EPL: Man Utd win three in a row, Chelsea lose

Manchester United extended their Premier League resurgence on Saturday with a thrilling 4-2 win over Brighton and Hove Albion, sealing three consecutive league victories for the first time in 20 months.

Matheus Cunha opened his United account with a calm finish before Casemiro’s deflected strike doubled the lead.

Bryan Mbeumo’s brace later ensured the result, despite a late scare from former Red Devil Danny Welbeck and Charalampos Kostoulas.

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The win marked a significant turnaround for United, who had lost their last three home meetings with Brighton.

Meanwhile, Chelsea’s inconsistency continued as they fell 2-1 to Sunderland at Stamford Bridge, conceding in stoppage time.

Alejandro Garnacho’s early goal against his former club looked to have set the tone, but Wilson Isidor equalised before Chemsdine Talbi’s dramatic late winner silenced the home crowd.

The contrasting results leave United climbing toward the top four, while Chelsea’s hopes of breaking into the Champions League spots took another hit in a frustrating evening for the Blues.

Superhuman

In 2009, as a newly minted house officer, I had a point to prove, a goal to achieve and a reputation to uphold. My family was rooting for me. And my mother, who had sacrificed everything to ensure that her daughter became a doctor, was constantly singing in my ear: ‘Make us proud.’

Burdened with that responsibility, I made the mental decision to be the best damned house officer in the Asokoro District Hospital. I went about my job, sometimes taking on extra work along the way without complaining. ‘Dr do you want to assist in this surgery or are you tired?’ No sir, I can join. ‘Dr I know it is time for you to leave, but can you quickly see the patient in bed 12?’ ‘Doctor, you have not finished taking blood samples for all the babies in the neonatal ward.’ ‘Doctor, have you left? Please come back, the patient in bed 2 is not making urine’

I tried to be a superhuman – yes, to all the work – after all, I signed up for it. But what I did not sign up for was the almighty 72-hour shift.

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The first day I saw the call roster in O and G, I was shocked. As a house officer and the first on call, I would resume Saturday morning, work throughout the day and night, continue to Sunday, work throughout the day (and night) as well, and then somehow appear bright eyed and smiling on Monday at 8am and work again, before finally living for home at 4pm. Therefore, if I came to work on Saturday morning I would leave on Monday evening. At one point, we were only two house officers in the department; and so, I was on call every weekend. This is not to say that I did not take calls during the week; I would do alternate day calls, and the dreaded weekend calls when it was my turn.

By the time I concluded my obstetrics and gynaecology posting, I weighed 44kg and had bags the size of ‘Ghana-must-go’ under my eyes. I survived on stale biscuits, soft drinks and Indomie noodles. They were days I cried in the bathroom from sheer exhaustion – my feet were swollen, my body ached in places I didn’t know existed, and I had a banging headache almost every day. To make matters worse, I was pregnant with my first baby but had to work like a corporal in the army.

I would not wish these working conditions on even my worst enemy.

When news broke that a young doctor in Rivers State, Oluwafemi Rotifa, a resident doctor at the Rivers State University Teaching Hospital (RSUTH), was confirmed dead after reportedly working a gruelling 72-hour shift, my heart sank. In 2023, another Dr Umoh Michael died on Sunday after allegedly working 72 hours non-stop. According to reports, Michael died during a church service at the United Evangelical Church on September 17. He was also said to have worked a 72-hour non-stop shift at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, where he was a resident doctor.

This is not just another tragic headline; it is a grim reflection of a system that has normalised cruelty in the name of service. The Nigerian Medical Association rightly lamented his passing, but beneath the grief lies an uncomfortable truth: This was not an isolated incident. It is the consequence of a deeply defective system that continues to demand the impossible from its doctors.

Doctors are trained to endure sleepless nights, grueling calls and the emotional weight of life-and-death decisions. But endurance has its limits. A 72-hour shift is not just ‘tough,’ it is a form of institutionalised hazard. Sleep deprivation impairs cognition to the same degree as alcohol intoxication. It slows reflexes, clouds judgement and chips away at empathy. Imagine being asked to insert a central line or resuscitate a newborn after being awake for 48 hours. The risk of error becomes frighteningly high. And unlike machines, our bodies exact a toll: hypertension, arrhythmias, mental burnout; and in this tragic case, sudden death.

