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  • Provost confirms no student missing as hoodlums attack Ebonyi college

    Provost confirms no student missing as hoodlums attack Ebonyi college

    The Provost of Ebonyi College of Health Science and Technology, Ngbo, Princess Chetachi Chibueze Jerry Usulor, has confirmed that no student is missing following an attack by hoodlums on the institution’s female hostel.

    The provost explained that nine students was injured in the attack.

    Speaking to journalists on Wednesday at the college premises, Usulor said the attackers invaded the hostel in the early hours of June 8, carting away phones, cash, ATM cards and other valuables from students.

    She explained that the incident occurred at about 1:20 a.m when the hoodlums stormed the hostel and began demanding valuables from students.

    According to her, she immediately alerted security agencies, including the police, homeland security personnel and other relevant authorities, who responded to the distress call.

    “I called the police control room, the divisional police headquarters and homeland security personnel. As people started arriving at the scene, the hoodlums fled,” she said.

    The provost attributed the security breach partly to the large expanse of unfenced land within the institution, noting that although the state government had earlier released funds for fencing, additional resources were needed to complete the project.

    She disclosed that the attackers escaped through one of several access points around the campus after hearing approaching voices and noticing the arrival of security personnel and residents.

    Usulor said the casualties recorded during the incident were not a result of direct attacks by the hoodlums but occurred when some students jumped from the one-storey hostel building in an attempt to escape.

    “Some of the students living upstairs jumped through the windows out of fear or while trying to hide their phones. Those currently receiving treatment sustained injuries from the fall,” she explained.

    She added that affected students were taken to hospital for medical examinations, including X-rays and scans, to ascertain the extent of their injuries.

    “About nine students are receiving medical attention. We want to be sure there are no complications involving their spinal cords or waists before they are discharged,” she said.

    The provost dismissed reports suggesting that students were missing after the attack, insisting that all students had been accounted for.

    She, however, said there were suspicions that the attackers may have received information from insiders as a female was among them, showing them the rooms to be robbed. The suspicion, according to her, followed claims by some victims that the hoodlums repeatedly demanded to know the whereabouts of a particular individual.

    “That is one of the issues the police are investigating. It is their responsibility to determine whether anyone was involved in aiding the attackers,” she stated.

    On security arrangements in the hostel, Usulor explained that male security personnel were stationed outside the hostel premises, as no female security officer was available to stay within the facility.

    She noted that the security personnel on duty on the night of the incident were already being questioned by the police as part of ongoing investigations.

    To prevent a recurrence, the provost said the college management had met with security stakeholders in Ohaukwu Local Government Area and agreed on enhanced security measures.

    She said police officers, local vigilantes and homeland security personnel would henceforth provide round-the-clock security coverage for the institution.

    According to her, the involvement of local security operatives would help identify suspicious persons, especially as reports indicated that the attackers communicated in the Ngbo dialect.

    Also speaking, the President of the Students’ Union Government, SUG, Comrade Ernest Chukwudi Nwobasi, confirmed that armed robbers attacked the female hostel, dispossessing students of phones, money and ATM cards.

    Nwobasi said nine students were hospitalised after sustaining injuries while attempting to escape from the attackers.

    He appealed to the Ebonyi State government to strengthen security around the institution and address infrastructure challenges affecting the college.

    The student leader specifically called for improved security deployment, completion of the institution’s perimeter fencing and support for accreditation needs, which he said were affecting the academic development of the school.

    He expressed optimism that government intervention would help safeguard students and prevent future security breaches on campus.

    Police authorities had yet to issue an official statement on the incident as of the time of filing this report.

    Provost confirms no student missing as hoodlums attack Ebonyi college

  • BREAKING: Panic at National Assembly as fire breaks out moments after Senate screening

    BREAKING: Panic at National Assembly as fire breaks out moments after Senate screening

    The National Assembly was on Wednesday thrown into panic following a fire outbreak in the Senate wing of the complex.

    DAILY POST gathered that the incident occurred at Hearing Room 107 of the National Assembly.

