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The Sectors Where Engineers are Found

by Fred Nwaozor > This classification captures the major ecosystems or sectors where professional engineers operate. What matters is how their roles shift in focus across these sectors, even though the core engineering principles remain the same. 1. Government (Policy formulation & implementation) In government, engineers function less as hands-on designers and more as technical decision-makers. They contribute to national development by shaping policies, regulations, and standards that guide engineering practice. For example, a civil or telecom engineer in a regulatory agency may help draft infrastructure policies, evaluate national projects, or enforce compliance with safety and quality standards. Their authority ensures that engineering decisions align with public interest; balancing cost, safety, sustainability, and long-term impact. Here, engineering judgment influences what gets built, how it is built, and whether it should be built at all. 2. Academia (Teach...

Trump rejects BBC's Apology, says "Not Enough"

Kings Olajide
The United States President, Donald Trump has again threatened to sue the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) next week for as much as $5 billion after the broadcaster admitted it wrongly edited a video of his speech.

The BBC has been plunged into its biggest crisis in decades after two senior leaders resigned, following accusations of bias including over the editing of Trump’s speech on January 6, 2021, when his supporters stormed the Capitol.

Trump’s lawyers had initially set a Friday deadline for the BBC to retract its documentary or face a lawsuit for “no less” than $1 billion.

The lawyers also demanded an apology and compensation for what they called “overwhelming reputational and financial harm”.

The BBC, which has admitted its editing of Trump’s remarks was an “error of judgement,” sent a personal apology to Trump on Thursday November 13, 2025, and promised not to rebroadcast the documentary, though rejected the defamation claim by Trump.

BBB apologises to Trump over Error in Speech Edit

“We’ll sue them for anywhere between $1 billion and $5 billion, probably sometime next week,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One as he headed Florida for the weekend.

“I think I have to do that; I mean they have even admitted that they cheated. They changed the words coming out of my mouth,” the president added.

Trump said he had not spoken with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, with whom he has built a solid relationship, about the issue, but that he planned to call him this weekend.

He said Starmer had tried to reach him, and was “very embarrassed” by the incident.

In an interview with British right-leaning TV channel GB News, Trump said the edit was “impossible to believe” and compared it to election interference.

He said: “I made a beautiful statement, and they made it into a not beautiful statement.

“Fake news was a great term, except it’s not strong enough. This is beyond fake, this is corrupt.”

Trump added that the BBC’s apology was not enough, saying: “When you say it’s unintentional, I guess if it’s unintentional, you don’t apologise.

“They clipped together two parts of the speech that were nearly an hour apart. It’s incredible to depict the idea that I had given this aggressive speech which led to riots.

"One was making me into a bad guy, and the other was a very calming statement," Trump concluded.