President Jonathan made an audacious move with the reconstitution of National Economic Management Team, essentially to engage in finding solutions to economic mishaps in the country…
Like everything Nigeria, the spate of bombings in the country has taken another dimension, with faceless living human beings among us senselessly going after innocent church worshippers and Islamic pupils…
Kalu should not stop until positive things outnumber negative things in Nigeria. His body language on the position at the World Bank suggests that those involved in it should never beat around the bush…
Nigerian civil servants are the laziest, most indolent, most ineffective and most corrupt breed of their kind in the world. They collude very enthusiastically and very willingly with the politicians and bankers to loot the country. And they are so hypocritical, it is almost unbelievable…
The pattern of attacks is no longer confined to the North-Eastern state of Borno, it has spread to the North West and there had been unsuccessful attempt to spread South ward…
What else could be called moral corruption? To the intellectual dude, politicians have morally crippled the country and the governance, but they will be destroyed by God…
The country’s perennial domestic disorder is due largely to destructive instinct which has continued to be synonymous with the abject and seething cauldrons of poverty of the largest population of the people of Nigeria…
Still fresh in most minds is the president’s loud promise last year to ‘soon’ expose those behind the deadly bombings by the dreaded Boko Haram sect, and right now it is another new year and Nigerians are still waiting eagerly to hear this important exposé…
Maybe, Okonjo-Iweala’s removal will be Nigerians’ subsidy’ to a new lease of life. But is this the way she has to live: genuflecting from one slighted opportunity to another without leaving any vital record on the sand of history?
Two significant events happened in Africa last week that should force Nigerians — both the government and the governed — to do a health check on the democracy we have in place currently: the military coup in Mali and the defeat of incumbent President Abdulaye Wade in Senegal…
Nigeria during her exit from 2006 Paris Club of Creditors was granted a mere 18 percent write down for the $36 billion she owned to mostly European creditors…