    A video clip of the incident showed staff of the National Assembly using fire extinguishers to contain the fire.

    The incident occurred just after the Senate Committee on the Niger Delta Development Commission had concluded the screening of Dr. Zainab Marwa, who was nominated to represent the North-East on the board of the commission.

    As at the time of filing this report no injuries or casualties have been reported from the fire outbreak.

    According to TVC, the incident may have been caused by a microwave that was left switched on in the kitchen area.

    It was gathered that in the aftermath of the incident, journalists covering proceedings at the National Assembly were reportedly instructed by committee officials to delete photographs and video recordings taken during the fire outbreak.

    BREAKING: Panic at National Assembly as fire breaks out moments after Senate screening

  • Hajj 2026: First batch of 344 Lagos pilgrims return home

    Hajj 2026: First batch of 344 Lagos pilgrims return home

    The first batch of 344 Lagos State pilgrims who participated in the 2026 Hajj exercise in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has returned to Nigeria.

    A statement by the Lagos state government said the pilgrims arrived in Lagos on Monday aboard Flynas flight XY9492, which departed Jeddah and landed at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja, at about 7:37 p.m. Nigerian time.

    Officials of the Lagos State Muslim Pilgrims Welfare Board received the returnees at the airport following the successful completion of the religious exercise in the Holy Land.

    Speaking after the arrival, the Chairman of the Dawah and Enlightenment Committee, Prof. Kabir Paramole, who led other officials on the first return flight, expressed happiness over the safe journey back home.

    He said the spiritual significance of the pilgrimage could not be overemphasised and prayed for the safe return of other Lagos pilgrims still awaiting airlift from Saudi Arabia.

    According to the schedule released by the authorities, the second batch of 345 pilgrims is expected to depart Makkah on Wednesday, June 10, while the final return flight is scheduled for Saturday, June 13, 2026.

    Meanwhile, the Medical Team Lead, Dr. Mazeedat Erinosho, commended the overall health condition of the Lagos pilgrims during their stay in Saudi Arabia.

    She described the health situation throughout the exercise as encouraging and impressive.

    Speaking on the activities of the medical team, Dr. Erinosho explained that comprehensive medical screening was carried out in January 2026 for the 1,600 intending pilgrims from Lagos State.

    According to her, the screening included blood pressure and blood sugar tests, as well as checks for tuberculosis, HIV, and Hepatitis B.

    She added that pregnancy tests were also conducted for women of reproductive age between 16 and 50 years from April 30 to May 1, 2026, in line with the requirements of Saudi Arabian health authorities.

    Dr. Erinosho further disclosed that pilgrims with serious health concerns were identified early and closely monitored to ensure they were medically fit for the pilgrimage.

    She said the medical team also organised health awareness sessions during weekend lectures across the 20 Local Government Areas of the state.

    The sensitisation programmes, according to her, focused on proper hydration, regular use of face masks, and compliance with prescribed medications.

    She noted that the Lagos medical team also worked with Port Health Services to ensure proper vaccination of the pilgrims before departure.

    Dr. Erinosho stated that throughout the pilgrims’ stay in Madinah, Makkah, and Mina, the Lagos medical team collaborated with the National Hajj Commission of Nigeria, NAHCON, medical team to attend to emergencies, clinic visits, and referrals to hospitals in Saudi Arabia.

    “During the pilgrims’ stay in Madinah, Makkah, and Mina, the Lagos medical team, in partnership with the NAHCON medical team, attended to emergencies, clinic visits, and referrals to Saudi Arabian hospitals,” Dr. Erinosho said.

    She explained that affected pilgrims were properly monitored until discharge and continued to receive personalised medical attention in their hotel rooms where necessary.

    The medical team lead added that pilgrims also had access to medications and consultations immediately after returning from Mina until their departure back to Nigeria.

    She said the efforts of the medical personnel contributed significantly to the reduction of health-related challenges and the successful outcome of the 2026 Hajj exercise for Lagos pilgrims.

    “These efforts greatly contributed to the reduction in health challenges and the overall success of the exercise,” Dr. Erinosho added.

