A time to hide
Libya coastguard says rescues nearly 400 migrants
Good news from Venezuela
Before we drown in corruption
PDP and the rest of us
Deregulation: What haven’t we actually deregulated?
Criminals can’t enjoy immunity
Separating morality from legality
Tunji Otegbeye: Exit of a true nationalist
Beyond the arms from the militants
The word everywhere is insecurity
Maduekwe’s dialectics on Iwu
ASUU Strike: Enough of stand – off please
Don’t cry for Gani!
Printing more money can backfire
ASUU-FG face off in who’s interest?
2011, there is real cause to worry
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SubscribeHonour, politics mutually exclusive?
The politicians are fooling around again like they did in previous “republicsâ€. They should be called to order before we are all consumed by the disorder which this tomfoolery is most certainly going to result in, as our past history so tragically depicts. My only fear is that we might not be as lucky as in previous situations where we emerged from it all in one piece. We will be over stretching our luck if we keep that hope alive.
Boko Haram: What a madness?
Whether it was the government or the Islamic insurgents who struck first is irrelevant; what should bother any right thinking Nigerian is that in spite of foreknowledge of the anti-social activities of the Taliban and the Boko Haram group, security forces in the country could not monitor and contain their activities before they became a deadly threat to the civilized existence we are all trying to live.
Their road, not our road
The nation’s major sea port of Apapa and Tin Can Island are critically endangered.
This new danger does not arise as a result of militants’ action, but due to lack of constructive reasoning, planning and execution of sensitive projects, necessary for Apapa and Tin Can Island Ports to function effectively.
Quintessential LKJ at 80
In what was considered as a world record by UNESCO, Jakande constructed within 4 years, 23,093 classrooms; increased the number of primary school from 604 in 1979 to 954 in 1983.
Can Amnesty stop militants?
At least, MEND is saying, ‘give us the kind of development that you have in Abuja and we would be satisfied’.
In response to this, the government is creating institutions like the Niger Delta Development Corporation (NDDC) through which to channel this development in the Niger Delta. On top of that, it has created a ministry for the region which at best is a bureaucracy.
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