Consider the aviation industry. No pilot is ever allowed to fly a plane after such prolonged hours of work. Aviation authorities across the world strictly regulate duty times and enforce mandatory rest periods. Why? Because a fatigued pilot is a danger, not only to himself but every passenger on board. The society recognises this and builds safeguards. Yet in health care, where doctors hold the lives of dozens in their hands each day, such safeguards are glaringly absent.

Are we superhuman? Why do we insist on treating doctors as expendable? Are patients’ lives less worthy of protection than airline passengers?

Part of the problem is cultural. We lionise doctors as superhuman beings who can push beyond natural limits. ‘That’s what training is for,’ some argue, as if medical education is meant to break us rather than equip us. Older doctors say things like ‘We went through it and did not die, therefore, so must you.’

This mythology serves administrators and governments well because it excuses systemic failure. It allows hospitals to stretch thin staffing rosters, avoid hiring more personnel and defer the investment needed to fix health systems.

Doctors are not superhuman. We bleed, we get tired, we mourn. And when we collapse under the weight of impossible demands, the system shrugs and replaces us with the next young graduate in line. This cycle of exploitation is unsustainable and dangerous.

The persistence of 72-hour shifts is not accidental. It is the by-product of chronic underfunding, poor planning and a lack of accountability. Many public hospitals in Nigeria are short-staffed, forcing resident doctors to plug impossible gaps. The doctor-patient ratio in Nigeria stands at an alarming 1:9083, far from the recommended 1:600 ratio.

Government budgets prioritise bricks and mortar – new buildings, new wards – while neglecting the human resource that actually drives health care. In teaching hospitals, the excuse is ‘training,’ but in truth, these shifts are a cheap way to provide round-the-clock manpower. Everyone knows it is unsafe. Everyone knows it is exploitative, yet the inertia continues because reform requires political will, financial investment and a reordering of priorities.

Real change starts with admitting the obvious: fatigue kills – not only doctors but also the patients they are meant to serve. That is why certain reforms can no longer be postponed. Just as pilots are protected by strict duty-time limits, doctors too must have legislation that prevents any resident from being worked beyond 24 consecutive hours. At the same time, Nigeria must urgently expand its health workforce by training and retaining more doctors, nurses and physician assistants, so that endless shifts are no longer the default. Hospitals need to abandon the culture of marathon calls and instead redesign duty rosters around structured shifts where safe handovers, not one exhausted individual, guarantee continuity of care.

Wellness must also move from being an afterthought to a policy priority, with mental health support, mandatory rest and even sleep facilities built into the system.

Above all, there must be accountability: hospital administrators and teaching hospital boards should no longer escape responsibility when unsafe schedules cause harm.

The death of this young doctor is a tragedy, but if we only mourn and move on, it would become just another line in the long obituary of Nigeria’s health system. True honour lies in ensuring that it never happens again.

We must ask ourselves hard questions: Why do we persist with a system we know is defective? Why is a pilot’s rest sacrosanct but a doctor’s life negotiable? And why, in 2025, do we still pretend that doctors are superhuman? They are not. We are not. I certainly am not. We are human beings entrusted with the sacred duty of healing others. To do that well, we must first be allowed to rest, to live, to thrive; otherwise, the system that kills its healers will ultimately fail its patients too.

Repeat; First published September 5, 2025

Regina Daniels Makes Public Appearance Without Wedding Ring

Nollywood actress Regina Daniels has made her first public appearance since her reported fallout with husband and politician Ned Nwoko, appearing notably without her wedding ring.

Daniels, who recently took a break from social media, shared a short video on her Instagram Stories on Saturday showing her aboard a private jet with friends, enjoying drinks and chanting, ‘Morale, high!’

Her ring finger, however, was bare – a detail that quickly drew attention from fans and fueled fresh speculation about the state of her marriage.