    Recall that DAILY POST had earlier reported in May 2026 that Lagos state government has announced that all 1,600 pilgrims from Lagos State have been successfully airlifted to Makkah for the 2026 Hajj exercise.

    Hajj 2026: First batch of 344 Lagos pilgrims return home

  • Fertility Clinics Getting Rich Off Students’ Desperation In Plateau

    Fertility Clinics Getting Rich Off Students’ Desperation In Plateau

    Nobody advertises it. There are no flyers on campus noticeboards, no social media posts with clinic addresses. It moves the way most things move among students with no money and urgent needs, mouth to mouth, roommate to roommate, quietly and without paperwork.

    In Plateau State, a growing number of young women are selling their egg cells to fertility clinics for between N120,000 and N150,000 a cycle.

    The clinics charge couples many times that amount for the same eggs. And when something goes wrong and sometimes it does there is no regulator to call, no law to invoke, and no record that the transaction ever happened.

    The Girl Who Just Needed to Pay Her Fees

    Blessing (not her real name) was in her second year at the University of Jos when the money stopped coming from home.

    Her father had lost his trading business to the economic downturn that squeezed millions of Nigerian households in 2024, and her mother, a petty trader in Vom, could barely cover feeding costs.

    School fees, hostel rent, and examination levies had stacked up into a debt that felt impossible.

    It was a coursemate who told her. The details were sparse but the headline was clear: a fertility clinic in Jos paid young women for their eggs, the procedure was quick, and the money was real.

    “She told me it was like giving blood,” Blessing told THE WHISTLER, speaking in a low voice and declining to give her faculty or year of study.

    “She said she had done it and nothing happened to her. I needed the money badly and I did not ask too many questions.”

    Within two weeks, Blessing had presented herself at the clinic, signed documents she described as “plenty of papers I did not read carefully,” received a course of hormone injections over several days, and undergone the retrieval procedure. She walked away with N140,000. She paid her fees. Then the pain started.

    “About a week later, my stomach was very swollen and I could not sleep well. I went to the clinic and they gave me some tablets and told me it was normal. But it lasted almost one month,” she said.

    She has not donated again. She has not seen a gynaecologist since. She does not know if the procedure has affected her long-term fertility. Nobody told her to find out.

    The Commission Sounds the Alarm

    Blessing’s experience is precisely what the Plateau State Gender and Equal Opportunity Commission (PLASGEOC) said it has been uncovering across the state’s campuses and precisely why it has decided to speak publicly about a practice that has, until now, operated entirely in the shadows.

    The commission said it had identified at least one fertility facility in the state where young women donate their ova, the medical term for egg cells in exchange for cash payments. It described the practice as exploitative and classified it as a form of gender-based violence.

    The commission’s Head of Information Unit, Nene Dung, said donors are reportedly paid between N120,000 and N150,000 per egg retrieval cycle, while the couples receiving treatment are charged significantly more for the same procedure.

    “People seeking fertility treatment are charged significant amounts, while young girls are paid to donate their ova. Some of them use the money to purchase expensive phones or meet other personal needs,” Dung said.

    The commission has already taken its awareness campaign directly into higher institutions engaging the University of Jos, Plateau State Polytechnic in Barkin Ladi, the College of Education Gindiri, and the University of Education Pankshin.

    Students at each institution have been told about the potential health consequences of egg donation and urged to make informed decisions about their reproductive health.

    “The problem is not limited to communities; it is also prevalent in schools. We are intensifying awareness efforts to ensure young women understand the implications and risks involved,” Dung said.

    The commission also called on parents and guardians to pay closer attention to the welfare and activities of their children, and urged all stakeholders to support efforts to hold exploitative facilities accountable.

    A Booming Industry, a Broken Regulatory Framework

    The alarm in Plateau State is a localised expression of a national problem rooted in the near-total absence of regulation governing Nigeria’s fast-expanding fertility industry.

    There are now around 100 fertility clinics operating across Nigeria which is an increase of over 4,000 percent since the first IVF clinic was established in the country over two decades ago.

