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Senate Vows To Scrutinise Service-Wide Votes Spending, Says No Budget Extension Beyond December

The Senate, on Monday, said any agency benefiting from service-wide votes without proper accountability would no longer be tolerated.

This is according to the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Senator Adeola Olamilekan, who warned that the 2026 budget would mark a decisive break from past spending practices.

READ ALSO: Peter Obi Joins Occupy National Assembly Protest Over E-Transmission Of Election Results

Speaking at a one-day public hearing on the 2026 Appropriation Bill, Senator Olamilekan stated that every expenditure item would be subjected to strict scrutiny to determine how public funds are utilised.

He called on ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) to cooperate fully with oversight institutions to promote transparency, efficiency and fiscal discipline across government.

The lawmaker also declared that the National Assembly will no longer extend the implementation of federal budgets beyond December 31, insisting that delays undermine fiscal planning and accountability.

Olamilekan equally highlighted the electricity sector as a major drain on public finances, underpinning the urgent need for comprehensive reforms, including unbundling of the power sector.

He noted that electricity subsidies, which run into several trillions of naira annually, must be addressed to free up revenue for national development.

Heavy Debt-Servicing 

He further expressed concern that government revenue remains inadequate to fund the proposed 2026 budget, which carries a deficit of ₦25.1 trillion.

According to him, budgeting without sufficient revenue raises serious questions about fiscal sustainability.

Responding to comments by a economic consultant, Mr. Adetilewa Adebayo, who warned that Nigeria’s estimated $3 trillion economic potential is being eroded by weak leadership and unsustainable borrowing, Senator Olamilekan noted that continued borrowing had become unavoidable due to heavy debt-servicing obligations inherited from previous administrations, including the military era.

Again, he said that high debt-to-revenue ratios were not unique to Nigeria, explaining that government revenues come in irregular inflows rather than bulk sums.

“If we project ₦5 trillion in a month, we may only realise ₦1 trillion, but the government must go on,” he stated.

The senator further stated that Nigeria must continue to service its debts to avoid a downgrade by international institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), warning that failure to meet financial obligations would damage the country’s credibility.

“Our debt service is a problem; we are servicing debt from previous administrations, even from the military era. We have no choice but continue to pay.

“An attempt by us to fail to meet any financial obligations, our rating will drop both in the World Bank and the IMF, and that’s not good for the country. We must try and free up so much of our revenue to address the deficit challenges confronting us,” Olamilekan added.

Gu beaten by Gremaud to Olympic gold in women’s slopestyle

Switzerland’s Mathilde Gremaud has retained her Olympic title in the slopestyle freestyle skiing competition at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Games in a gripping race in the Italian Alpine town of Livigno.

China’s Eileen Gu, who had been hoping to convert her Beijing 2022 silver medal into gold this time, came in second on Monday after tumbling at the start of her last run.

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Canada’s Megan Oldham, ⁠24, took the bottom step of the podium despite a big crash on her second run.

Earning herself a day-late birthday present, Gremaud skied well above the already very high bar set by Gu on her first run with three spectacular runs of her own, wearing the Swiss flag like a cape as she came down the last time, having already ensured herself the gold medal.

Mathilde Gremaud in action.
Gremaud competes in the women’s slopestyle final [Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP]

Gremaud rolls out new trick

On a crisp and sunny day in the high-altitude ski resort close to the Swiss border, Gremaud kicked off the final by performing – ⁠for the first time by a woman – an elite-level trick known as the nose butter double cork 1260.

In this trick, the skier presses the tips of the skis on the takeoff to start the spin and then performs a double cork 1260, two distinct off-axis, inverted flips combined with three-and-a-half full, horizontal rotations.

Known for her variety of tricks on the slope, the Swiss champion veered towards the very technical ones, followed by breathtaking acrobatic jumps during her second run, earning her the eventual highest score overall of 86.96, just pipping Gu’s first-run score of 86.58.

Despite the big crash on her second run, ‌Oldham picked up in the third run, soaring through the rails and performing conservative yet still very acrobatic jumps at the end, winning her a score of 76.46.

At the end of the race and during the prize-giving ceremony, the crowd was painted in different hues of red as the ‌flags of the three winning countries – Switzerland, China and Canada – all waved in the air to the beat of loud music and cheering. The medals were handed out by Britain’s ‌Princess Anne, a former Olympic equestrian.

Eileen Gu in action.
Gu won her second straight Olympic silver medal in the freestyle slopestyle event [Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP]

High competition

Double Olympic champion Gu, 22, set ⁠the bar high on the first run with big tricks on the rails and stunning jumps, adding flair to all of her tricks and putting herself in first place early on.

After a poor second run when she stumbled on the rails at the beginning of the beautifully sculpted piste, Gu knew ‌she would need something special on her final run to grab the title away from Gremaud. But she tumbled into the snow almost immediately, ending her hopes of reclaiming top spot in the competition.

American-born Gu, who represents her mother’s country of China at the Olympics, said last week that she had nothing left to prove after her two gold and one silver medal from Beijing.

Has Iran rigged the game against itself? | Pinch Point

Pinch Point

Iran has a long history of coups, revolutions and invasions, leaving it with a complex web of economic, religious and military alliances.

On paper, it’s meant to create a balance between theocracy and democracy. In reality, only one man is truly in control.

