to expend considerable effort responding to criticism and political backlash rather than maintaining focus on reform delivery. This represents a largely avoidable distraction.

Ultimate success

Ultimately, the success of the NPP will depend not on the scale of its electoral victory, but on its ability to translate vision into measurable outcomes through competent leadership, merit-based appointments, professional administration, evidence-based decision-making, and disciplined governance. Sustained public confidence will be earned through demonstrable results rather than political rhetoric alone.

Positive and negative aspects of the NPP Government

Governance

Positive Aspects -Anticorruption push; institutional reform efforts

Negative Aspects – Concerns about indecisiveness in actions. Slow progress. Not following strong evidence first and actions next process. Lack of control on behaviour of public sector staff with vested interests. Overconfidence in own skills without seeking support from skilled professionals available in abundance

Economy

Positive Aspects – Early signs of stabilisation

Negative Aspects – Poor communication of professional explains of the progress achieved so far. Limited relief for citizens; unmet economic promises

Public Sector

Positive Aspects – Strong progress in power sector

Negative Aspects – Responding to Public Sector renumeration increases without attributing it to key performance indicators. Lack of following scientific process of implementing educational reforms. No sign of Local Government reforms

Politics

Positive Aspects – Broke higher social strata, traditional right-wing twoparty, dominance; broadened parliamentary representation slightly

Negative Aspects – Ideological compromises (what is promised and what is doing), unmet expectations due to impractical promises.

Public Trust

Positive Aspect – High level bench mark set as the initial mandate

Negative Aspects – Growing disappointment after first year due to slow actions having 2/3 majority in parliament and having public support in hand. Poor stakeholder management skills. Poor strategic communication skills.

Part II of this article further outlines strategic goals for Sri Lanka and presents global examples demonstrating how other countries have successfully achieved similar objectives.

Hacktivist group defaces Senate website, calls for accountability in gov’t

Local hacking activist collective Nullsec Philippines defaced the official website of the Senate of the Philippines at around 11:30 p.m. on Wednesday, June 10.

Nullsec Philippines altered the contents of the website and left a message to the Senate as it admitted responsibility for the hacking incident in a Facebook post.

‘The Filipino people entrusted you with power, responsibility, and the duty to serve the nation-not personal interests, political dynasties, or corrupt networks. Every peso lost to corruption is a meal taken from a family, a classroom left unfinished, and a future denied,’ Nullsec Philippines said.

Defacing, in cybersecurity, is the act of illegally breaking into a website to alter its visual appearance and content, replacing it with a protest message, similar to virtual graffiti or digital vandalism.

‘The people deserve truth. The people deserve accountability. The people deserve better. We do not forgive, We do not forget. Expect Us,’ the hacktivists added.

Nullsec Philippines is a collective of grey-hat ‘hacktivists’ who previously defaced official government websites in late 2025, including the websites of the Department of Education and the University of the Philippines Open University.

As of 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, June 11, the Senate website remains under maintenance but no longer displays Nullsec’s message.

The Senate Electronic Data Processing and Management Information System Bureau (EDP-MIS) confirmed that their website had been defaced, but assured the public that no sensitive information was affected.

‘Based on our initial assessment, there is no indication that any confidential or sensitive information has been compromised,’ they said.

The Senate mess

The Senate has been in chaos for a month now since Sen. Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa unexpectedly reappeared in session after six months of hiding on May 11. Dela Rosa’s presence in the chamber became significant as 13 senators voted for the ouster of then Senate President Vicente “Tito” Sotto III and elected Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano in his place.

It was then followed by a gun-related incident on May 13, which paved the way for Dela Rosa’s escape and evasion of an active arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court over alleged crimes against humanity.

Currently, authorities are still tracking the whereabouts of the fugitive lawmaker. Obstruction of justice cases have also been filed against Sen. Robin Padilla for allegedly helping Dela Rosa escape.

Leadership dispute

Another round of chaos ensued in the Senate on June 1 after the arrest of Sen. Jinggoy Estrada for his P573-million plunder case related to flood control corruption.