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Another video from the same flight later showed that she was accompanied by her co-wife, Laila, suggesting that the absence of her ring may not hold much significance.

The development follows a wave of controversy between the actress and her husband.

Daniels had earlier accused Nwoko of violence, while her siblings claimed the businessman sent thugs to assault her.

Nwoko, in turn, alleged that the actress was struggling with drug and alcohol use, which he said often led to violent outbursts.

Neither Regina Daniels nor Ned Nwoko has issued any new statement regarding the situation.

The actress’s latest appearance marks her first public outing since the dispute became public.

Communication Experts Call For Reimagined Nigerian Narrative

Communication and media professionals have called for a deliberate effort to reshape Nigeria’s national identity through storytelling and strategic communication.

They made the call on Saturday at The Nigerian Side Summit 2025 held in Abuja on Saturday.

The summit, themed ‘Storytelling and Strategic Communications for Nation-Building,’ brought together communication experts, creatives, and development practitioners committed to transforming how Nigeria is perceived locally and globally.

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In her opening remarks, Tari Abili, Abuja Chapter Lead of The Comms Avenue, said the initiative aimed to inspire a new national conversation that celebrates creativity, resilience, and progress.

‘Communication is a connector. It bridges distance, unites perspectives, and helps us find common ground even when we come from different places and experiences.

‘This summit is our collective opportunity to reimagine the narrative of Nigeria – to explore how storytelling and strategic communication can become instruments of transformation, unity, and national pride,’Abili said.

Delivering the keynote address, Mr. Emmanuel Dania, CEO of AmouroG Oil and Gas and Co-founder of Astral Media, emphasized that communication is central to defining Nigeria’s collective identity.

‘Communication is more than just exchanging words; it is the lifeblood of our society,’ Dania said. ‘Each time we share a story, a thought, or a dream, we are constructing our identity. In a country as diverse as Nigeria, with over 250 ethnic groups, communication is the loom that weaves our many threads together.’

He urged communicators to use storytelling and media responsibly to promote inclusion and national cohesion.

‘The stories we tell shape perceptions and influence identities,’ he added. ‘We must strive to promote narratives that unite us rather than divide us. Let us communicate with purpose, with passion, and with a commitment to building a stronger, united Nigeria.’

Dania also called for investment in education and technology to strengthen communication skills, especially among young Nigerians, saying effective dialogue could ‘pave the way for understanding and reconciliation.’

In his presentation titled ‘Narrative as Infrastructure: Why Stories Are the New Roads,’ Gideon Ibeabuchi, General Manager of Mswitch Creative Hub, described storytelling as the foundation of social and national transformation.

‘Every road built in concrete begins as a story – a vision someone believed could connect people and possibilities,’ Ibeabuchi said. ‘In the same way, every thriving nation begins not with money or power, but with narrative.’

He argued that nations rise or fall based on the stories they believe about themselves.

‘Whoever controls the narrative controls the future,’ he noted. ‘Africa’s future must be told by Africans – through our own lens, with our own rhythm, and in our own voice.’

Ibeabuchi revealed that through the StoryXLab initiative, Mswitch Creative Hub is training a new generation of African storytellers and creative technologists capable of shaping how the continent is perceived globally.

The Nigerian Side movement, which convened the summit, seeks to challenge stereotypes and promote a richer, more authentic portrayal of Nigeria through storytelling, dialogue, and collaboration.

As the discussions concluded, participants agreed that stories remain powerful tools for building unity, fostering innovation, and redefining Nigeria’s image on the world stage.

‘When stories change, nations change,’ Ibeabuchi said in closing. ‘And when nations change, the world begins to pay attention.’

Truck Falls Off Lagos Bridge, Lands On Bus Station

A devastating accident occurred in Lagos early Saturday when a truck skidded off the Oshodi bridge and plunged into the bus station below.

According to eyewitnesses, the incident happened along the Apapa-Oshodi Expressway, inward Mile 2.

The truck, which was fully loaded with toner printing materials, reportedly lost control while descending the bridge, resulting in the crash.

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No lives were lost in the incident. However, the truck driver sustained severe injuries, including fractures to his limbs and arms.

