This Nigerian Life DAILY

Tuesday, 03 February 2026

FEBRUARY 03, 2026

TODAY IN NIGERIA

Governors received ₦9 trillion from FAAC allocations. Your roads still have potholes. Nine suspects face terrorism charges for Benue massacre that killed over 150—eight months after the attack. Court blocked NLC and TUC's planned FCT protest over minimum wage failures. Health workers' strike grounds hospitals nationwide. Tinubu brokers another truce between Wike and Fubara in Rivers—the third intervention this year. An economist warns 140 million Nigerians face poverty in 2026. Meanwhile, Fela Kuti receives Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. The pattern: money reaches government but systems collapse. ₦9 trillion to states, zero visible impact. Justice arrives after communities bury their dead. Courts block protests instead of addressing grievances. Healthcare shuts down. Governors count billions.


FEATURED DEEP DIVE

BIG MONEY, ZERO IMPACT

Governors got ₦9 trillion—where did it go?

₦9 trillion reached state accounts in recent months. Lagos got ₦400 billion. Rivers ₦300 billion. Kano ₦250 billion. Your street still floods. Your hospital still lacks beds. Your school still has no desks. Governors are facing one question: where's the money?

CONTINUE READING → 5 min


STANDARD ANALYSIS

150 KILLED, NINE CHARGED

Justice arrives eight months after communities buried their dead

Nine suspects face 57 terrorism charges for Benue massacre. Over 150 people died in June 2025. Communities buried their dead in July. Trials begin in February 2026. Justice moves slowly. Villages remain vulnerable to next attack.

CONTINUE READING → 3 min

WHEN COURTS BLOCK PROTESTS

Minimum wage won't buy food but workers can't demonstrate

Court blocked labour unions from planned FCT protest over minimum wage failures. The grievances—₦30,000 wages, ₦900 fuel, doubled food prices—remain unaddressed. Blocking protests doesn't make life affordable. It just removes the valve.

CONTINUE READING → 3 min

HEALTHCARE STOPS

Patients can't access care, workers can't afford to work

Pregnant woman goes into labour. Hospital closed. Child spikes fever. Clinic shut. Diabetic needs insulin. Pharmacy unstaffed. Health workers' strike has grounded hospitals. Patients can't access care. Workers can't afford to work. System collapses.

CONTINUE READING → 3 min

140 MILLION FACE POVERTY

That's two-thirds of Nigeria below the line this year

140 million Nigerians will be plunged into poverty in 2026, economist Ngwu warns. That's two-thirds of the country. Not theoretical poverty—can't afford food poverty. Can't pay transport poverty. Can't send children to school poverty.

CONTINUE READING → 3 min

TINUBU BROKERS TRUCE AGAIN

Third presidential intervention in Rivers crisis this year

President Tinubu brokered peace between Wike and Fubara again. Third time this year. Each truce lasts weeks. Conflict reignites. Presidential intervention required again. Rivers governance held together by personality, not institutions.

CONTINUE READING → 3 min

OUTLOOK BRIGHTENS, RISKS REMAIN

Oil and forex improving but shocks could erase all gains

Nigeria's 2026 outlook brightens, PwC reports. Oil production stabilising. Foreign exchange improving. But risks persist—oil price shocks, exchange rate volatility, policy implementation gaps. Improvement is real. So are threats.

CONTINUE READING → 3 min


QUICK CONTEXT

FELA'S GRAMMY HONOUR

Lifetime Achievement Award for Afrobeat pioneer

Fela Kuti received Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award posthumously. Global recognition for Nigerian musical genius who used art as resistance. He challenged military governments through music. Decades after death, his influence shapes world culture.

CONTINUE READING → 2 min

LAGOS WATER CITY

$2 million plan for Makoko after demolitions

Lagos earmarked $2 million to build water city for Makoko residents—after demolishing their homes first. Planning follows displacement. Alternative housing comes after homelessness. Sequence exposes priorities.

CONTINUE READING → 2 min

SNAKEBITE TREATMENT GAP

Half of clinics can't treat common emergency

50% of Nigerian clinics lack capacity to treat snakebites. No antivenoms. No training. No protocols. Rural farmers get bitten. Reach clinic. Clinic can't treat. Patient dies from delay. Treatable injury becomes fatal.

CONTINUE READING → 2 min


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Publishing Editor: Adeyemi EKO

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