Since his arrest, his allies in the former majority bloc, including Cayetano, who was then holding the Senate leadership, refused to attend sessions for two consecutive days. Sessions were canceled during their absence, causing delays in the passage of some key measures.

The leadership issue in the Senate intensified when on June 3, Sen. Francis Escudero, who previously associated himself with the Cayetano-led bloc, showed up and joined the 11-member minority.

A quorum of 12 was then declared, and Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian was elected Senate President Pro Tempore. Arguments arose from then on as Cayetano insisted that he still holds the Senate leadership position.

The Senate was then divided into two factions – the Cayetano bloc and the Gatchalian bloc – but both Malacañang and the House of Representatives already recognized Gatchalian as the new Senate leader and his bloc as the new majority.

The chaos in the Senate continues after a possible security threat was relayed to senators by the National Bureau of Investigation earlier this week. This potential threat prompted Gatchalian to order a work-from-home arrangement for all Senate employees. The Senate building was also placed under heightened alert and police were deployed to secure the area.

The developments came as the Senate prepares to hold an impeachment trial against Vice President Sara Duterte over graft and corruption, betrayal of public trust and unexplained wealth.

Ateneo team declined supervision, held activity away from resort front – police

Members of the Ateneo men’s basketball team were allegedly warned about sea conditions before a drowning incident in Aurora that killed two players, police said on Wednesday, June 10.

Colonel Percival Pineda, Aurora police director, said the group had moved about 300 meters away from the resort and ‘asked to be alone’ during their team-building activity at the Hermanos Leisure Farm and Surf Camp in Barangay Lipit, Dipaculao.

‘The place they went to walk by the coastline was far from the resort front, around 300 meters. But the resort owner said it was safe in front of them and their lifeguard was there,’ Pineda said in a teleconference briefing in Camp Crame.

He added that the group declined supervision during the activity.

‘They asked not to be disturbed in their activity. When they left, that’s when the incident happened,’ he said.

Based on accounts from the resort owner, the team had been advised on sea conditions and safety measures were in place, including a lifeguard stationed at the resort front, Pineda said.

However, the group allegedly conducted a waist-deep water activity parallel to the shore, where four members were swept by a current at around 2:40 p.m. on Monday.

Pineda said Ateneo men’s basketball player Rene Clert Baterbonia, 19, Nigerian import Chukwuemeka Divine Adili, 21, and two others were found about 30 to 40 minutes later after they were swept by a current.

They were given first aid at the scene before being rushed to a medical facility, where Baterbonia and Adili were later declared dead.

Pineda said the resort had safety signage and measures in place but noted that the group did not coordinate with the local government unit.

‘Based on our conversation with the resort owner, the team’s activity was exclusive,’ he said. ‘They did not coordinate with the local government unit regarding their training.’

Authorities have ruled out foul play based on statements from the resort owner, lifeguard, coaching staff, and municipal disaster risk reduction and management personnel.

Separate investigations are being conducted by the Philippine National Police Criminal Investigation and Detection Group and the National Bureau of Investigation to determine the circumstances of the incident.

Nigeria’s response. The Nigerian Embassy in Manila said it has been coordinating with Adili’s family, Ateneo de Manila University and authorities following the incident.

In a statement posted on Facebook, the embassy said Adili’s family has requested an autopsy before arrangements for his repatriation to Nigeria are finalized.

It added that Adili was among three student-athletes caught in a strong sea current during the activity, with one survivor.

A post-mortem examination certificate on Baterbonia showed he died of asphyxia due to drowning, while authorities have yet to receive Adili’s death certificate.

Timing helped limit Mindanao quake toll; preparedness still key – OCD

The timing of the magnitude 7.8 earthquake that struck off Maasim, Sarangani, in Mindanao at 7:37 a.m. on June 8 may have helped limit the death toll. Still, continued preparedness remains crucial as affected communities grapple with thousands of aftershocks, according to the Office of Civil Defense (OCD).