    The industry has grown rapidly, fuelled by rising awareness of infertility treatment and the expansion of private fertility services beyond Lagos and Abuja into secondary cities like Jos, Kaduna, and Kano.

    Regulatory oversight has not kept pace.

    Nigeria’s National Health Act of 2014 is the only law that attempts to regulate egg donation in the country, but it does not directly address it.

    Section 53 of the Act criminalises the buying or selling of human tissue and since eggs are considered human tissue, this creates a legal grey area.

    Egg donation itself is not explicitly illegal, but there are no regulations specifying who can donate, how often, or what compensation is appropriate. As a result, many young women go through the process without proper counselling, medical support, or clear information.

    With the growing number of private fertility clinics in Nigeria, there is a risk that assisted reproductive technology may become increasingly commodified where profit is prioritised over patient welfare.

    In a country where poverty rates are high, women may be pressured into donating eggs for financial reasons, often without a full understanding of the medical risks involved.

    Across Africa more broadly, poor regulation and lack of transparency in the fertility industry leave donors and recipients vulnerable to exploitation and unethical practices. The absence of a clear legal framework has sparked concerns around informed consent and donor protection.

    What the Medicine Says

    For Blessing and the many young women like her across Plateau State’s campuses, the procedure they are agreeing to for N120,000 to N150,000 is medically non-trivial.

    Egg donation requires controlled ovarian hyperstimulation, a course of daily hormone injections that forces the body to produce multiple egg follicles simultaneously followed by a surgical retrieval procedure conducted under sedation.

    The most documented and serious immediate complication is ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome, or OHSS, the very condition that left Blessing with a month of abdominal swelling and sleepless nights.

    THE WHISTLER learned that in a study of 617 egg donors in the United States, 10.3 percent experienced severe OHSS symptoms, while 1.62 percent were hospitalized with critical OHSS including kidney failure and cardiovascular collapse. Nineteen women in the same study described ovarian torsion, a condition in which engorged ovaries twist on themselves and cut off their own blood supply.

    In severe OHSS cases, ovaries can balloon to several times their normal size, causing abdominal pain, fluid retention, and dangerous blood clots. Around five percent of women undergoing ovarian stimulation may encounter moderate to severe OHSS.

    Beyond OHSS, the rate of serious complications from retrieval procedures including ovarian torsion, intra-abdominal bleeding, infection, and ruptured ovarian cysts has been documented at between 0.7 and 0.87 percent of retrieval cycles, with a further 8.5 percent of donors experiencing minor complications serious enough to require medical attention after the procedure.

    These figures come from well-regulated clinical environments in countries where fertility clinics operate under mandatory licensing, pre-procedure counselling protocols, and post-procedure monitoring requirements. In Nigeria, where none of those standards are uniformly enforced, the risks borne by donors like Blessing may be substantially higher.

    Dr. Ladi Dachung, a gynaecologist based in Jos who has no affiliation with any fertility clinic, said the absence of a regulatory framework means that women who experience complications after egg donation have almost no formal recourse.

    “When a young woman walks into a clinic, gets injections, has her eggs removed and then experiences problems, there is no authority she can complain to that has any power over that clinic. There is no licensing body that can sanction the clinic. There is no record of the procedure that links her to the facility. She is entirely on her own,” Dr. Dachung said.

    The Exploitation Arithmetic

    At the core of what the Plateau commission is calling gender-based violence is a financial structure that places all the risk on the donor and almost all the profit with the clinic.

    A young woman in Jos is paid N120,000 to N150,000 to undergo hormonal stimulation and surgical egg retrieval, a procedure that carries documented medical risks and no therapeutic benefit to her own body. The clinic takes those eggs and charges an infertile couple undergoing IVF treatment many multiples of that amount. IVF treatment in Nigeria can cost around ₦1.1 million per cycle , and cycles using donor eggs typically command a premium above that figure.

    The donor receives less than 15 percent of what the procedure generates. She bears 100 percent of the physical risk.

