Light and Shade in Borno
An end and a new beginning
Obasanjo’s letter: Next Iyabo, and then Jonathan
Obasanjo and Jonathan:The messenger and the message
Nelson Mandela, 1918-2013
American university of Nigeria Yola: A university and the community
Baroness Lynda Chalker and Nigerian ruling class’ colomentality
Festus Iyayi: They killed our comrade
Kwara’s ‘election winning machinery’ and related politics
The more things change, the more they remain same
China, Vietnam and Dubai: Travel and thoughts
Bukola Saraki’s annual ritual of stampedes
This is the beginning; this is the end
When 89% of corps members cannot write a letter
Hope, delusion and Jonathan’s National Conversation
Now they will have their national conference
Gudu killings: Sorrow, tears and blood

Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up for our newsletter, and be the first to get the latest news on Vanguard.
Subscribe
Limitations of ‘new PDP’ discontent
WHEN the two sides of the raging PDP battle for supremacy addressed the press together on Sunday night, vowing to muster efforts to end the rift within the ruling party, they moved closer to a closure.
Burdens of contemporary education
LAST Sunday, I drove my children back to resume the new school term. The night before, I held a discussion with them about the responsibility of being educated, as a holistic pursuit of the life process.
PDP implodes like an old NEPA transformer
If we attempt a post-humous reading of his fertile imagination, the earth-shaking event of last weekend, with the walk out of seven governors, and former vice president, Atiku Abubakar, from the PDP convention in Abuja, would certainly have elicited an absolutely quotable line for posterity!
Delightful Delta State
I RETURNED to Abuja on an afternoon flight from Asaba, the Delta State capital, last Sunday. We had been attending the 9th Nigerian Editors’ Conference; an occasion which climaxed with a gala night of music, featuring D’Banj; Omawumi; the Delta State cultural troupe and some of the leading comedians that made Delta the capital of Nigerian stand up comedy.
Olusegun Obasanjo’s selective amnesia
LAST week, former President, Olusegun Obasanjo was keynote speaker at the fourth annual Ibadan Sustainable Development Summit, organised by the University of Ibadan. Against the backdrop of heightening political tension in the country, he surveyed the landscape and delivered what the French call a coup-de-poing, against the “younger” generation of political leaders, especially those who emerged as the crop of leaders from 1999.
Deportations, ethnic jingoism and political opportunism
I THINK Femi Falana’s well-argued piece on the on-going hysteria in the face of the forced repatriation of 72 Nigerians of Anambra state origin, by the Babatunde Fashola administration in Lagos, has been the most informed analysis of the core issues so far.
Vice President Namadi Sambo’s Islamic Development Bank loan
EARLY this week, reports emerged that Vice President Namadi Sambo, on behalf of the Federal Government, had “sought the support of the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) for the provision of about $450M to expand the power transmission system to wheel up to 20, 000 megawatts of electricity”.
Alhaji Umaru Dikko, nostalgia and PDP’s politics
A WEEK can be a very long time in politics. This is even truer within the pressure cooker ambience of Nigerian politics. Two events this week, underline the central place of power and the incredible struggle to retain it, by the denizens of the PDP.
The PDP finds its undertakers
THE late Chief Mobolaji Bank-Anthony must be turning in his grave! It was on Igbosere Road in Lagos, if I recall properly, that he established his undertaking business in old Lagos. It was appropriately named “THE SYMPATHETIC UNDERTAKERS”.
Nigeria: From an imperfect democracy to a perfect mess
“The PDP appears to have added public brawling to its list of accomplishments. The self-proclaimed largest party in Africa has turned into a fight club that employs the police as ushers for its matches…When the interest of the nation is subjugated so that the narrow, parochial interest of a clique in power is served events like we see unfold in Rivers will soon become common place.

Subscribe to our E-EDITIONS
Subscribe to our digital e-editions here, and enjoy access to the exact replica of Vanguard Newspapers publications.
Subscribe