Yinka Odumakin’s last column
She ‘married’ her best friend’s dad!
Nigeria: This Inconclusive country!
Biafra agitation: Abuja, Aburi or Araba?
How not to try Dasuki!
Na wetin MTN do sef?
Papa Eaglets and our cheating culture
Ken Saro-Wiwa wins!
MPC’s obituary announcement
Arewa’s songs of conquest (2)
Arewa’s songs of conquest
Re: Hopelessness Of Our Anti-Corruption War
Fulani herdsmen’s scars on Falae
Hopelessness of our anti-corruption war (2)
Letter To Kumalia:This March Of Folly!
The hopelsssness of our anti-corruption war
Fiscal irresponsibility as ‘Bailout’
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SubscribeFinishing well: The Osoba example
AREMO Olusegun Osoba is known as one of the most celebrated journalists of the old era alive in Nigeria today. He was a hardworking and very mercurial practitioner of journalism and media manager who brought great panache to the industry in his active years in journalism.
Whither Jega’s child voters?
IT’S an undiluted shame that one has to write about the voting age in Nigeria in the year of our Lord 2015! All the preceding ages of civilisations that humanity ever knew had addressed standards in one way or the other.
From stones depicting prices,through King Henry I stretched arm making a yard to the French King’s foot until international standard weights and measurements evolved,the issue has been managed by stages of enlightenment.
Like Nigeria, South Africa fails (2)
THERE is a saying in the Yoruba country that the sound of rain shortly after the utterance of a cleric fortifies his belief that the heavens validate his assertion. As this column was hitting the print last Tuesday, South African President Jacob Zuma was in the news doing what black people are famous for – blaming others for their failures.
Like Nigeria, South Africa fails
ELDER statesman Dr. Tunji Braithwaite once recalled how his mother just six years into Nigeria’s independence asked poignantly “when will this independence end?”. That was how brutal the old woman could put the simmering signs of failure in such a short period. If you are perceptive enough ,you may not have all the tips on how to seed but you sure must identify the signals of failure.
Re: Na only Fulani waka come (2)
DEAR YINKA,I will institute the concluding part of this discourse by differing to agree on some of your earlier positions. If we agreed all the time, it will indeed be a boring exchange and it is not be in my DNA to let a good opportunity go to waste.
Re: Na only Fulani waka come
Thank you for transporting the grand recollections, hopes and outlook that we shared during our days in what we knew as the greatest citadel of learning in Africa. In search for greener pastures, shortly after we left Obafemi Awolowo University, I stumbled on a closely held secret. Our academic curriculum was enormously designed by and after the University of Michigan.
Na only Fulani waka come (2)
I HAVE no issue with Senator Rabiu Kwakwanso keeping his Almajiris so he could mobilise millions of herded voters at will,all I insist is that he should not run education from Abuja and churn out policies that would almajarise my own toddlers.
Na only Fulani waka come
By Yinka Odumakin DEAR Hillary,The headline above is a line you sent to me on WhatsApp in what has become our ritual of daily dialogues about our country over the years. This has been a carryover of our passion from our days at the “Ife fortress “(apology to Prof. Jubril Aminu) where we learned when […]
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