OCD spokesperson Junie Castillo said the timing of the powerful earthquake that struck early in the morning on the first day of classes, when many students were gathered in open areas for the flag-raising ceremonies instead of being inside school buildings, was a ‘blessing in disguise.’

It could have been different if they had been inside their classrooms. Most students were attending flag-raising ceremonies, so they were in open spaces,’ Castillo told INQUIRER in an interview on Wednesday.

‘[The quake] happened daytime. Imagine if this happened at night. That’s a different story,’ he said. ‘The time it happens really affects the impact of every hazard, not just earthquakes.’

Castillo was asked whether the timing of a disaster can significantly influence its impact.

He added that nighttime earthquakes generally pose greater risks as people are inside their homes and visibility is limited, potentially complicating evacuation and rescue efforts.

Previous quakes

Apart from the timing of the earthquake, Castillo said advances in disaster preparedness over the years may have also helped mitigate its impact.

Compared with the 1976 Moro Gulf earthquake-an 8.1-magnitude quake that struck past midnight, triggering a tsunami that took around 8,000 lives, the death toll from the recent Mindanao quake remains substantially lower at 45 as of posting time.

Not to discount the lives lost, but after 50 years since the 1976 quake, Castillo said communities now have access to better information that was not widely available decades ago.

‘If we talk about the preparedness that we’re doing now, one thing we have are references from disasters before that have been factored into our preparedness efforts,’ Castillo said.

‘Of course, we didn’t have the ‘duck, cover, and hold’ protocol back then. We also didn’t have evacuation procedures. Those kinds of mechanisms simply were not in place at the time,’ he added.

He also noted that communities with living memory of the 1976 Moro Gulf earthquake may be better prepared, as some residents have either experienced the disaster themselves or learned about it from those who did.

In addition, the spokesperson said there is a wealth of ‘science-based information that is available right now which was not available before.’

Preparedness vs resilience

As aftershocks continue to rattle affected communities, Castillo urged residents to maintain a ‘presence of mind’ and familiarize themselves with earthquake-related hazards in their areas.

He identified five major earthquake-related hazards, including ground shaking, surface rupture, earthquake-induced landslides, tsunamis, and liquefaction, reminding residents to look out for these.

It’s not about romanticizing resilience,’ Castillo said. ‘Preparedness comes before resilience.’

He added that residents should continue monitoring advisories from authorities and ensure that damaged structures are inspected before reoccupying them.

Moreover, Castillo also said relief efforts should go beyond the distribution of food and non-food items.

He stressed the need to provide psychosocial support to affected communities, particularly children and families coping with trauma caused by the powerful earthquake and the continuing aftershocks.

Urgent Baguio need: New wastewater treatment plant

Sanitation work crews of the summer capital have been busy scrubbing down its only sewage treatment plant (STP) after failing its recent performance evaluations.

Baguio was slapped with a notice of violation after its outdated and overworked treatment facility failed tests conducted by the Environmental Management Bureau (EMB) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources in December, due to high biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), lawyer Rhenan Diwas, city environment and parks management officer, informed the Baguio City Council on June 1.

BOD measures the abundance of organic matter in waterways that consumes all the oxygen required by native marine life.

In February, the Baguio STP failed again because of a buildup of phosphate and oil attributed to kitchen cooking oil in the Balili River, where treated domestic water is discharged in this part of the city.

I have reminded restaurants and eateries not to dump cooking oil in our sewers,’ Diwas said.

Work crews have literally been wiping down STP turbines and other equipment to remove the oil, and will purchase submersible tanks as an extra measure to contain pollutants in a bid to pass the next round of tests this month, he said.

‘Moral imperative’

Mayor Benjamin Magalong and the local government’s city managers have long intended to modernize and improve Baguio’s STP and its entire septic network, some of which date back to the 1930s, decades after the mountain resort city was designed, built, and opened in 1909 by the American colonial government.

Back in 2019, the local government expected to focus most of its resources on repairing and expanding sewer coverage as its ‘moral imperative’ to ensure that four rivers emanating from their Baguio headwaters are reasonably clean.

