Author: Fatimah Idera

Fatimah Idera is a writer and passionate journalist who loves writing and researching.With over 4 years of reporting her stories imbibe the storytelling techniques in capturing audience attention.She covers beats around procurement/accountability,Investigative reports, fact checking, climate, education, health and developmental reports. Fatimah who is based in Lagos had attended several trainings. She also cover UK news for the new Dailyprime.

Fake-degree NHS doctor

A woman who posed as a qualified psychiatrist and worked in the NHS for more than two decades has been ordered to repay over £400,000 or serve additional time behind bars. Zholia Alemi, 62, of Burnley, secured jobs across the UK by submitting forged medical credentials to the General Medical Council (GMC), despite never completing her medical degree. She was convicted of 20 offences, including forgery, and sentenced to seven years in prison in 2023 following a trial at Manchester Crown Court. On Wednesday, a judge ruled that Alemi must return £406,624 to the NHS in compensation or face a…

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Harvard university

In a move that intensifies an ongoing battle with one of the nation’s most prestigious universities, President Donald Trump on Wednesday suspended the entry of foreign nationals seeking to study or participate in exchange programs at Harvard University, citing national security concerns. The presidential proclamation, effective for an initial period of six months, blocks new international students from entering the U.S. to attend the varsity. It also directs the State Department to consider revoking the academic or exchange visas of current students who fall under the directive’s criteria. The suspension could be extended beyond six months. The school swiftly condemned…

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An immigrant Guatemalan man mistakenly deported to Mexico returns to U.S

A deported immigrant and Guatemalan man who was mistakenly deported to Mexico despite expressing fear of persecution had been flown back to the United States (US) on Wednesday, following a federal judge’s order directing the Trump administration to facilitate his return. The man’s return marks a significant development in a series of judicial rulings requiring the U.S. government to bring back migrants who were unlawfully deported. It appears to be the first successful reentry among those cases. Recall that on May 23, U.S. District Judge Brian Murphy in Boston ordered the man’s return after the Department of Justice admitted its…

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Rachel Reeves

British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves on Wednesday pledged £15.6 billion ($21.1 billion) to upgrade transport infrastructure in cities beyond London, marking a major step in addressing long-standing regional disparities. Speaking in Rochdale, northwest England, Reeves unveiled the first commitments from her upcoming June 11 Spending Review, which will outline government department budgets through 2029. This is the most comprehensive multi-year review since 2015, aside from a COVID-specific one in 2021. The announcement comes as Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s Labour government seeks to demonstrate tangible progress in public services and infrastructure after poor results in recent local elections. Cities outside London…

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OECD lowers global forecast

The global economy is slowing more than previously expected, with the Trump administration’s ongoing trade war increasingly affecting U.S. growth, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) warned on Tuesday. In its latest Economic Outlook, the Paris-based organisation revised its global growth projections downward, citing rising protectionism and persistent trade tensions. Global economic growth is now projected to decline from 3.3 per cent in 2024 to 2.9 per cent in both 2025 and 2026. This marks a downgrade from the OECD’s March forecast, which anticipated growth of 3.1 per cent this year and 3.0 per cent next year. The…

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Vietnamese firms to sign MoUs for $2 billion in U.S. agricultural imports

Vietnamese firms are set to sign Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) with U.S. partners to purchase $2 billion worth of American agricultural products, Vietnam’s Ministry of Agriculture announced on Tuesday. The agreements are part of broader efforts to strengthen trade ties and secure a new bilateral trade deal. The deals come amid trade tensions that saw the Trump administration impose a 46 per cent reciprocal tariff on Vietnamese goods as a measure currently paused until July. If enforced, these tariffs could significantly impact Vietnam’s export-driven economy, particularly its vital trade relationship with the United States, its largest export market. The agreements…

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Britain’s Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds

Britain’s Trade Secretary Jonathan Reynolds is set to meet the U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Tuesday to discuss the implementation of a bilateral trade arrangement complicated by the U.S. decision to impose new steel tariffs. Impact of Reynolds’ visit to US Reynolds’ visit to Paris and Brussels this week marks a key step in reviewing recent political agreements with both the United States and the European Union, which are Britain’s two largest trading partners. While the deals announced last month signal political alignment, they are not formal trade agreements, and their implementation details remain unclear. One of the main…

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Australia pays Nauru $400m to deport former detainees

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Monday that his government would determine its defence capability requirements before committing to any increase in military spending, responding to a U.S. request for Australia to raise its defence budget to 3.5 per cent of GDP. “What you should do in defence is decide what you need your capability and then provide for it,” Albanese told reporters. He emphasised that his government had already accelerated A$10 billion in defence funding over the next four years and is targeting a defence budget of 2.3 per cent of GDP by 2033. The comments came after…

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