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FG To Launch Two New Additional Investment Funds For Nigerian Startups

The Federal Government of Nigeria’s Investment in Digital and Creative Enterprises (iDICE) programme has announced plans to launch two additional funds for the technology and creative sectors in 2026, targeting investments in Nigerian start-ups across the country.

The announcement comes as the Chair of the iDICE Steering Committee, Vice President Kashim Shettima, described the formal kick-off, featuring an anchor investment in a new venture fund by Ventures Platform, a pan-African seed-stage fund, as an exciting milestone that will leverage the potential of Nigerian youth.

The new funding achieved a $64 million first-round close based on investor commitments last Thursday.

Ventures Platform was appointed as the Fund Manager for the technology component of iDICE in August 2025, following a competitive bidding process supervised by the funding partners.

With this development, iDICE joins other institutional investors, including the International Finance Corporation (IFC), Standard Bank of South Africa, and British International Investment (BII) in the new fund, which has achieved a $64 million first close and targets a final close of $75 million.

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Shettima emphasised earlier that “the commencement of investing by iDICE is an exciting milestone and a leap forward in the determined efforts of the Government of Nigeria, under the leadership of His Excellency President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, to deliver on our vision of unleashing the full potential of Nigeria’s young people, in line with the Renewed Hope agenda.”

Responding to the development, the MD/CEO of Bank of Industry, Dr Olasupo Olusi, said that by investing in Ventures Platform’s Fund II, authorities are deepening the Federal Government’s objective of upscaling the Nigerian technology and creative sectors by catalysing strategic investments in high-growth, technology-enabled enterprises and the innovation ecosystem.

According to him, the development will contribute meaningfully to the nation’s broader economic transformation agenda, with goals to create jobs at scale and empower high-growth entrepreneurs across the country.
Kola Aina, Founding Partner at Ventures Platform, expressed confidence in the partnership, saying: “We are delighted to have been selected as the iDICE Technology Fund Manager, partnering with the Federal Government of Nigeria and other key stakeholders to achieve our collective goal of supporting Nigeria’s young entrepreneurs and innovators to bring their innovative ideas and solutions to life—creating deep value and transforming the country’s economy.”

The iDICE programme is being implemented across three broad areas: skills and enterprise development, focused on building a community of highly skilled talent; expanding access to finance through equity, quasi-equity, debt capital funding, and capacity-building grants; and creating an enabling environment through pro-business policies and legislation.

In addition to its technology-focused investments in 2026, iDICE announced it “will launch two additional funds: a creative sector fund that will invest in creative sector start-ups and a ‘fund of funds’ that will invest in smaller funds supporting technology and creative sector startups.”

iDICE is a $617 million programme launched by the Federal Government of Nigeria to support young Nigerians aged 15-35 with skills and resources in the technology and creative economy sectors, aiming to increase employability, foster innovation, and create new entrepreneurs.

It is supported by financing from the African Development Bank Group (AfDB), Islamic Development Bank (IsDB), and the French Development Agency (AFD), with the state-owned Bank of Industry serving as co-investor and implementing agency.

Children In Need’s Sara Cox’s love life now after escaping boyfriend who stole from her

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Sara Cox is kicking off the longest ever Children In Need challenge today – here we look back at her relationship history, including two husbands and three kids

Radio legend Sara Cox kicks off the longest ever Children In Need challenge today – walking 135 miles, the equivalent of five marathons in just five days.

The BBC Radio 2 drivetime host, who originally hails from Bolton, will trek across four counties – Northumberland, Durham, North Yorkshire and West Yorkshire – to complete the Great North Marathon Challenge and raise thousands for charity.

She’lll run, jog, and walk through sweeping moorland, steep ridges, and the rolling hills of northern England, with the support of towns, villages, and Radio 2 listeners, along the way.

But as her advertising executive husband Ben Cyzer, who she shares two children with, prepares to cheer her on, we look back on her love life up to meeting Ben and how many kids she’s got.

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Last year, Sara told fans how she had once been in a ‘very unhappy’ relationship when she first moved to London back in the mid Nineties- with an ex-boyfriend who she later discovered had actually stole money from her.

Speaking to the Times, Sara – who had moved to the Big Smoke to pursue a career in the music industry – shared: “I was in a very unhappy relationship when I first moved to London. I lived in Arnos Grove in Enfield, north London, in a converted church.

“I was with this person who turned out to be horrible and he stole from me. I felt emotionally stranded there. Then I binned him off and the MTV [from 1997] and Big Breakfast [from 1998] years began.”

Though she has never revealed who the horrible ex was, it clearly didn’t stop her finding love as in October 2001 she married first husband, DJ Jon Carter, now 55.