These are the 24-kilometer Balili, which exits at the farmlands of Benguet neighbor La Trinidad; 33-km Bued that traverses Kennon Road; 6-km Asin-Galliano that discharges into Tuba, Benguet; and 88-km Ambalanga that flows to the mines of Itogon, Benguet.

In 2020, water quality samples taken from Balili River confirmed that it contained 160 quadrillions of fecal coliform bacterial count. The La Trinidad government has been dealing with households along the Balili riverbanks suspected of draining their septic tanks into the waterway.

Since 2011, a consortium of Baguio and Benguet universities has been developing action plans to regulate riverside settlements in order to rehabilitate the river.

A cluster of La Trinidad houses that was turned into a colorful mural and has been a major tourist attraction towers over the portion of Balili that leads out of Baguio.

Patchwork repair

But the polluted water could also be traced back to the increased volume of septage that has overwhelmed the 35-year-old Baguio STP. Built in 1986 by Japan’s Tobishima Corp., the facility can process only 8,600 cubic meters of wastewater per day, which is equivalent to 57,334 people in a city populated by 368,426, per the 2024 census.

Overpopulation and overdevelopment has increased the STP wastewater volume to 12,000 cu.m. and is suspected to include sewage transported surreptitiously by poso negro (septic desludging) trucks from some Benguet towns, Diwas said.

An urban carrying capacity report in 2019 concludes that Baguio resources to address liquid waste were breached in 2007.

Lowell Barton Jr., the EMB point man overseeing the Baguio case, said his agency has stopped short of elevating Baguio’s violations to the Pollution Adjudication Board (PAB), which could impose a P25,000 daily fine until the rivers are cleaned. The PAB could even order the STP to shut down, which could trigger ‘a domino effect no one wants,’ Barton told the council.

Diwas said the city government has resorted to patchwork repair jobs to keep the STP running smoothly while it negotiates for grants or loans to begin a massive overhaul of the facility which would require P1.2 billion, or to replace it with a modern system that costs P2.9 billion, he told the council.

The STP in its current condition only serves 4,000 commercial and residential connections in roughly 65 barangays out of the total 128 heavily populated villages.

A $63-million loan from the Asian Development Bank (ADB), negotiated in 2020 and reduced in 2025 to $45 million, was removed as a national government priority last year over delays in securing final council endorsement.

Mark Lapid, chief operating officer of the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority, offered to provide P500 million when he attended this year’s Baguio Flower Festival.

Magalong had also applied for a second P500-million grant at the Department of Public Works and Highways.

Gradual upgrade

Diwas said Baguio has drawn up a gradual upgrade and expansion of its sewage networks until 2035, intending to increase sewer connections by 19,000 households.

Magalong and his predecessor, now Baguio Rep. Mauricio Domogan, also addressed pollution issues by regulating and then finally banning all piggeries from operating inside the city.

Baguio’s sewerage program is tied to the city’s overall campaign to ease the impact of climate change on a mountain city, which the ADB described in a 2023 study as the recipient of the highest precipitation (rainfall) in the country.

‘As per the hydraulic and hydrodynamic analysis, the rapidly changing climate will result in a noticeable rainfall increase in Baguio over the intermediate future period of 2031-2060,’ projected at about 20 percent, the study said. This affects how groundwater aquifers are recharged and how flooding impacts the rivers leaving the city.

Herbal malaria remedies under scrutiny as study warns against mixing with conventional drugs

Fresh concerns have emerged over the widespread practice of combining herbal remedies with conventional malaria drugs, as experts warn that such mixtures may reduce treatment effectiveness and pose potential health risks.

The warning follows a detailed study conducted by scientists at Obafemi Awolowo University, led by Samuel Akintunde Odediran. The research examined the antimalarial properties of two widely used African plants, Chrysophyllum albidum (African star apple) and Citrus aurantifolia (lime), and how they interact with standard medications.

Published in the Annals of Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the study sheds light on a long-standing practice across many African communities, where herbal mixtures are often used alongside, or in place of, modern medicines to treat malaria.