Emergency responders arrived promptly and rushed him to a nearby hospital for treatment.

The accident caused significant disruption to traffic in the area, as officials of the Lagos State Traffic Management Authority (LASTMA) worked tirelessly to restore normal flow.

Preliminary investigations suggest that the driver may have experienced brake failure or lost control of the vehicle while navigating the descent.

Confirming the incident, the General Manager of LASTMA, Mr. Bakare Oki, said operatives of the agency rescued a severely injured male victim following a ghastly accident involving a fully loaded six-tyre truck with registration number AKD 135 YK, which suffered brake failure and plunged off the Oshodi Bridge into the terminal ditch while descending from Oshodi-Oke inward Mile 2.

Oki explained that preliminary findings indicated the ill-fated truck, laden with toner printing materials, suffered a critical mechanical fault while descending the bridge, causing it to lose control and tumble into the terminal below.

He described the accident as an unfortunate incident that could have resulted in multiple fatalities but was swiftly mitigated through the prompt intervention of LASTMA personnel, who arrived at the scene within minutes.

‘Upon arrival, our officers immediately commenced rescue operations and successfully extricated a male victim who sustained grievous injuries.

‘The injured man was taken to a nearby medical facility for urgent treatment, while the truck driver was apprehended and handed over to security operatives from Makinde Police Station, Oshodi, for further investigation into the brake malfunction and other contributory factors.

‘To prevent secondary collisions and ensure road safety, LASTMA operatives cordoned off the accident scene, diverted traffic, and supervised the clearance of the wreckage, restoring normalcy within a remarkably short period,’ he said.

Oki reiterated the agency’s commitment to protecting lives and property on Lagos roads, particularly during the ember months when traffic volume and accident risks are typically higher.

He also emphasized that LASTMA’s ongoing 24-hour traffic management operations were designed to ensure seamless vehicular movement across the state before, during, and after the festive season.

Customs Intercepts Illicit Drugs Worth N562.5m

The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has intercepted illicit drugs valued at N562.5 million in the Gbaji area of Badagry, Lagos State.

The drugs were uncovered during a stop-and-search operation carried out by officers of the Federal Operations Unit (FOU), Zone A, Ikeja, along the access road to the Seme border.

The Comptroller of the Unit, Mohammed Shuaibu, disclosed this during a brief handover ceremony held at his office on Wednesday, October 22, 2025.

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According to the Comptroller, the interception took place at about 1700 hours on the 17th of October, 2025, when a patrol team, acting on credible intelligence, apprehended one Uduak Monday.

The suspect was reportedly found in possession of a nylon bag tightly wrapped with sellotape.

He stated that upon examination, the contents of the bag were discovered to be Ice Crystal Methamphetamine weighing 25 kilograms, with an estimated street value of N562,500,000.

Shuaibu said that ‘the seizure underscores the unit unwavering commitment to combating smuggling in all its forms and highlights the importance of robust inter-agency collaboration.’

The Comptroller added that the unit remained resolute in its mission to work in synergy with relevant agencies and stakeholders to dismantle smuggling networks operating within the zone.

He also disclosed that the seized substance had been handed over to the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) for further investigation and prosecution.

While receiving the exhibit and the suspect on behalf of the Chairman and Chief Executive of the NDLEA, the Commander of Narcotics, Lagos State Strategic Command, CN Abubakar Liman, was quoted as commending the collaborative efforts of the Nigeria Customs Service in the fight against drug trafficking.

He said, ‘The contributions of the NCS in the ongoing war against drugs trafficking are remarkable. We will continue to update the unit as the trial of the suspect progresses in court.’

Liman also commended the Unit ‘for deepening the realization of the memorandum of understanding signed between the two agencies.’

ABU Debunks Allegations Of Secret Nuclear Weapon Project

Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria, has debunked a social media video alleging that the institution was involved in developing a nuclear weapon for Nigeria.

In a statement issued to newsmen in Zaria, Awwal Umar, Director, University’s Directorate of Public Affairs, described the viral video as misleading, aimed at misinforming the public about Nigeria’s peaceful nuclear energy programme.

