While robotic surgery is advancing rapidly, experts warn that medicine cannot function without human judgement, accountability and ethical responsibility.
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Wike Sneaks Out Of Nigeria For Medical Care, Four Years After Condemning Foreign Treatment For Leaders Reliable sources confirmed that Wike, the former Governor of Rivers State and one of the most outspoken figures in the country’s political landscape, left Abuja earlier this week on a discreet medical trip.
Wike Sneaks Out of Nigeria for Medical Care, Four Years After Condemning Foreign Treatment for Leaders Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Nyesom Wike, has quietly traveled to the United Kingdom for medical treatment—just four years after publicly declaring that Nigerian leaders had “no justification” to seek healthcare abroad.
Reliable sources confirmed that Wike, the former Governor of Rivers State and one of the most outspoken figures in the country’s political landscape, left Abuja earlier this week on a discreet medical trip.
According to those close to him, doctors have diagnosed him with congestive heart failure, a condition that requires urgent and sustained management. Specialists reportedly recommended a bypass surgery, but Wike is said to have declined, fearing an extended absence from office that could open political space for his rivals. “He has congestive heart failure that is being managed,” one source disclosed. “The doctors suggested a bypass surgery, but he refused because he doesn’t want to be away for too long or risk being replaced.”
The revelation has triggered widespread controversy and public outrage, largely because of Wike’s well-documented statements in the past against medical tourism by Nigerian leaders. In 2019, while receiving a delegation from the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN) in Port Harcourt, Wike proudly announced that he had not traveled abroad for two years and saw no need to do so, insisting that Nigeria had the resources to provide healthcare at international standards.
He questioned why any leader would need foreign medical treatment when hospitals within the country could be equipped to serve the same purpose.
His words at the time were celebrated across the country, with many hailing him for “speaking truth to power” in a system where leaders routinely abandon local facilities for foreign hospitals.
The latest development therefore comes as a stunning contradiction to the image Wike projected during his governorship years. Nigerians who once admired his stand against medical tourism are now accusing him of hypocrisy, saying he has joined the long list of political elites who fail to practice what they preach.
Critics argue that while citizens are urged to make sacrifices and endure a failing healthcare system, their leaders secretly fly abroad at the slightest health scare.
This controversy has been compounded by persistent rumors about Wike’s health over the past year. Earlier in 2024, reports circulated that he had collapsed at a public event in Abuja and was rushed to hospital before allegedly being flown overseas for emergency treatment. The minister strongly denied the allegations at the time, describing them as “politically motivated lies” designed to distract attention from crises in Rivers State. He insisted that he was in good health, adding that he had never fainted nor received overseas treatment. His sudden journey to London now casts a shadow over those denials, raising questions about the accuracy of his previous statements and fueling speculation that his health challenges may be more serious than admitted. The news of Wike’s trip has also unleashed a storm of reactions on social media. Many Nigerians expressed outrage, calling out what they see as a double standard. “Same man that told us leaders shouldn’t go abroad for treatment is now in London. What changed?” one user asked on X (formerly Twitter). Another wrote, “Hospitals in Nigeria are for the poor.
Politicians only trust foreign hospitals for themselves.” Civil society groups have also joined in, describing Wike’s trip as a betrayal of public trust and a reminder of the ruling class’s disregard for the plight of ordinary citizens.
Observers note that the minister’s case is part of a long-standing trend in Nigerian politics. From governors to presidents, public officials have consistently shunned local hospitals for foreign clinics, leaving behind a collapsing health sector that fails to meet international standards. Billions of naira have been spent on overseas treatments while public hospitals suffer from underfunding, shortage of equipment, dilapidated infrastructure, and mass exodus of medical professionals to countries with better working conditions. The late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua and former President Muhammadu Buhari were among Nigerian leaders who spent prolonged periods abroad for medical attention, sparking nationwide debates about transparency, accountability, and national pride. Critics argue that Wike’s actions reveal the irony of Nigeria’s political class: they expect citizens to endure dysfunctional public services while refusing to rely on those same systems themselves. As governor, Wike did invest in some health infrastructure projects in Rivers State, but analysts maintain that his administration, like many others, fell short of initiating the lasting reforms that could have built public confidence in Nigeria’s health sector.
His choice to travel abroad despite once promising otherwise has, in the eyes of many, exposed the hollowness of his earlier commitments. The secrecy surrounding the minister’s trip has also raised questions about funding. Nigerians are demanding transparency on whether Wike’s treatment is being paid for with public funds or through his personal resources.
Civic groups insist that at a time when the nation is grappling with economic hardship, widespread unemployment, and deep budget cuts in vital sectors, the public has the right to know how such overseas expenses are being handled.
Opposition politicians have also seized on the news to accuse the government of double standards, pointing out that leaders cannot call for sacrifice while enjoying privileges denied to the citizens they govern.
Ultimately, Wike’s UK medical trip has reignited a broader national debate that goes beyond his personal health. It highlights the crisis of confidence in Nigeria’s healthcare system and the unwillingness of leaders to confront the rot with the seriousness it requires. For millions of Nigerians, the controversy reinforces a painful reality: hospitals at home are good enough for the poor, but when those in power fall sick, they turn to London, Dubai, or India.