Malaria remains a major public health challenge in sub-Saharan Africa, with millions of cases recorded annually. Health authorities such as the World Health Organisation continue to recommend evidence-based combination therapies involving conventional drugs to combat the disease and reduce the risk of resistance.

Despite this, many patients still rely on traditional remedies, frequently combining them with prescribed drugs under the assumption that the effects will be complementary.

The new findings suggest that this assumption may be dangerously flawed.

According to the study, extracts from both African star apple and lime demonstrated measurable antimalarial activity when tested in mice infected with malaria parasites. However, their effectiveness varied depending on the plant part and the type of treatment being evaluated.

African star apple leaves showed notable preventive potential, achieving a 67 per cent reduction in malaria parasites. This result was comparable to the 69 per cent reduction recorded for its stem bark and the 73 per cent achieved by the standard drug Pyrimethamine in similar tests. These findings suggested that certain parts of the plant may offer some level of protection against malaria infection.

Lime fruit extracts, on the other hand, proved particularly effective in suppressing parasite growth, achieving as much as 93 per cent reduction in parasitemia in some cases. This strong suppressive effect also translated into longer survival times for infected mice, indicating that the plant may help control the disease, even if it does not completely eliminate the parasite.

Meanwhile, the bark of the African star apple showed the most promise in curative models, suggesting potential for treating established infections. However, researchers noted concerns about its safety, as it was associated with lower survival rates in some instances, raising the possibility of toxicity.

Despite these encouraging findings, the study confirmed that conventional antimalarial drugs such as chloroquine and pyrimethamine remain significantly more effective than plant extracts when used alone, reinforcing the continued importance of modern medicines in malaria treatment.

The researchers also observed that the leaves and fruits of the lime tree performed poorly in preventive models and were associated with lower survival outcomes.

According to them, this suggests they may not be suitable for malaria prophylaxis, though they may still have value in traditional roles such as repelling mosquitoes or supporting general health.

However, the most critical finding of the study relates to the interaction between herbal remedies and conventional drugs, a practice that is both common and largely unregulated.

The study found that combining plant extracts with standard antimalarial medications often reduced the effectiveness of the drugs, rather than enhancing them. In some cases, the combinations produced significantly poorer outcomes than the drugs alone.

For instance, mixtures involving lime extracts and chloroquine, as well as African star apple bark and pyrimethamine, were identified as particularly problematic.

Even more concerning were indications of possible toxicity in certain combinations, raising serious questions about their safety in real-world use.

These findings challenge the widespread belief that natural remedies are inherently safe or that combining them with modern drugs will automatically improve treatment outcomes.

Instead, the study highlights the complex chemical interactions that can occur when different substances are taken together, interactions that may interfere with how drugs are absorbed, metabolised, or function within the body.

The research also explored combinations of different plant extracts, reflecting common practices in traditional medicine where multiple plants are used in a single preparation. While most of these combinations did not outperform standard drugs, some were found to improve survival time in infected mice.

Researchers believe this effect may be linked to immune-boosting or supportive properties of the plants, rather than direct antimalarial action. Compounds such as flavonoids and vitamin C, particularly abundant in lime, are known to enhance immune response and reduce inflammation, which may help the body cope better with infection.

However, the results were inconsistent. Not all plant combinations were beneficial, and some appeared to reduce effectiveness or introduce additional risks, especially when combined with conventional drugs.

The researchers emphasised the need for caution, noting that the unpredictable nature of these interactions makes it difficult to recommend such practices without proper scientific validation.

They called for increased public awareness about the potential risks of mixing herbal remedies with prescribed medications, as well as stronger regulation of herbal medicine practices. They also stressed the importance of further research to better understand the safety, efficacy, and mechanisms of action of traditional treatments.

For patients, the message is clear: combining herbal remedies with conventional malaria drugs is not always harmless. Without proper medical guidance, it can reduce treatment effectiveness, delay recovery, or even lead to adverse health outcomes.

