 The Speaker of the House of Representatives Honourable Abbas Tajuddin has assured that the 10th National Assembly is committed to prioritising and addressing the socio-economic challenges facing Nigerians. He said these are planned every on Tuesday, while welcoming members back from a two-month annual recess. Abbas says legislative actions must be activated to dictate a clear robust vision aimed at supporting the executive in restoring the country to the part of prosperity. And this can only be achieved by sustaining the January to December budget circle as introduced by the 9th Assembly. All adult committees shall cease to exist on October 3rd, 2023. However, in an event that any adult committee is unable to conclude its assignment on this date, such as shall be yielded to the relevant standing committees of the House. My dear colleagues, I bid need to express my displeasure at the failure of substrate caucuses to send their nominations for membership of the standing committees. This is in spite of all pleas made to us before our recess and assurances received from the state caucuses. As a result, therefore, we are yet to fully populate the standing committees of the House. Consequently, the House leadership has resolved to make such nominations for states who failed to do so by Thursday, 28 September. In a related development, the House has resolved to mandate its committee on health institutions to investigate cases of unethical exploitative practices in health procurement and surrogacy by fertility hospitals and clinics in the country. But by Jimmy Benson, who moved the motion expressed this May, are the unholy practice of by fertility centers who are capitalizing on the absence of a sustainable or suitable regulatory framework to exploit providers at donors while potentially trading on donated eggs. The House, however, mandated its committee on health institutions to ensure compliance as it adjourned plenary to 3 October. The House is worried that women under ghost surgical egg retrieval relinquishing control over the eggs obtained between 100,000 Naira to 150,000 Naira by retrieval with five to six eggs extracted per month. The House is also worried about the widespread practice of terminating this process as donation while in reality desperate women of childbearing age are coerced through target marketing to sell their eggs with potentially adverse effects on their future reproductive health and overall well-being.