The statement said the video falsely claimed that Nigerian scientists in the 1980s secretly enriched weapons-grade uranium in Kaduna and that ABU researchers obtained centrifuge equipment from the AQ Khan network in Pakistan.

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Describing the allegations as baseless, the university stressed that most of its scientists at the Centre for Energy Research and Training (CERT) were still undergoing training abroad in the 1980s and could not have participated in uranium enrichment.

The statement further noted that the university had no connection with the AQ Khan network and had never received any equipment for the construction of a centrifuge or nuclear device.

It stated that by 1987, the only nuclear facility at the university was a 14 MeV Neutron Generator, which became operational in 1988.

‘Nigeria’s first nuclear reactor (NIRR-1) was established much later in 1996 under the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Technical Cooperation Programme and commissioned in 2004,’ it said.

The statement stressed that Nigeria’s nuclear activities had always been open and pursued strictly for peaceful purposes, in line with the country’s obligations under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the Pelindaba Treaty, which prohibit the development of nuclear weapons.

The statement reaffirmed that the Centre for Energy Research and Training, established in 1976, operates in collaboration with the IAEA and international partners from the U.S., Russia, and China.

It further explained that the center has never engaged in any secret weapons programme.

‘ABU has always pursued peaceful applications of nuclear science and technology for national development,’ the statement said.

It recalled that the university’s founder, Sir Ahmadu Bello, had demonstrated early interest in peaceful atomic research following his visit to the Museum of Atomic Energy at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the U.S. in 1960, two years before ABU was established.

The management restated its commitment to advancing science and technology for the benefit of humanity and to upholding Nigeria’s international obligations on the peaceful use of nuclear energy.

Access Holdings reports N2.5trn gross earnings in H1 2025

Access Holdings Plc Group has announced its half-year audited financial results for the period ended June 30, 2025, posting N2.5 trillion.

The Group’s financial results for the half year ended June 30, 2025, reflect the resilience of its business model, the diversification of revenue streams, and the steady progress to the execution of its five-year strategic plan.

A statement issued yesterday by the Company’s Secretary, Sunday Ekwochi, said, ‘Gross earnings increased by 13.8% year-on-year to N2.5 trillion in H1 2025 from N2.2 trillion in H1 2024, driven by strong growth in interest income which increased by 38.9% year-on-year to N2.0 trillion from N1.5 billion in H1 2024.

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‘Net interest income also increased by 91.8% year-on-year to N984.6 billion in H1 2025 from N513.4 billion in H1 2024.’

He said’Complementing this performance was a growth in net fees and commission income, which increased by 16.1% year-on-year to N237.7billion in H1 2025 from N204.7 billion in H1 2024.’

According to the statement, ‘Profit before tax (PBT) and profit after tax (PAT) closed at N320.6 billion and N215.9 billion respectively underscoring the strength and resilience of our business model in the markets we operate in.’

It added that, ‘Key balance sheet indicators remain strong with total assets, customer deposits, loans and advances, and shareholders’ equity closing at N42.4 trillion, N22.9 trillion, N13.2 trillion N3.8 trillion respectively.

‘The Banking group demonstrated resilient performance in H1 2025. Interest income grew by 38.7% year-on-year to N2.0 trillion in H1 2025 from N1.5 trillion in H1 2024. Net interest income increased by 85%, from N536.7 billion in H1 2024 to N992.7 billion in H1 2025. Fee and commission income increased by 27% to N294.9 in H1 2025 from N232.5 billion in H1 2024 driven by increased transaction volumes. Profit before tax (PBT) and profit after tax (PAT) closed at N303.0 billion and N199.3 billion respectively.

‘Banking group subsidiaries contributed 65% to the Banking group’s profit before tax (PBT) in H1 2025. This result highlights our journey towards sustainable performance and execution across our key African and international markets.

‘The Group’s non-banking subsidiaries maintained a strong growth momentum. For Access – ARM Pensions, financial performance was robust, with revenue up 29.9% to N21.0 billion and profit before tax up 65.1% to N13.1 billion. The business delivered a solid ROAE of 48.1%, a cost-to-income ratio of 35.1%, and a PBT margin of 62.5%, underscoring strong operational efficiency and profitability.