Until that dynamic changes, many believe, the country’s health sector will remain trapped in cycles of neglect and underdevelopment. Whether Wike returns soon to resume his duties in Abuja remains uncertain, but his decision to seek medical attention abroad has already left a deep mark on public perception.
To some, it is not just about one politician’s illness but about the unending hypocrisy of Nigeria’s political class and their unwillingness to fix the very system they ask ordinary people to depend on.
Wife of former Deputy Senate President Ekweremadu returns home following custodial sentence, while her husband remains imprisoned in UK.
The wife of former Nigerian Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, Beatrice, has returned to Nigeria after being released from a prison in the United Kingdom.
Her arrival in the country on Tuesday, January 21, 2026, followed the completion of the custodial portion of her sentence for her role in a high-profile organ-harvesting conspiracy.
Mrs Ekweremadu was received by family members and close associates at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport in Abuja, marking her first time on Nigerian soil since the legal saga began in mid-2022.
While her return has sparked celebrations in her hometown of Mpu, in the Aninri Local Government Area (LGA) of Enugu State, it came amid the continued incarceration of her husband in London.
The return of the former Deputy Senate President’s wife followed her May 2023 conviction by the Old Bailey in London.
She was sentenced to four years and six months in prison for conspiring to facilitate the travel of a 21-year-old Lagos Street trader to the UK for the purpose of harvesting his kidney.
The organ was intended for the couple’s daughter, Sonia, who suffered from a chronic kidney condition.
The case, which was prosecuted under the UK’s Modern Slavery Act 2015, marked the first time the legislation was used in a human organ-harvesting prosecution.
Under UK law, non-violent offenders are typically eligible for release on license after serving half of their custodial term.
Reports indicated that Mrs. Ekweremadu’s release was further facilitated by her good conduct record and by a broader UK government initiative to address severe prison overcrowding.
Despite his wife’s return, Senator Ekweremadu remains in a UK correctional facility serving a significantly longer sentence.
In May 2023, the former lawmaker was handed a nine-year and eight-month term, as the court deemed him the primary driver of the conspiracy.
Efforts by the Nigerian federal government to secure his release or repatriation have so far been unsuccessful.
In late 2025, a high-powered diplomatic delegation visited London to explore a Prisoner Transfer Agreement (PTA) that would allow the Senator to serve the remainder of his term in a Nigerian facility.
However, the UK Home Office reportedly rejected the proposal in November 2025, citing concerns over the guarantee of the sentence’s continued enforcement if transferred to the Nigerian jurisdiction.
The third convict in the case, Dr. Obinna Obeta, who was described by the prosecution as the medical “middleman,” continues to serve a 10-year prison sentence in the UK.
Meanwhile, the couple’s daughter, Sonia, who was cleared of all criminal charges during the 2023 trial, remains in the United Kingdom, where she is reportedly receiving ongoing medical treatment for her condition.
Elon Musk has asserted that medical degrees may soon become obsolete, as AI-powered robots are expected to surpass human surgeons in performance.
The Tesla and SpaceX CEO claimed that humanoid robots like Tesla’s Optimus will outperform the world’s best surgeons within three years.
Speaking on the Moonshots podcast hosted by Peter Diamandis, Musk argued that human doctors are slow to train, prone to error, and fundamentally limited.
“Right now there’s a shortage of doctors and great surgeons,” Musk said.
“[It takes] a super long time to learn how to be a good doctor Doctors have limited time, they make mistakes. How many great surgeons are there? Not that many,” he added.
“So don’t go to medical school?” Diamandis asked Musk.
While robotic surgery is advancing rapidly, experts warn that medicine cannot function without human judgement, accountability and ethical responsibility.
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In a recent development, the ongoing controversy surrounding Ayo Labinjoh, the mother of Anu and Afrobeats superstar, Davido, over partenity dispute has intensified.
It’s worth noting that Ayo Labinjoh and Davido have been in the headlines over paternity dispute, with the singer claiming five DNA tests yielded negative results
In a fresh Instagram post, Ayo shared an existing DNA test result contradicting Davido’s earlier claim.
She emphasized that the DNA test result was valid, while investigative journalist, Kemi Olunloyo has fought vigorously for her daughter.
Her post reads,“The ONLY DNA TEST Fake
No swab, just bl00d
Not 2, Not 5.We still haven’t seen David post today online and in newspapers”.
Meanwhile, Davido has revealed that his father, Dr. Adedeji Adeleke, played a significant role amid his paternity dispute with Ayo Labinjoh.
In a recent tweet on X (formely Twitter), the ‘Feel’ crooner shared that his father insisted that he undergo DNA test.
“You guys don’t know my father..He’s even the one that forced me to go. Adeleke’s we don’t play about Blood on this side”, The tweet reads.
Meanwhile, Cubana Chief Priest’s alleged baby mama, Helen Atti, has weighed in on Davido’s paternity dispute.
She took to the singer’s comment section, writing, “Please just help her, you can still adopt her, it doesn’t mean anything. I know you love children a lot, not like Pascal Okechukwu, big belle for no reason”.
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