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NAFDAC Speaks On Approving Lung-Cleansing Herbal Tea For Smokers

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

  THE National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has refuted assertions regarding its approval of a…

I Do Not Believe In God Anymore – British-Nigerian, Kemi Badenoch
National

I Do Not Believe In God Anymore – British-Nigerian, Kemi Badenoch

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

The controversial leader of the United Kingdom, UK, Conservative Party, Kemi Badenoch, has opened up about her faith. The politician revealed…

National

Sea Piracy: Nigerian Navy Recruits 1,814 New Sailors

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

  NO fewer than 1,814 young Nigerians have been recruited into the Nigerian Navy within the last six months to…

National

How Social Media Shaped Nigerian Expressions in 2024

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

By Folasade Adeniran, News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) LANGUAGE is a dynamic tool shaped by interaction, cultural perception, attitudes, and…

National

Minister Assures Borno Residents of Steady Power Supply

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

  By Inusa Ndahi, Maiduguri Mr Ekperikpe Ekpo, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Gas), has assured Borno residents…

National

Minister assures Borno residents of steady power supply

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

Mr Ekperikpe Ekpo, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Gas), has assured Borno residents of steady gas supply for…

National

NGO Sensitises 150 People to Humanitarian Development

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

  THE Today for Tomorrow Initiative, in collaboration with Actionaid Nigeria, has sensitised approximately 150 individuals across five communities in…

Global

Canada To End Weeks-Long Postal Strike

adminDecember 15, 2024March 25, 2026

  THE Canadian government is set to end a nearly month-long postal workers’ strike that has disrupted mail delivery across…

National

Founder Of Fashion Chain Mango – Isak Andic Is Dead

adminDecember 15, 2024March 26, 2026

Billionaire founder of the popular fashion chain Mango, Isak Andic is dead. Newsextra24 reports that Andic died in an accident…

National

Again, NNPC Reduces Fuel Price

adminDecember 15, 2024March 25, 2026

  THE Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, NNPC Ltd, has reduced the price of Premium Motor Spirit (petrol) across its…

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  • Easter Security: IGP Sends 250 Tactical Officers, 14 Special Units to Benue
  • ‘It Still Feels Unreal’ — Artemis II Crew Reaches Halfway Mark to the Moon For the four astronauts aboard NASA’s Artemis II mission, the journey to the Moon is no longer just a dream or a countdown on Earth — it is now a living reality. On Saturday, the crew officially crossed the halfway point between Earth and the Moon, marking a major milestone in what is already being described as one of the most historic space missions in modern times. Inside the Orion spacecraft, the astronauts are not just travelling through deep space — they are also soaking in a view very few humans in history have ever witnessed. Astronaut Christina Koch described the moment with simple but powerful emotion, saying the crew shared a collective “expression of joy” when they were informed they had reached the halfway mark. At that point, they had been travelling for just over two days since launching from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. And the view? Nothing short of breathtaking. “We can see the Moon out of the docking hatch right now, it is a beautiful sight,” Koch said during a live NASA broadcast. By early Saturday, NASA confirmed that the Orion spacecraft had travelled more than 229,000 kilometres from Earth, carrying astronauts Christina Koch, Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman, and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen deeper into space than any crewed mission has gone in decades. NASA also released the first striking images from inside the spacecraft — including a full portrait of Earth, glowing blue against the darkness of space, with its oceans and swirling clouds standing out in dramatic contrast. It was one of those images that reminds people just how small, fragile, and beautiful our world really is. For Jeremy Hansen, who is on his first-ever trip to space, the whole experience still feels almost too incredible to process. “There has been a tremendous amount of disbelief for me,” he said. “It’s just so extraordinary.” And beyond the science, the pressure, and the history being made, there is also a childlike wonder in the mission. “I really like it up here,” Hansen said with a smile. “The views are extraordinary. It’s really fun to be floating around. It just makes me feel like a little kid.” That honesty captures what makes this mission so powerful. Yes, it is about exploration, engineering, and the future of humanity in space — but it is also about human emotion. Awe. Fear. Curiosity. Joy. After a dramatic launch and a series of critical engine burns that placed Orion on its path toward the Moon, the astronauts have now settled into the rhythm of life in space. Their schedule still remains packed with technical checks, medical drills, equipment testing, and preparations for scientific observations they will carry out once they move closer to the Moon. NASA officials say the crew is doing well, the spacecraft systems are performing as expected, and morale remains high. The astronauts have also reportedly been able to speak with their families back on Earth — a reminder that even while travelling through deep space, home is never far from the heart. The next major moment in the mission is expected between Sunday night and Monday, when the spacecraft enters what NASA calls the “lunar sphere of influence” — the point where the Moon’s gravity becomes stronger than Earth’s pull on Orion. That moment will be more than just a technical shift. It will signal that the crew is truly entering lunar territory. If all goes according to plan, Artemis II will swing around the Moon early next week, completing a feat not achieved by humans in over 50 years. Even more remarkable, the crew could set a new record by travelling farther from Earth than any human beings have ever gone before. Mission commander Reid Wiseman admitted the scale of the mission still hasn’t fully sunk in. “There is nothing normal about this,” he said. “Sending four humans 250,000 miles away is a Herculean effort, and we are now just realizing the gravity of that.” And he is right. Because beyond the cameras, headlines, and engineering milestones, Artemis II is about something bigger: humanity returning to the frontier. It is the beginning of a new chapter — one that could eventually lead to a permanent human presence on the Moon and lay the groundwork for future missions to Mars and beyond. For now, though, four astronauts are floating quietly through the dark, with Earth behind them and the Moon ahead. And somewhere in that silence, history is unfolding.
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  • Easter Security: IGP Sends 250 Tactical Officers, 14 Special Units to Benue
    General news