‘Hydrogen Payments recorded a 40.5% growth in top-line revenue compared to H1 2024. Profit before tax (PBT) grew by 273% year-on-year. The total transaction value processed increased by 211%, reaching N41.1 trillion in H1 2025, up from N13.8 trillion in H1 2024.

‘Access Insurance Brokers has sustained strong momentum, recording a 125% year-on-year increase in gross written premium, 146% growth in revenue, and a 161% improvement in profit before tax (PBT).

‘Oxygen X, the Group’s digital lending arm, has sustained strong momentum since launch in Q3 2024, delivering N5.4 billion in revenue and N2.2 billion in profit before tax in H1 2025.

‘Access Holdings’ businesses are well-positioned to deepen market penetration, expand product offerings, and leverage cross-sell opportunities across the Group to drive continued growth and profitability’, the statement said.

The statement further added that the group’s focus remains on driving prudent growth and continued execution of its strategic priorities, scaling its digital and transaction-led income streams, increasing revenue diversification, embedding efficiency, innovation, and disciplined portfolio management across all areas of the business. It will also continue to uphold the highest standards of risk and governance discipline to ensure sustainable profitability.

‘Access Holdings remains confident that it will continue to deliver sustainable value and returns to its shareholders. Its long-term objective is to build a stronger, more agile Group that consistently delivers superior returns, fosters innovation-driven growth, and optimises portfolio performance to create inclusive value across its markets while reaffirming investor confidence in the strength and future of Access Holdings.

‘The Group appreciates the continued trust and support of its shareholders, customers, and employees. Together, the Group is building a stronger future’, the statement said.

How migration wound up taking a hold of 2026 polls

The government of Uganda has officially halted the registration of refugees from countries including Somalia, Ethiopia, and Eritrea, citing administrative and security concerns. The move comes amid growing public debate over the impact of migration on urban centres, housing, and employment, as well as a rising populist discourse among politicians.

Uganda has long been celebrated for its friendly tenor to refugees, with settlements housing hundreds of thousands of people fleeing conflict in the Horn of Africa. However, in recent months, registration has slowed, leaving many aspiring refugees in a state of limbo. Analysts say the decision may reflect political calculations as much as bureaucratic limitations.

‘Numbers matter in politics,’ says Ms Juliet Katusiime, a political analyst. ‘Refugee populations are visible in urban areas, and politicians have increasingly used migration as a populist issue to win support. The perception of strain on local services, housing, and jobs can be leveraged on the campaign trail.’

Populist tenor

In Makindye East, Kampala, the local population has voiced frustration over the impact of the growing migrant population. ‘Since these migrants came, rent prices have gone up. You cannot find affordable housing anymore,’ says Mr Vicent Tumusiime, a native resident. Similar sentiments have been reported in other urban neighbourhoods, where ordinary Ugandans feel squeezed by rising rents and competition for jobs. ‘With elections drawing near, the issue of immigration and security has become a rallying point for some politicians seeking to project strength and national control,’ Mr Timothy Chemonges, the Executive Director of the Centre for Policy Analysis (CEPA), notes.

He adds: ‘Intelligence briefings in recent months have pointed to rising cross-border movement, including reports of unverified foreign nationals entering through informal routes, particularly from conflict-prone neighbouring states.’ Coupled with growing public pressure over crime, housing shortages, and unemployment in urban areas, the government has moved to signal firmness. According to insiders, the suspension is intended to allow for a policy review, data verification, and tighter coordination among security and immigration agencies.

Mr Hilary Onek, the minister for Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Refugees, says Uganda cannot turn away people fleeing violence and conflict from neighbouring countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. ‘International law does not allow us to do that. We register them as refugees,’ Mr Onek said, adding: ‘The only problem we have is with people who fly into Uganda for greener pastures-those from Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Pakistan. We don’t even have common borders with them. They come here looking for business opportunities, and in such cases, we have no justification to register them as refugees,’ he says.