    Dr. Safiya Ahmad Nuhu, gender studies at Bayero University Kano, who has researched reproductive exploitation in northern and north-central Nigeria, said the financial structure is deliberately designed to take advantage of economic vulnerability.

    “These clinics are not selecting donors randomly.

    They are targeting young women in financial distress such as students, low-income women, women with no safety net. The payment is calibrated to be just enough to be attractive without being large enough to attract scrutiny. It is a very deliberate exploitation of poverty,” she said.

    Ferrukh Faruqui, an international researcher who has studied egg donation practices described it as “unethical” that vulnerable young women continue to be exploited by a profitable, largely unregulated fertility industry, calling the financial incentive structure an “ethical conflict of interest for poor women” who risk their health for the benefit of wealthy recipients and profitable clinics.

    The Silence That Protects the Trade

    Part of what allows the practice to continue unchallenged is the silence built into its structure.

    Donors are typically required to maintain confidentiality as a condition of payment. The clinics operate discreetly. And the young women who experience complications like Blessing, with her month of abdominal pain are quietly managed and sent home without formal documentation.

    With no clear national law governing egg donation, many clinics operate without transparency or accountability. Many young women go through the process without proper counselling, medical support, or clear information leaving them vulnerable to exploitation.

    There is also a cultural dimension. In Plateau State, as across much of Nigeria, reproductive health is a deeply private subject. Young women who experience complications after egg donation are unlikely to discuss it openly, still less to seek legal redress. They suffer quietly, and the clinics continue operating.

    Blessing has not told her parents what she did. She has not told most of her friends. When asked if she would warn other students against it, she paused for a long time before answering.

    “I would tell them to think very carefully,” she said finally. “The money is real. But what they do not tell you is also real.”

    What Must Change

    Reproductive health advocates and legal scholars have consistently identified the same set of reforms that Nigeria needs to bring the fertility industry under meaningful oversight: a dedicated legal framework governing assisted reproductive technology; mandatory licensing and regular inspection of fertility clinics; standardised and enforceable informed consent protocols; limits on the frequency of donation per individual; and clear, regulated compensation guidelines that prevent economic desperation from substituting for genuine consent.

    Scholars have specifically recommended that regulatory measures be established at the state level across Nigeria, with legislation clearly stating that free and informed decision-making is central to all assisted reproductive technology procedures, and that professional bodies and ART institutions must provide consistent, updated guidelines aligned with international best practices.

    PLASGEOC has called on all stakeholders to support its awareness campaign and demanded that anyone found engaging in exploitative practices be held accountable under the law.

    But accountability requires a law specific enough to be invoked and that law does not yet exist.

    Until it does, the trade will continue as it always has: without advertising, without records, and without consequences.

    One whisper at a time, in the corridors of student hostels across Plateau State, the next Blessing is already being recruited.

    Fertility Clinics Getting Rich Off Students’ Desperation In Plateau is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • Police Kill Two Kidnappers , Rescue Five Victims In Abuja

    Police Kill Two Kidnappers , Rescue Five Victims In Abuja

    The FCT Police Command has successfully rescued five kidnapped victims following an intensive joint rescue operation conducted in the Byazhin area of the Federal Capital Territory.

    Acting on recent kidnapping incidents within Paze community in Byazhin area, the Commissioner of Police, FCT Command, CP Ahmed Muhammed Sanusi, PhD, FCAI, personally led a clearance operation with a team comprising operatives of the Anti-Kidnapping Unit, the NPF Intelligence Response Team (IRT), and Kubwa Area Command, in collaboration with local hunters and vigilante groups.

    On 9th June, 2026, at approximately 9:00 p.m., the joint security team launched an intensive search, clearance, and rescue operation across Paze and Byazhin communities. 

    During the operation, the team engaged suspected kidnappers in a gun duel, resulting in the neutralization of two suspects and the arrest of two others identified as Icheh Mohammadu and Abubakar Usman, while other gang members fled into nearby hills with varying degrees of bullet wounds. 

