Jonathan as Tinubu’s toughest challenger, by Dele Sobowale
Election 2011: The shape of things to come(4)
Yar’Adua: End of self-deceit
Election 2011: The shape of things to come(2)
Election 2011: The shape of things to come
NYSC: Troubled states versus parents/kids
After Yar’Adua: Who Comes Next?
Jos to Warri: In the shadows of death(2)
Jos to Warri: In the shadows of death
They never listen; That is the problem(2)
For love of Blueberry
Making progress: Ghost workers to ghost president
Open letter to Mrs. Jonathan
Lukman: Time to go sir
From President to problem now(4)
Want to be President in 2011? Start now(2)
Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up for our newsletter, and be the first to get the latest news on Vanguard.
SubscribeYar’Adua: From President to problem(2)
“Successful leaders at all levels love their status and power and are hesitant to leaving voluntarilyâ€.
Jack Welch, Chairman, General Electric Company, 1988.
Yar’Adua: From President to problem
A few people are “alive†in the world today but who are on perpetual life support systems. They cannot leave the hospital and are virtually vegetables. The former Prime Minister of Israel, Sharon, has been in coma since 2006; so are about 200 people worldwide. None of them, however great will ever be allowed to govern their nations from their sick beds. As General De Gaulle had said, “The graveyards are full of indispensable peopleâ€. Yar’Adua and nobody else born of woman in Nigeria is indispensable.
Farouk Mutallab will not die
This article could have been titled Obama and Media Executioners Vs Farouk and Nigeria and it will still be appropriate. But, the selection of the title was based on the need to come quickly to the conclusion before providing the supporting evidence.
Fuel scarcity, no; sabotage, yes (2)
CONTRARY to what many people think, the culprit is not NNPC.
As far as importing and making fuel available is concerned, the corporation had done its duty. There is sufficient fuel in Nigeria’s territorial waters to ensure that we do not experience any scarcity throughout the yuletide. The imminent deregulation of the downstream sector is not even the issue.
Fuel scarcity, no; sabotage, yes
IF you think there is fuel scarcity in Nigeria then you must either be ignorant or a fool. There is no fuel scarcity; and that is authoritative – as you will discover shortly. But, there is scarcity of patriotism and abundance of saboteurs – again as you will soon find out.
Judiciary and corruption (2)
James Ibori’s case which has been turned into a charade can serve as proxy for others pending in the courts. This particular case has demonstrated, as no other, how those expensive lawyers, Senior Advocates of Nigeria, SAN, and judges have conspired to delay justice. Granted, the great Dr Samuel Johnson, 1709-1784, had pronounced that, “A lawyer has no business with the justice or injustice of the cause which he undertakesâ€.
Open letter to Mrs Turai Yar’Adua (2)
Let me at this point admit some of the constraints you and the president have. His selection and emergence as president have elevated some people into positions of prominence which will be lost if he steps aside. He is also keenly aware of the constitutional provisions stipulating that the vice president should take over if he resigns his office. Since the office of president was zoned to the North in 2007 that would mean that power will rotate back to the South in less than four or even eight years.
Open letter to Mrs Turai Yar’Adua
BREAKING News Commentary: Justas I was about to send this Sunday’s column to the Sunday Editor, news reached us that our dear President Yar’Adua had once again been admitted into a hospital in Saudi. He was on admission in January this year, which occasioned the column below – written in January 2009.
Amnesty, deregulation and the fate of Nigeria (2)
The Senate is not satisfied with the budget performance, and neither is the minister himself satisfied with the budget performance because in some places the performance is as low as 15 per cent, in some places 27, and in some places 30 something —Senator Ayogu Eze, chairman of the Senate Committee on Information and Media, November 4, 2009.
Amnesty, deregulation and the fate of Nigeria
The gradual descent into anarchy and increasing escalation of violence occurred and grew out of control probably because the leaders of those two countries, at the time it mattered most, failed to put nation above self-interest until there was no nation to lead anymore.
Subscribe to our E-EDITIONS
Subscribe to our digital e-editions here, and enjoy access to the exact replica of Vanguard Newspapers publications.
Subscribe