Mr Onek says investigations revealed that some of these individuals had successfully established profitable businesses in Uganda.

‘People from Pakistan and Eritrea have made money here and become powerful,’ he says. ‘If you want to do business in Uganda, you must get a visa, usually valid for three months, and then apply for a work permit depending on your activity,’ the minister explains.

Line in the sand

Mr Onek reveals that Uganda currently hosts about 50,000 Eritreans, many of whom came for economic reasons rather than as refugees escaping persecution.

Local authorities, already stretched, fear that an increase in unregistered residents could complicate planning and strain relations between host communities and newcomers. Humanitarian groups have warned that this could fuel resentment and social tension, especially in Kampala, Arua, Gulu, and Mbarara, where migrant populations are significant.

‘The challenge now,’ Mr Chemonges emphasises, ‘is to craft a balanced, evidence-based policy that secures national interests without undermining Uganda’s international commitments’. He suggests long-term measures such as developing digital migration data systems to track movement without disrupting essential services, creating urban integration plans that link refugee support with local development, improving coordination among security, immigration, and social welfare agencies and strengthening community engagement programmes to reduce fear and misinformation around migrants.

Politicians have not been silent. During rallies and campaign stops ahead of the upcoming elections, several candidates have touched on migration, often with a populist tone. Some promise stricter controls and closer scrutiny of new arrivals, framing the debate as one of national interest and economic security, as witnessed with Mr Mubarak Munyagwa, the presidential flag-bearer of the Common Man’s Party. Humanitarian organisations have cautioned against the politicisation of refugee issues, warning that migrants remain highly vulnerable.

‘Stopping registration doesn’t make migration disappear; it just drives people into informal and potentially unsafe channels,’ says Mariam Abdi, a spokesperson for a refugee rights group in Kampala.

As Uganda navigates this delicate issue, the tension between political expediency, public perception, and humanitarian obligations is becoming increasingly visible. For voters and policymakers alike, migration is no longer just a regional matter-it is a domestic political flashpoint. ‘The withdrawal or reduction of support from partners such as the United States and UN agencies, particularly the World Food Programme, whose budget has been cut by a third or more, has weakened the government’s capacity to feed and support refugees,’ Mr Marlon Agaba, the executive director of the Anti-Corruption Coalition Uganda (ACCU), observes.

Mr Agaba notes that tensions are growing, especially among urban refugees. ‘When you look at the situation in Kisenyi and other urban areas, it’s still manageable. But in [the] West Nile [Sub-region], particularly Arua [District], the refugee population is rapidly increasing. This brings pressure on land and local resources, which could be part of the reason the government wants to suspend refugee registration.’ He adds that the long-term strategy should involve working with refugees’ countries of origin to ensure conditions are safe for their return.

Dutch deal

This comes as the Dutch government prepares to send dozens of migrants to Uganda under a deal similar to one struck by the Trump administration, despite possible legal and practical challenges. The Dutch Migration and Foreign Affairs minister, Mr David van Weel, told the Financial Times this week that a ‘transit hub’ in Uganda where people would be deported could start operating as early as next year. Mr Van Weel says the agreement was ‘in compliance with international law, with European law, with our national laws . . . But of course, this will be appealed in the beginning, and then we’ll see whether or not that holds up.’

Human rights were a central component to the agreement struck last month with Kampala, Mr Van Weel says, something that is not a priority for Washington.

‘We don’t deny a responsibility that human rights of people that we send there need to be respected. That’s clear,’ Mr Van Weel says, adding that they had asked the UN refugee agency UNHCR and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) to manage the centres on the ground.

In August, the Trump administration entered into an agreement with Kampala to take in rejected asylum seekers from the US. But Washington does not seek the collaboration of any UN agencies in its deportation plans. The Ugandan Foreign Affairs ministry at the time said it would prefer to take in individuals from African countries, and that it would not accept those with criminal records or unaccompanied minors.