And it seems Sara is a bit of a fan of secret wedding as her and Jon tied the knot in a small ceremony at a North London registry office, reportedly followed by a small party for friends in a remote Irish hotel.

Together they welcomed Sara’s first child – her eldest daughter Lola, now 21 – in June 2004. But the former couple split a year later in 2005 after a series of rows.

Sara was linked to now husband Ben within weeks of her marriage to Jon falling apart, although at the time they were just good friends. But by 2006, things were hotting up between the pair and they eventually fell in love.

Sharing the lovely story of how they met, Sara said: “My most memorable Glastonbury Festival has got to be 2005. I met a very handsome, dashing, very, very funny, lovely person called Ben.

“And a few years later I married him. So it was the first time I met my now husband, father of two of my children. All thanks to Glastonbury.” She’s also hinted one of her children may have even been conceived at Worthy Farm as they worn a few months later in the following March.

Though they were living together by 2007, the pair didn’t actually tie the knot until June 2013. This was despite Sara once telling the Mirror that although she was happy and in love, she had no plans to walk down the aisle again.

At the time she said: “I am never getting married. Maybe when we are 60 I might get married and have a little party at the old folks’ home – but no.”

But of course she did walk down the aisle again – and it was another secret wedding for Sara – who only revealed the happy news on Twitter, formerly known as X, afterwards by tweeting a picture of herself in a wedding dress alongside her new husband.

By that point, the couple were already parents to son Isaac, who was born in 2008 and is now 17, and daughter Renee, who was born in 2010 and is 15. The family live together in north London, as well as having a horse called Nelly who is stabled in nearby Hertfordshire.

The couple also pranked fans in 2022 by getting ‘re-married’ at Camp Bestival in a ‘manky’ wedding dress while holding a can of Stella. But Sara later revealed it just a joke they signed up for the day before as a bit of a laugh.

She shared: “I don’t think I made it very clear in that post – it’s just a joke thing that you do at Camp Bestival. I mean, look at what I’m wearing! It’s an inflatable church, the DJ was called Jesus. Next to the inflatable church was a little marquee that had all these old wedding dresses, like these really manky wedding dresses, because obviously it’s a festival. They’ve been worn by hundreds of people before.”

Animal lover Sara also has three dogs named Daisy, Dolly and Pip, two cats named Watson and Peggy, and two “quite posh” tortoises called Tom and Chally. She is now toying with the idea of buying some land and expanding her menagerie to include pigs and hens – and says husband Ben is on board.

She told the Mirror: “It’s always been a bit of a pipe dream, but I’d love to have a little smallholding at some point. My dad’s a farmer, he’s got a beef farm up north in Bolton. I’d have Nelly and I’d love a rescue pony, because I’m an ambassador for World Horse Welfare, who have ponies that can’t be ridden but are good to be pals. Plus a couple of little pigs.”

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German court opens trial of Saudi doctor for Christmas market attack

A court in southeastern Germany is set to open the trial of a Saudi Arabian doctor who is suspected of carrying out a ramming attack last year.

Taleb al-Abdulmohsen, a 51-year-old psychiatrist, will appear in court on Monday in the town of Magdeburg, accused of killing six people and wounding more than 300 when he drove a van into a busy Christmas market last December.

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The defendant has been charged with six murders, the attempted murder of another 338 people, and committing a “treacherous attack”. The victims killed included a nine-year-old boy and five women aged 45 to 75.

Because of the large number of victims, a hall has been prepared as a special court that will be able to seat all participants, who are believed to include more than 140 co-plaintiffs and 400 witnesses.

The suspect, who has expressed antipathy towards Islam and sympathy with far-right politics, will be seated in a bullet-proof booth amid a heavy presence by German security forces.

Al-Abdulmohsen, who arrived to live in Germany in 2006, has been in custody since the day of the crime on December 20, 2024, faces life imprisonment for murder if found guilty.

The co-leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, Alice Weidel, attends a commemoration after the Christmas market car-ramming attack in Magdeburg, eastern Germany, on December 23, 2024 (AFP)

According to prosecutors, al-Abdulmohsen was not under the influence of alcohol or other substances and “acted out of dissatisfaction and frustration over the course and outcome of a civil dispute and the failure of various criminal complaints”.

He has described himself as a “Saudi atheist” and an activist who is critical of Islam.

Abdulmohsen’s online activities also included criticism of Germany for accepting too many Muslim refugees and backing for conspiracy theories about the “Islamisation” of Europe. He has expressed support for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

Despite that, the AfD held a “memorial” rally at the scene of the attack, stating that the “terror” arriving in Magdeburg must be halted.

Co-leader Alice Weidel also referred to Abdulmohsen as an “Islamist” as she spoke at the rally. Such rhetoric has helped the far-right party gain prominence in Germany.

