The Ministry of Transport has defended the government's acquisition of two diesel locomotives and 20 freight wagons, dismissing concerns raised by critics as inaccurate and technically unfounded.
The plans have proven to be very unpopular with a whopping 121 letters of objection submitted, including fears over noise, light, fire risk and road safety.
Nigeria customs generates N3 35 trillion revenue in first five months of 2026 (Nairametrics) The Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) generated N3.35 trillion in revenue between January and May 2026, driven ...
A new oral insulin embedded in sugar-free chocolate uses nano-carriers to target the liver, cutting hypoglycemia risk. The ...
The Egyptian archaeological mission under the Supreme Council of Antiquities operating at the Ain el-Sabil site, located in the Dakhla Oasis, has succeeded in uncovering a fully articulated ...
Google has released A2UI v0.9, a framework-agnostic standard for AI agents to declare user interface intent across multiple ...
Third day of Yorgen Fenech's jury trial dominated by the testimony of Assistant Police Commissioner Keith Arnaud, who walked jurors through the investigation that followed Daphne Caruana Galizia's ass ...
Adani Ports CEO Aswani Gupta explained the transaction adheres to SEBI regulations and reiterated that the Thiruvananthapuram ...
Ed Miliband’s dreams of No11 are at risk as locals in his own backyard are plotting a countryside coup to oust the Chancellor hopeful, GB News can reveal. With leadership frontrunner Andy Burnham ...