The questions Townsend must answer before Calcutta Cup

Tom English

BBC Scotland’s chief sports writer
  • 11 Comments

Having won their opening game in the Six Nations for five seasons in a row, Scotland’s forlorn grind for relevance has started early this time.

After death in the Eternal City comes the resurrection mission in Auld Reekie.

It’s a dismal reflection on the state of things that Scotland are now looking for yet another “reaction” after yet another defeat.

But that is where they are under an increasingly beleaguered Gregor Townsend and a coaching regime that has been there too long and needs breaking up with new voices being heard.

The players, too, must be boring themselves at this point.

Their coach is under the cosh, but they continue to fail on multiple fronts – attitude, accuracy, mental strength, ruthlessness. They are bobbing along and going nowhere.

As an international rugby nation, the Scots are now deep into their third decade of existential crisis, so you’d think the awfulness of Saturday’s defeat by Italy in Rome would be easier to take.

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The ‘proud of the effort’ mantra from Townsend is the biggest red rag to the biggest Scottish bull.

The scale of the failure was epic, not so much because they lost – because this was always going to be a tight game against a fine Italy team – but in the way they lost.

Their lack of aggression and intent from the start, their defensive disorganisation for Italy’s tries, the terrible weaknesses in their lineout (while Italy were nailing most of theirs), the self-harming bouts of indiscipline at critical times, their inability to problem-solve on the move.

Italy were missing some key players. Scotland were missing no-one.

When it came to coaching nous and player execution, Italy had a little too much of both.

They inflicted a soul-destroying defeat on Scotland, but, in many senses, Scotland did it to themselves. A recurring theme, that.

The feeling of fury in the aftermath is unprecedented since Andy Robinson’s team lost to Tonga in 2013 and Matt Williams’ team lost to, well, pretty much everybody in his slapstick years in charge.

A campaign over after just one game? Maybe premature, but you can’t fault anybody for thinking it.

England will expect an angry Scottish reaction on Saturday. Some of the visitors, hard-bitten by recent experience, will know that there’s fire and brimstone coming their way.

The home fans in vast numbers are now dead against Townsend remaining as coach, but come kick-off time in Edinburgh, you won’t know it. The place will be electrified.

Could you discount a Scotland upset? No. Would you bet on it? No, again.

At Murrayfield, the decision-makers are sitting in silence, apparently still confident that improvement will come if they just hold their nerve.

As a reminder, Townsend took over in 2017. He’s nearly 100 games in. This is his ninth Six Nations. Scotland have never contended.

His future is being talked about, but not by the people who might determine it. Not yet.

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What to do with the back three?

Townsend picked on form in Rome, but it was a brutal experience for all involved, particularly Jamie Dobie, one of the best Glasgow Warriors players in a stellar season for his club side.

The weather made it a dogfight in the air. Scotland won some battles, but Italy won the war.

Scotland’s victories in the contestable kicking duels led to field position, which they subsequently butchered.

Some of Italy’s wins led to points, particularly when Louis Lynagh out-did Dobie just before the Tommaso Menoncello try and the Italy forwards were way more alert in mopping up in the aftermath.

Would it have been any different had Townsend gone with his established three of Blair Kinghorn, Darcy Graham and Duhan van der Merwe? Unlikely.

It wasn’t a day for Kinghorn’s game – and he hasn’t been playing great in France in any event. Van der Merwe – still fighting to regain form – is vulnerable in the air at the best of times.

These are huge calls for Townsend. Rip it up or keep faith? Van der Merwe has been a wrecking ball to the English, a bogey man they have largely failed to contain.

He has scored seven tries in five games in the Calcutta Cup. The fixture stirs something inside him.

Will Townsend pick on vibes? Will he put the band back together? What, then, about the notion of picking on form? The form guys out wide all season have been Kyle Steyn and Dobie.

Lineout is Scotland’s weakness in microcosm

A general view of a lineout during the Six Nations match between Italy and Scotland at the Stadio OlimpicoSNS

Twice in the opening 11 minutes in Rome, Scotland had an attacking lineout in the Italy 22.

On any day, these were glorious chances to build pressure and add points. On a day like Saturday, they were golden opportunities. They lost both lineouts.

Their drill both times was hardly complex. The throw went to the front – the safest option – and Italy were up quicker to steal it. It was the kind of sluggishness that proved so costly.

The rain pelted down, but Italy found a way to deliver a functioning lineout. Scotland toiled miserably.

They were beaten at the front, in the middle and then, in a monsoon, they launched some over the back. No lifter, no jumper, no communication. It was a mess.

And everybody was to blame, not just Ewan Ashman and George Turner.

A change at hooker? If Dave Cherry was to be parachuted in from the second tier of French rugby then it wouldn’t be a huge surprise.

Cherry can throw, but if the whole operation is as hapless again then everybody may as well stay at home. You don’t win Tests with a third-rate lineout.

More changes at lock? Given how passive Scotland were in the beginning, they’d better get more energy in from the start on Saturday.

Gregor Brown to start ahead of Grant Gilchrist and alongside Scott Cummings.

Jamie Ritchie’s brutality at seven instead of Rory Darge. Get some attrition in there. Some belligerence. Some leaders.

Maybe there’s an almighty eruption on the cards on Saturday. An ambush. A smash-and-grab. Maybe a formidable-looking England are about to get run over by wrathful Scots.

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