10 Players In As Super Eagles Camp Open For Gabon Play-Off Clash

Nigeria’s camp has opened for the 2026 World Cup play-off against Gabon, with ten players already in camp as of early Monday ahead of the crunch tie. 

The players currently in the team’s Rabat, Morocco camp are Fulham defender Calvin Bassey, his teammates, Alex Iwobi, Samuel Chukwueze; Wolves striker, Tolu Arokodare, and Olakunle Olusegun, who plays for Russian outfit, Pari Nizhny Novgorod.

Others are Besiktas midfielder, Wilfred Ndidi; FC Paris winger, Moses Simon, captain William Troost-Ekong; fast-rising defender, Benjamin Fredericks, and Chidozie Awaziem of FC Nantes.

READ ALSO: Nigeria’s Nnadozie Nominated For 2025 FIFA The Best Award (FULL LIST)

Coach Eric Chelle invited 24 players for the match, weeks after Nigeria made the play-offs with a 4-0 thumping of neighbours, Benin Republic.

The Super Eagles are up against the Panthers of Gabon on Thursday, November 13, 2025, in the semi-final of the African play-offs.

Both sides will be eyeing victory, which will take them to the final of the play-offs.

A Place In The Sun’s Jasmine Harman shares family heartbreak after ‘such a painful time’

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A Place In The Sun presenter Jasmine Harman shares two children with her husband Jon but she has opened up on a “painful” time in her life

A Place In The Sun presenter Jasmine Harman has opened up about the heartbreak she and her husband faced while trying to expand their family.

The 49-year-old TV star first joined the popular property programme in 2004 and has since appeared in over 200 episodes. Away from the screen, Jasmine is married to Jon Boast and the couple share two children together.

Speaking to The Sun’s Fabulous magazine, Jasmine spoke candidly about the emotional challenges of parenting, loss, and gratitude as she reflected on how her own upbringing has shaped her approach to motherhood.

“Every decision you make as a parent brings doubt,” Jasmine admitted. “But I remind myself that children turn out as they turn out, shaped by guidance, experience and their own personalities.”

Now a devoted mum to Joy and Albion, both conceived via IVF, Jasmine says she is conscious of giving her children the childhood she never had.

“I had such a different childhood from that of my kids. I’m the eldest of seven and, growing up, our family had very little. I spoil my children more than I should and it feels good to give them the things I didn’t have.”

Despite her sunny on-screen presence, Jasmine’s journey to motherhood has not been without pain. She revealed that in 2017, she and Jon, a cameraman whom she met while filming A Place In The Sun, tried for a third baby, only for their hopes to be crushed when the embryo failed to implant.

“Sadly, when we tried for a third baby in 2017, our embryo didn’t implant,” she said. “This came so soon after losing Jon’s sister, Jo, who died suddenly at 40 from an unexplained heart problem.

“We’d hoped that welcoming a new baby might have lifted the family and brought fresh joy after such a painful time, but instead we were reminded how fragile and precious life can be.”

Jasmine, who joined A Place In The Sun when it launched in 2004, has become one of the show’s longest-serving presenters, helping countless British house hunters find their dream homes abroad.

Away from the cameras, though, she’s open about the realities of parenting and maintaining balance amid busy family life.

“All parents fumble through,” she reflected. “Every day is the first time you have experienced that stage of raising a child — right now, challenges range from siblings falling out to screen-time boundaries.

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“I always apologise if I lose control of my emotions, as I want to model how they should react in or after stressful situations. I just hope my kids see me as present, understanding and kind, and that they remember childhood as a time of love, exploration and adventure.”

The TV star is set to launch her own new series, Jasmine’s Renovation In The Sun. The programme will document exactly how Jasmine and her family purchased a rundown Spanish villa and made it their dream home.

Is the fall of Pokrovsk, Ukraine’s key eastern stronghold, inevitable?

But in recent weeks, tens of thousands of Russian soldiers have been storming the town around the clock, taking over the streets where buildings are mostly reduced to bombed-out, deserted ruins.

They use reconnaissance drones and satellite images to identify gaps in Ukrainian defences and use tiny groups of soldiers who are attacked and killed in droves by Ukrainian drones.

But the surviving soldiers grind forward, targeting drone operators and engaging them in close combat, blazing the trail for larger groups of servicemen.

They are backed by Russian artillery, drones and glide bombs that destroy even the deepest and most fortified bunkers.

The town is “a layer cake of passages, spots under fire, our and enemy positions”, Kirill Sazonov, a Ukrainian political scientist-turned-serviceman, wrote on Telegram on Thursday.

“Somebody is sitting on a third floor, someone’s in a house next door, someone’s in the basement,” he wrote. “There’s no front line, sectors under [Russian or Ukrainian] control or logic.”