For healthcare providers and policymakers, the challenge lies in bridging the gap between traditional and modern medicine. This includes educating communities, engaging with traditional practitioners, and developing frameworks that ensure safe and evidence-based use of herbal treatments.

At the same time, the study underscores the potential value of medicinal plants. For decades, plant-based compounds have played a crucial role in drug discovery, including the development of some of the world’s most effective antimalarial therapies.

However, translating traditional knowledge into safe and effective medical treatments requires rigorous testing, precise dosing, and a thorough understanding of how different substances interact.

Ultimately, the story of African star apple and lime is not just about two plants. It reflects a broader reality, one in which ancient healing traditions intersect with modern science. As researchers continue to explore this intersection, the goal remains clear: to harness the benefits of both worlds while minimising the risks.

FG set for TVET cohort 2 rollout, trains monitoring officers

The Federal Government has announced plans to commence the rollout of the second cohort of its Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) programme, following the successful implementation of the first phase, which currently has over 150,000 young Nigerians undergoing skills training across the country.

The development was disclosed during a two-day capacity-building workshop for State Project Monitoring Officers (PMOs) under the TVET programme, held in Abuja.

The workshop, themed: ‘Strengthening Monitoring, Compliance and Programme Delivery for Cohort 2 Implementation,’ was organised by the Federal Ministry of Education to strengthen monitoring systems, enhance transparency, improve compliance, and ensure effective programme delivery ahead of the commencement of Cohort 2.

Speaking at the opening ceremony, the National Coordinator of Special Programmes under the Minister of Education, Adebayo Onigbanjo, described the training as a critical step towards consolidating the gains recorded under the TVET initiative and maintaining implementation standards nationwide.

According to him, state PMOs play a pivotal role in monitoring accredited training centres, ensuring compliance with programme guidelines, and guaranteeing that beneficiaries receive quality instruction aligned with national development goals.

‘TVET is one of the key pillars of the Nigeria Education Sector Renewal Initiative (NESRI) and one of the flagship programmes designed to equip Nigerians with practical, industry-relevant and employable skills,’ Onigbanjo said.

He explained that the workshop was designed to ensure that monitoring officers are fully aligned with their responsibilities and equipped with the tools and knowledge required to support training centres effectively.

Onigbanjo noted that participants were being trained on the operation of biometric registration systems deployed across training centres to strengthen data integrity, beneficiary verification, and accountability.

‘Transparency remains at the heart of the TVET initiative. We are deliberately leveraging technology while maintaining human oversight to ensure accountability at every stage of implementation. Every trainee is biometrically registered, and all payments are made directly to beneficiaries’ bank accounts, thereby eliminating opportunities for abuse and ensuring that support reaches the intended recipients,’ he stated.

He further revealed that the programme currently operates through more than 1,600 accredited training centres located across nearly every local government area in the country, making the role of State PMOs increasingly important in ensuring quality assurance, compliance, and prompt resolution of operational challenges.

Also speaking, the National Project Monitoring Officer for TVET and IDEAS, Odewunmi Olatunji, said the engagement provided an opportunity to assess lessons learnt from the first phase of implementation and prepare stakeholders for a more effective rollout of Cohort 2.

According to him, the workshop creates a platform for direct engagement between national and state-level officers to identify implementation challenges and jointly develop practical solutions.

‘This engagement allows us to receive feedback from officers who are directly involved in implementation at the state level. Their experiences are invaluable in helping us address gaps, improve coordination, and ensure that challenges encountered during the first phase are not repeated in the next cycle,’ Olatunji said.

He added that officials of the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), biometric registration service providers, and other implementation partners were participating in the workshop to ensure alignment ahead of the commencement of the second cohort.

Discussions at the workshop focused on funding processes, payments to training centres and beneficiaries, compliance requirements, accreditation procedures, reporting frameworks, and strategies for improving programme performance nationwide.

The planned rollout of Cohort 2 comes as the Federal Government intensifies efforts to reposition technical and vocational education as a major driver of youth employment, industrialisation, and economic growth.