    Easter Security: IGP Sends 250 Tactical Officers, 14 Special Units to Benue

    April 4, 2026
  • ‘It Still Feels Unreal’ — Artemis II Crew Reaches Halfway Mark to the Moon  For the four astronauts aboard NASA’s Artemis II mission, the journey to the Moon is no longer just a dream or a countdown on Earth — it is now a living reality.  On Saturday, the crew officially crossed the halfway point between Earth and the Moon, marking a major milestone in what is already being described as one of the most historic space missions in modern times. Inside the Orion spacecraft, the astronauts are not just travelling through deep space — they are also soaking in a view very few humans in history have ever witnessed.  Astronaut Christina Koch described the moment with simple but powerful emotion, saying the crew shared a collective “expression of joy” when they were informed they had reached the halfway mark. At that point, they had been travelling for just over two days since launching from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.  And the view? Nothing short of breathtaking.  “We can see the Moon out of the docking hatch right now, it is a beautiful sight,” Koch said during a live NASA broadcast.  By early Saturday, NASA confirmed that the Orion spacecraft had travelled more than 229,000 kilometres from Earth, carrying astronauts Christina Koch, Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman, and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen deeper into space than any crewed mission has gone in decades.  NASA also released the first striking images from inside the spacecraft — including a full portrait of Earth, glowing blue against the darkness of space, with its oceans and swirling clouds standing out in dramatic contrast. It was one of those images that reminds people just how small, fragile, and beautiful our world really is.  For Jeremy Hansen, who is on his first-ever trip to space, the whole experience still feels almost too incredible to process.  “There has been a tremendous amount of disbelief for me,” he said. “It’s just so extraordinary.”  And beyond the science, the pressure, and the history being made, there is also a childlike wonder in the mission.  “I really like it up here,” Hansen said with a smile. “The views are extraordinary. It’s really fun to be floating around. It just makes me feel like a little kid.”  That honesty captures what makes this mission so powerful. Yes, it is about exploration, engineering, and the future of humanity in space — but it is also about human emotion. Awe. Fear. Curiosity. Joy.  After a dramatic launch and a series of critical engine burns that placed Orion on its path toward the Moon, the astronauts have now settled into the rhythm of life in space. Their schedule still remains packed with technical checks, medical drills, equipment testing, and preparations for scientific observations they will carry out once they move closer to the Moon.  NASA officials say the crew is doing well, the spacecraft systems are performing as expected, and morale remains high. The astronauts have also reportedly been able to speak with their families back on Earth — a reminder that even while travelling through deep space, home is never far from the heart.  The next major moment in the mission is expected between Sunday night and Monday, when the spacecraft enters what NASA calls the “lunar sphere of influence” — the point where the Moon’s gravity becomes stronger than Earth’s pull on Orion.  That moment will be more than just a technical shift. It will signal that the crew is truly entering lunar territory.  If all goes according to plan, Artemis II will swing around the Moon early next week, completing a feat not achieved by humans in over 50 years. Even more remarkable, the crew could set a new record by travelling farther from Earth than any human beings have ever gone before.  Mission commander Reid Wiseman admitted the scale of the mission still hasn’t fully sunk in.  “There is nothing normal about this,” he said. “Sending four humans 250,000 miles away is a Herculean effort, and we are now just realizing the gravity of that.”  And he is right.  Because beyond the cameras, headlines, and engineering milestones, Artemis II is about something bigger: humanity returning to the frontier. It is the beginning of a new chapter — one that could eventually lead to a permanent human presence on the Moon and lay the groundwork for future missions to Mars and beyond.  For now, though, four astronauts are floating quietly through the dark, with Earth behind them and the Moon ahead.  And somewhere in that silence, history is unfolding.
    General news