    During the operation, the police team also recovered two AK-47 rifles with magazines. The Command therefore calls on healthcare practitioners, private and public hospitals, and members of the public to promptly report any individual presenting gunshot related injuries or seeking treatment under suspicious circumstances.

    The sustained pressure mounted on the criminal elements forced them to abandon five hostages, who were promptly rescued unharmed.

    The rescued victims have since been taken to a nearby hospital for medical attention, while efforts are ongoing to reunite them with their families. Meanwhile, search operations continue across the general area and adjoining communities aimed at apprehending the fleeing suspects and dismantling the criminal network.

    The Commissioner of Police commended the bravery, resilience, and professionalism displayed by the operatives and supporting local security volunteers during the operation. He reaffirmed the Command’s resolve to combating kidnapping and other violent crimes across the Federal Capital Territory.

    Members of the public are encouraged to remain security conscious and report suspicious persons or activities to the nearest police station or through the Command’s emergency numbers: 08032003913, 07057337653.

  • BUA Chairman, Rabiu Acquires Another Private Jet

    BUA Chairman, Rabiu Acquires Another Private Jet

    Chairman of BUA Group, Abdul Samad Rabiu, has taken delivery of a Bombardier Global 8000 private jet valued at approximately $81m (about N110bn), further expanding the conglomerate’s corporate aviation fleet.

    Rabiu announced the arrival of the aircraft via his Instagram Stories, expressing gratitude to God for the milestone achievement.

    The newly delivered Global 8000 joins BUA Group’s existing aviation assets, which include a Bombardier Challenger 350 and a Bombardier Global 6500, reinforcing the company’s growing investment in business aviation.

    The acquisition follows the signing of a purchase agreement on December 4, 2025, at BUA Group’s Dubai office during a meeting between Rabiu and senior executives of Bombardier, the Canadian aircraft manufacturer.

    Speaking at the time of the agreement, Rabiu described the purchase as both a strategic business tool and a reflection of BUA Group’s long-term growth ambitions as the company continues to expand across multiple industries and international markets.

    According to Bombardier, the Global 8000 is designed to combine industry-leading speed and range with a spacious cabin featuring four distinct living areas.

    The aircraft is expected to offer the longest range in its class while maintaining one of the fastest operating speeds in business aviation.

    With a maximum range of approximately 8,000 nautical miles, the jet can undertake nonstop intercontinental flights on routes that would typically require refuelling stops for smaller aircraft.

    Its cabin layout allows for flexible configurations that support work, dining, relaxation, and private sleeping arrangements during long-haul journeys.

    Industry analysts note that ownership of an aircraft in the Global 8000 class comes with high operating costs. Annual expenses are estimated to range between $1.8m and $2.9m, depending on factors such as flight hours, maintenance requirements, crew costs, and route complexity.

    BUA Chairman, Rabiu Acquires Another Private Jet is first published on The Whistler Newspaper

  • NWFL: Bayelsa Queens beat Rivers Angels to end barren streak

    NWFL: Bayelsa Queens beat Rivers Angels to end barren streak

    Holders Bayelsa Queens recorded their first win in the Nigeria Women Football League, NWFL, Super Six playoff courtesy of a 2-1 victory over Rivers Angels.

    The Prosperity Girls showed resilience and character to reclaim the lead after being pegged back in the second half.

    Chiamaka Ezekwugo opened the scoring for Bayelsa Queens with a powerful header one minute before the half  hour mark.

    Abasiofon Uwah restored parity for Rivers Angels from the penalty spot in the 58th minute.

    However, Dorshima Taarnum’s 63rd minute decisive strike proved to be the difference as Bayelsa Queens sealed all three points.

    Bayelsa Queens moved to third position  on the standings with four points from three games following the win.

    NWFL: Bayelsa Queens beat Rivers Angels to end barren streak

  • Again, EFCC arraign Blessing CEO over N13m cancer fraud

    Again, EFCC arraign Blessing CEO over N13m cancer fraud

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has again arraigned controversial self-acclaimed relationship expert, Blessing CEO.