Speaking recently at the National Technical and Vocational Education and Training Conference 2026, the Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, said the government was implementing one of the most ambitious TVET reform programmes in Nigeria’s history through the Nigeria Education Sector Renewal Initiative (NESRI).

According to the minister, over 1.3 million Nigerians initiated applications when the TVET portal opened, while more than 963,000 completed their applications, demonstrating unprecedented demand for skills acquisition opportunities.

He disclosed that over 150,000 trainees are currently undergoing training nationwide, while the government has expanded its network to more than 1,600 accredited training centres across the country.

The minister further revealed that more than 4,000 instructors and teachers have been trained in modern pedagogical approaches and industry-specific trades, while over 2,500 Quality Assurance Managers have been deployed to strengthen standards across Federal Technical Colleges, Vocational Enterprise Institutions, and Skills Training Centres.

Alausa noted that the Federal Government has also upgraded more than 38 technical workshops and launched the National Skills Information Centre, while work is ongoing to operationalise a National Job Matching Platform that will directly connect skills acquisition to employment opportunities.

‘Our goal is very clear: Every TVET graduate should possess skills that are relevant, marketable, certified, and linked to economic opportunities,’ he said.

He stressed that the next phase of reforms would focus on scaling quality, deepening industry participation, strengthening labour market linkages, and ensuring sustainable financing for skills development.

The minister added that the future economy would require expertise in emerging fields such as Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Automation, Renewable Energy, Cybersecurity, Precision Agriculture, Advanced Manufacturing, and Digital Entrepreneurship, noting that the government is determined to build a workforce capable of driving innovation and national development.

The Federal Ministry of Education reaffirmed its commitment to building a skilled workforce capable of supporting industrial growth, entrepreneurship, productivity, and economic prosperity, while ensuring that quality assurance, accountability, and effective monitoring remain central to the success of the TVET programme.

Ondo targets 500,000 health insurance enrollees by 2027

The Ondo State government is targeting 500,000 enrollees under its Orange Health Insurance Scheme (ORANGHIS) by next year as part of efforts to cushion the impact of rising healthcare costs and expand access to affordable medical services.

The Director-General, Ondo State Contributory Health Commission (ODCHC), Abiodun Oyeneyin, made this known on Tuesday at the maiden National Summit of State Social Health Insurance Agencies (SSHIAs) in Akure.

The summit, themed ‘Economic Realities and the UHC Dream: Mobilising States for Scalable Health Insurance,’ brought together policymakers, healthcare providers and stakeholders to explore strategies for expanding coverage and advancing Universal Health Coverage (UHC) across Nigeria.

Oyeneyin said the scheme had continued to record steady growth, attracting enrollees from the formal sector, informal workers, vulnerable groups, and beneficiaries of the Basic Healthcare Provision Fund.

According to him, more than 300,000 residents are enrolled in ORANGHIS, with projections indicating a sharp increase following the government’s recent decision to extend coverage to retirees. ‘We have over 300,000 enrollees under ORANGHIS. The government has also approved the inclusion of retirees, estimated at 34,000 and still growing,’ he said.

He expressed optimism that enrolment would rise significantly within the next year, driven by expanded coverage and sustained investment in the state’s healthcare system.

‘We hope that by this time next year, we will be close to 500,000 enrollees, if not more,’ he added.

Governor Lucky Aiyedatiwa announced free health insurance coverage for retirees during the opening of the summit, describing it as part of efforts to improve healthcare access for senior citizens. The governor also unveiled a N1 billion Hospital Intervention Fund aimed at upgrading and modernising healthcare facilities across the state.

Oyeneyin said: ‘Healthcare is expensive, and insurance provides certainty in budgeting while guaranteeing access to quality services,’ he said.

He added that sustained campaigns and strategic partnerships had contributed to rising enrolment, alongside improvements in service delivery, particularly in drug availability across accredited facilities.

Also, the President, Forum of Chief Executive Officers of State Health Insurance Agencies in Nigeria, Mohammed Safana, called for stronger inter-state collaboration to improve healthcare financing and expand insurance coverage nationwide.