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Nigerian Medical Experts Successfully Separate Conjoined Twins After 13 Hours Operation

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A team of Nigerian medical experts spent 13 hours performing complex surgery on a pair of conjoined twins to they live their independent lives in Abuja, the nation’s capital.


Named Goodness and Mercy Martins, the kids came as a surprise when they were born on 13th of August 2018 at the Federal Medical Centre, Keffi Nasarawa state, through a caesarean session, as their unemployed mother had not known she was expecting twins, let alone a pair conjoined at the chest and abdomen.


The conjoined sisters required about N20m for complex surgeries that would see them separated. Their hearts and the liver were fused together from the womb.
Fortunately, the management of the National Hospital Abuja decided to fund their care and the entire processes which led to the major surgical procedure for their separation as its corporate social responsibility.


At the formal presentation of the separated twins on Tuesday in Abuja, ahead of their discharge from National Hospital on Wednesday, the Minister of Health, Dr Osagie Ehanire, said the successful outcome of the surgery was down to teamwork and administrative support the experts at the hospital received.


“These beautiful girls of Benue State origin and their proud parents, are beneficiaries of a healthcare system when it functions as it supposed to.
“The case management team has demonstrated that our health system, even with modest resources, can rise up to the highest challenges and offer quality care, to find its position among renowned international hospitals.”

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Since their arrival in Abuja a day after their birth, the twins have undergone four operations. A team of experts which include paediatricians, neurologists, anesthesiologists, plastic surgeons, radiologists and others spent 16 months treating them.


The girls are said to be doing well, the surgeries were not plain sailing.
Leader of the team who is a consultant pediatric surgeon, Professor Emmanuel Ameh, explained that the case of the conjoined twins was unusual because they were joined at two of the most delicate organs of the body.


He later presented a short animation video explaining the steps taken to separate the sisters while each footage summarised the efforts by the medical team.


“This is an extremely rare condition. The biggest challenge we faced had to do with their separation at the chest region. This is really the first time that twins joined in the chest and the abdomen are separated throughout the entire country. All the other separated twins are joined only in one organ,” Ameh said.


Also speaking, Dr Jaf Momoh, National Hospital’s Chief Medical Director, noted that the separation of conjoined twins was a complicated procedure that required a multidisciplinary team approach with several meetings and rehearsals of all aspects of the operative procedure to become a success.

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The father of the girls, Michael Edeh Martins, who a painter from Oturkpo, expressed his delight over the successful surgery.


“I am so happy to see Goodness wrapped separately. I initially couldn’t believe it. My gratitude goes to God and the medical team. May this success continue”.

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We don’t have power to determine tenure of IGP – Police Service Commission

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Police

The Police Service Commission, PSC, has said it has no constitutional powers to determine the appointment or removal of the Inspector-General of Police, IGP.

Gatekeeper recalls that the Police Service Commission had last week directed all serving police officers who have served for 35 years, or attained the age of 60 years, to proceed on immediate retirement in line with existing laws.

Since the directive several public commentators have argued that the directives should also affect the tenure of the IGP.

But Ikechukwu Ani, Head, Press and Public Relations of the PSC, in a statement on Monday, said, “By virtue of Paragraph 30, part 1 of the third schedule to the Constitution, and clause 6 (1) of the Police Service Commission (Establisment) Act, 2001, the Commission is charged with the responsibilities of appointment, promotion, dismissal and exercising disciplinary control over persons holding offices in the Nigeria Police Force (except the Inspector General of Police).

“The law is clear on the mandate of the Commission and it does not extend to the Inspector General of Police who is an appointee of Mr. President with the advice of the Police Council.

“The Commission wishes to state that it is comfortable with the size of the powers which the Constitution has bestowed on it and is not interested in shopping for more powers that obviously are not backed by law.”

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Electricity, telecom tariffs increase unconscionable, should be stopped – Shehu Sani

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Former lawmaker, Senator Shehu Sani, has described the planned increase in electricity and telecom tariffs as unconscionable.

The statement comes after the telecoms regulator last week approved the increase in mobile tariffs.

The federal government also recently said that plans were ongoing to increase electricity tariffs “over the next few months.”

However, Sani, who said the government’s plan is unreasonable, insisted that it should be halted.

The ex-lawmaker also expressed his support for the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) over the scheduled protest against the government’s proposal, calling it a welcome development.

“The planned increase in electricity tariffs in the midst of poor power supply and the proposal to increase telecom tariffs is unconscionable and should be halted. The scheduled labour union protest is a welcome development,” he posted on X.

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Trump to cut off funding to South Africa, gives reason

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Donald Trump

The United States President, Donald Trump, has revealed his decision to cut off all future funding to South Africa, citing poor treatment of “certain classes of people.”

Trump made this known on Sunday in a post on Truth Social, his social media platform.

According to Trump, South Africa was seizing land and mistreating some citizens without concern for the violations of their rights.

“South Africa is confiscating land and treating certain classes of people VERY BADLY.

“I will be cutting off all future funding to South Africa until a full investigation of this situation has been completed!” Trump wrote.

Reports suggest that the American leader may be defending White South Africans, some of whom have alleged that the South African policy is unfair to them.

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