    Blessing CEO was arraigned before the Federal High Court sitting in Ikoyi, Lagos State on Wednesday, June 10 2026, over a N13 million cancer fraud.and falsification of cancer result.

    The arraignment followed several petitions from individuals and groups, including the Nigeria Cancer Society.

    The EFCC in a statement shared on Instagram said it filed “a fresh six count charge bordering on obtaining money by false pretence and retaining the proceeds”.

    “The petitioners allegedly made donations to the defendant after her posts claiming that she was battling Stage 4 breast cancer.

    “She was, however, later discovered to have allegedly falsified the document she presented to members of the public,” the commission added.

    The development came less than 24 hours after Blessing CEO was arraigned for an alleged N69.1 million tenancy fraud.

    https://dailypost.ng/2026/06/09/alleged-n69-1m-fraud-blessing-ceo-faces-fresh-efcc-charge

    Again, EFCC arraign Blessing CEO over N13m cancer fraud

  • Arsenal close in on Arnaldo Abrantes, Chelsea defender returns as Alonso arrives

    Arsenal close in on Arnaldo Abrantes, Chelsea defender returns as Alonso arrives

    Arsenal are closing in on appointing former Olympic sprinter Arnaldo Abrantes as the Gunners’ new first-team doctor after the sacking of Zafar Iqbal.

    The Telegraph reports that Abrantes is now poised for the job.

    Abrantes is understood to have left his most recent position as the head of medical services at Aston Villa following the conclusion of the 2025/26 season.

    The 39-year-old has also worked for Nottingham Forest as head of performance in the past.

    Meanwhile, in another development,

    West Ham United confirmed that defender Axel Disasi is returning to parent club Chelsea after the conclusion of his six-month loan deal at the London Stadium.

    Disasi will now hope for a fresh start at Chelsea under new manager Xabi Alonso.

    The 27-year-old made 17 appearances in the Premier League and FA Cup, scoring against Leeds in the sixth round.

    Arsenal close in on Arnaldo Abrantes, Chelsea defender returns as Alonso arrives

  • White House Set To Host Historic UFC Combat

    White House Set To Host Historic UFC Combat

    Combat sports will be brought to a standstill when two highly rated popular figures in the Lightweight division Alex ‘Poatan’ Pereira and Ilia Topuria are set to go head to head on Monday at the White House lawn in what will be a historic UFC fight.

    The UFC Freedom 250 card will be the first ever sporting spectacle hosted at the White House, while it will also mark the 250th anniversary of the United States.

    Topuria who is coming into the match as an unbeaten double weight class champion, is known as one of the most feared fighters in the world having gotten the better of names such as Paddy Pimblett, Dustin Poirier and Tony Ferguson.

    Topuria, known as ‘El Matador’, recorded high-profile knockout wins over Charles Oliveira, Max Holloway and Alexander Volkanovski in his last three fights amid title success in both the Featherweight and Lightweight classes.

    UFC Freedom 250

    In the co-main event, Pereira is aiming to become the first UFC fighter to claim belts in three weight divisions when he takes on Ciryl Gane for the interim heavyweight title.

    As a former middleweight and light heavyweight champion, Pereira (13-3-0) powered his way to five knockout victories in his last six fights. Gane (13-2-0, 1NC) is unbeaten in his last two fights, while his last fight with heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall at UFC321 was rendered a no contest owing to an eye poke in the first round.

    With legendary status in view, Poatan expressed that he is already focused on fights beyond UFC Freedom 250, given that he could well be approaching the latter stage of his career.

    The main card will also feature the colourful Sean O’Malley, who will once again hope to become a top contender in the bantamweight division when he takes on Aiemann Zahabi before the co-main event.

    In a separate Heavyweight clash, fan favourite Derrick Lewis will face the undefeated Josh Hokit, who saw off Denzel Freeman and Curtis Blaydes in his last two fights. Much like that of O’Malley and Lewis, Hokit is known for his outspoken demeanour as a favourite to US President Donald Trump.

    White House Set To Host Historic UFC Combat is first published on The Whistler Newspaper