    ‘It Still Feels Unreal’ — Artemis II Crew Reaches Halfway Mark to the Moon For the four astronauts aboard NASA’s Artemis II mission, the journey to the Moon is no longer just a dream or a countdown on Earth — it is now a living reality. On Saturday, the crew officially crossed the halfway point between Earth and the Moon, marking a major milestone in what is already being described as one of the most historic space missions in modern times. Inside the Orion spacecraft, the astronauts are not just travelling through deep space — they are also soaking in a view very few humans in history have ever witnessed. Astronaut Christina Koch described the moment with simple but powerful emotion, saying the crew shared a collective “expression of joy” when they were informed they had reached the halfway mark. At that point, they had been travelling for just over two days since launching from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. And the view? Nothing short of breathtaking. “We can see the Moon out of the docking hatch right now, it is a beautiful sight,” Koch said during a live NASA broadcast. By early Saturday, NASA confirmed that the Orion spacecraft had travelled more than 229,000 kilometres from Earth, carrying astronauts Christina Koch, Victor Glover, Reid Wiseman, and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen deeper into space than any crewed mission has gone in decades. NASA also released the first striking images from inside the spacecraft — including a full portrait of Earth, glowing blue against the darkness of space, with its oceans and swirling clouds standing out in dramatic contrast. It was one of those images that reminds people just how small, fragile, and beautiful our world really is. For Jeremy Hansen, who is on his first-ever trip to space, the whole experience still feels almost too incredible to process. “There has been a tremendous amount of disbelief for me,” he said. “It’s just so extraordinary.” And beyond the science, the pressure, and the history being made, there is also a childlike wonder in the mission. “I really like it up here,” Hansen said with a smile. “The views are extraordinary. It’s really fun to be floating around. It just makes me feel like a little kid.” That honesty captures what makes this mission so powerful. Yes, it is about exploration, engineering, and the future of humanity in space — but it is also about human emotion. Awe. Fear. Curiosity. Joy. After a dramatic launch and a series of critical engine burns that placed Orion on its path toward the Moon, the astronauts have now settled into the rhythm of life in space. Their schedule still remains packed with technical checks, medical drills, equipment testing, and preparations for scientific observations they will carry out once they move closer to the Moon. NASA officials say the crew is doing well, the spacecraft systems are performing as expected, and morale remains high. The astronauts have also reportedly been able to speak with their families back on Earth — a reminder that even while travelling through deep space, home is never far from the heart. The next major moment in the mission is expected between Sunday night and Monday, when the spacecraft enters what NASA calls the “lunar sphere of influence” — the point where the Moon’s gravity becomes stronger than Earth’s pull on Orion. That moment will be more than just a technical shift. It will signal that the crew is truly entering lunar territory. If all goes according to plan, Artemis II will swing around the Moon early next week, completing a feat not achieved by humans in over 50 years. Even more remarkable, the crew could set a new record by travelling farther from Earth than any human beings have ever gone before. Mission commander Reid Wiseman admitted the scale of the mission still hasn’t fully sunk in. “There is nothing normal about this,” he said. “Sending four humans 250,000 miles away is a Herculean effort, and we are now just realizing the gravity of that.” And he is right. Because beyond the cameras, headlines, and engineering milestones, Artemis II is about something bigger: humanity returning to the frontier. It is the beginning of a new chapter — one that could eventually lead to a permanent human presence on the Moon and lay the groundwork for future missions to Mars and beyond. For now, though, four astronauts are floating quietly through the dark, with Earth behind them and the Moon ahead. And somewhere in that silence, history is unfolding.

    April 4, 2026
  • LASTMA Under Fire as Alleged ₦100,000 Extortion Claim Triggers Probe in Lagos
    General news

    LASTMA Under Fire as Alleged ₦100,000 Extortion Claim Triggers Probe in Lagos

    April 4, 2026
  • Budget on Paper, Empty in Reality: Why Nigeria’s Capital Projects Are Quietly Dying
    General news

    Budget on Paper, Empty in Reality: Why Nigeria’s Capital Projects Are Quietly Dying

    April 4, 2026
  • “Longer. Stronger. Permanent.” — The Dangerous Penis Enlargement Craze Quietly Wounding Nigerian Men
    General news

    “Longer. Stronger. Permanent.” — The Dangerous Penis Enlargement Craze Quietly Wounding Nigerian Men

    April 4, 2026
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