The Dutch deal, which still needs to be finalised, would have Uganda taking in people that the Dutch government has been unable to send to their home countries, per Mr Van Weel. He adds that LGBT+ people would not be sent to Uganda to protect them from its discriminatory laws, which punish being gay with life in prison or even death. ‘I think we have [a] responsibility for [the] people we send there,’ he said. ‘There’s also a responsibility from the Ugandan side.’

Mr Vincent Bagiire, the permanent secretary in Uganda’s Foreign Affairs ministry, says Kampala has proposed measures similar to the deal with Washington. This means ‘accepting persons without a criminal record and persons of African origin who shall not use Uganda for political activism’. He says: ‘Uganda hosts both the IOM and UNHCR, and we shall collaborate to benefit from their expertise in matters of migration.’

The Granular details

According to Eurostat, the Netherlands last year ordered about 19,000 people to leave the country, and returned some 4,200. There can be a lag between a return decision and actual deportation, mainly due to legal challenges. The top nationalities who could not be returned by the Netherlands were not from the region around Uganda, but from Ukraine, Turkey, Algeria, Morocco and Syria-countries with high numbers of asylum applications in general-raising questions about the effectiveness of the Uganda deal. Dutch Migration and Foreign Affairs minister David van Weel says ‘it’s not only about solving the immediate problem of these cases, it’s also about the signal that we’re sending out’ as a ‘deterrent’.

‘If you have been issued a negative return decision, you have to leave voluntarily, because if not, then you will go to Uganda,’ he explains, adding that people would ‘become more co-operative once they are already outside of Europe’. Rights activists and some migration experts have criticised such schemes over concerns about rights breaches. Critics also argue that it would be more efficient to invest in asylum infrastructure in Europe. Mr Weel declined to say how much the ‘transition hub’ in Uganda would cost. The minister says UN organisations were ‘positive towards the idea’ of managing the return hub, as they are ‘already very active in Uganda.’

The IOM says it was ‘engaging closely’ with European partners, including the Dutch government, in implementing the EU’s new asylum rules and ‘return processes.’ UNHCR says it had ‘not seen the details’ nor had any ‘formal discussions’ on the Dutch-Ugandan deal and that its potential role would be limited to advising governments that centres comply with rights standards.

Uganda bags five gold medals in Nairobi

Uganda bagged a total of 15 medals, five of which gold, at the Africa Zone III Boxing Championship which ended Friday night in Nairobi.

Nine Ugandans were in the final on Friday at Kasarani Gymnasium in Nairobi with five winning gold, while the four losers settled for silver.

Heavyweight Aziz Ringo, the grandson of former president Idi Amin, was among the heroes. Fatuma Nabikolo and ?Emily Nakalema were the heroines. Kasim Murungi edged Kenyan Phoba Kumbo Mwinyi while Farahat ?Manirola sealed the day with 4:1 victory over Ndjibu of DR Congo.

?Uganda would have bagged more gold had DR Congo not stood in the way. Middleweight Alfred Ojok lost the final to Kinda Wetu; welterweight ?Edward Mukwaya lost to Kabengela Ntumba while bantamweight ?Samuel Ochen lost to Kolongo Bakora, all of DR Congo’s.

Brenda Muduwa surrendered the women’s light flyweight final to Kenya’s Veronica Mbithe.

Six Ugandans, including 2023 African silver medallist ?Erina Namutebi, settled for bronze after losing at the semifinals, while Kato Kazibwe was the only Ugandan who never stepped on the podium.

This is arguably Uganda’s biggest medal haul at a boxing event, never mind the magnitude of the competition. It could also be a timely morale booster for the Bombers ahead of the Islamic Games in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia next month.

GOLD

1. Fatuma Nabikolo

2. ?Emily Nakalema

3. ?Aziz Ringo

4. ?Kasim Murungi

5. Farahat ?Manirola

SILVER

6. ?Brenda Muduwa

7. Alfred Ojok

8. ?Edward Mukwaya

9. ?Samuel Ochen

BRONZE

10. ?Erina Namutebi

11. Livingstone? Matovu

12. ? Alex Kanaabi

13. ? Emmanuel Tabule

14. ? Angel Katushabe

15. Jimmy ?Adriko

16. ?Kato Kazibwe, no medal