He’s confident that Ukrainian forces won’t leave Pokrovsk because Kyiv wants to defend it by any means necessary – and the open fields outside it are “less comfortable than the town’s basements”.

Moscow wants to spur Pokrovsk’s takeover because of worsening weather, muddy roads and a lack of tree foliage that makes troop movements more detectable.

But any predictions about Pokrovsk’s future can only be made “by an idiot, a cynic or a tarot cards reader”, Sazonov wrote.

Members of the White Angel police unit, which evacuates people from front-line towns and villages, check an area for residents in Pokrovsk on May 21, 2025 [Anatolii Stepanov/Reuters]

Is the takeover imminent?

Other analysts disagreed with Sazonov’s assessment that Ukraine will hold its position.

Ukrainian forces “have so few soldiers on the front line that it was possible to contain Russia’s advance only while the Russians were in the fields” around Pokrovsk, Nikolay Mitrokhin, a researcher with Germany’s Bremen University, told Al Jazeera.

As soon as Russian soldiers infiltrated the town, they met next to no resistance because Ukrainians are so few and their drones are less effective among buildings, he said.

“The town’s takeover is a matter of time,” Mitrokhin, who has written hundreds of authoritative analyses of the hostilities since Russia began its full-scale invasion in 2022, told Al Jazeera.

Kyiv may have to make the uneasy decision to pull the remaining forces out of Pokrovsk or risk having them encircled, he said.

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(Al Jazeera)

Why does Russia want Pokrovsk so badly?

Moscow wants to use the town as a springboard for the takeover of the Kyiv-controlled part of Donbas, a key rustbelt region whose annexation Russia declared unilaterally in September 2022.

Kyiv still controls one-third of Donbas, and Pokrovsk’s fall will pave the way for the takeover of other parts of Ukraine’s “belt of strongholds” that have been fortified since 2014.

The town’s commanding heights will also let Russian forces use swarms of drones to back their advance westwards to the Dnipro region.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited the town in late October to encourage the troops, but even his staunchest supporters lambasted him and his top brass for allowing Russian forces to infiltrate Pokrovsk and smaller towns nearby.

“The president takes the risk by coming to support the troops, but systemic problems of managing the troops are not being solved, and we keep losing town after town,” lawmaker Mariana Bazuhla wrote on Facebook on Tuesday.

Pokrovsk’s fall would be a major propaganda triumph for Moscow even though the victory will have cost tens of thousands of lives.

Pokrovsk
Ukrainian soldiers prepare to fire artillery in the direction of Pokrovsk, Ukraine, on September 9, 2025 [Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu via Getty Images]

How will peace talks be affected?

For Russia, the takeover of Pokrovsk would mean that the front-line is “unstable” and Moscow would try to persuade Washington, where United States President Donald Trump has been pushing for peace talks for months, that this insistence on a ceasefire makes no sense, according to Volodymyr Fesenko, head of the Kyiv-based Penta think tank.

Washington and Kyiv want to suspend hostilities along the current front line, which stretches more than 1,000km (620 miles), and begin negotiations on who will hold what territory after that.

The Kremlin’s rationale is that “Russian forces are expanding the zone of their control and that Ukraine will have to unilaterally cede land”, Fesenko told Al Jazeera.

“The peace settlement will be paused for several weeks or even months,” he said.

The Washington-brokered peace talks have been stalled for months and are not likely to be resumed after Trump cancelled his summit with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, which had been expected to be held in Budapest.

Meanwhile, the Kremlin keeps coming up with new demands, such as Ukraine maintaining a neutral status, limitations of its military and recognition of Russia’s annexation of four Ukrainian regions.

Putin also wants the West to lift all sanctions slapped on Russia since it annexed Crimea in 2014 and the recognition of Russian as the second official language in Ukraine.

However, the possible loss of Pokrovsk won’t affect the fighting spirit of Ukrainian troops.

“This isn’t the first town in Donbas Ukrainian forces have to leave. I don’t think it will cardinally affect the morale,” Fesenko said.

What are the economic consequences if Pokrovsk falls to Russia?

Pokrovsk is a major centre for Ukraine’s coal mining industry, and large metallurgical plants in central Ukraine depend on the coking coal it produces.

It is also home to almost a dozen Soviet-era plants although these have suspended work because of the hostilities.

The town’s takeover could boost the Kremlin’s recent efforts to modify the plants of Donbas for production of weaponry and military-related items, according to Pavel Lisyansky, head of the Strategic Research and Security Institute, a Kyiv-based think tank

“They militarise the economy,” he told Al Jazeera, adding that Moscow aims to turn the region into “a huge military base to frighten Europe”.

Pokrovsk also sits at the intersection of several strategic highways and railroads.

After Pokrovsk, Moscow will push to retake Sloviansk, the first Ukrainian town seized by Moscow-backed separatists in 2014.