Football’s Mr Controversy, by Patrick Omorodion
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SubscribeThe Strait closed without a shot, by Stephanie Shaakaa
For generations, the world assumed that if the Strait of Hormuz ever closed, it would be because someone fired the first shot
The Red Flag Generation: How we learned to leave before we learned to stay, by Stephanie Shaakaa
We live in a time where falling in love feels less like discovering a person and more like passing a test. From New York to Nairobi, Tokyo to Lagos,
Seyi can be President, by Emeka Obasi
President Tinubu is the strongest politician ever produced in this country. Give it to him. He is fully in control of power, without forcing anyone to do his bidding. All those screaming that Asiwaju is buying people with money should be ashamed of themselves. All the turn coats are cheaper than Ayilara whores.
The bullying conundrum in schools, by Francis Ewherido
I experienced/saw bullying from primary school. At Ughelli, Delta State, two elder brothers of mine protected me. When my father was transferred to Ozoro in 1973, I continued my primary education in Ozoro. I did not really experience bullying. But two classmates of mine did cause me some distress. On one occasion, they wanted to see the […]
Tinubu, the Great: Naija no dey carry last, by Ugoji Egbujo
Tinubu has done us proud. The first Nigerian leader to visit the English monarch in decades. That’s no mean feat. He may not have tamed the electricity demon he had bitched bitterly about when he was in the opposition. But it’s inspiring to see him dazzling the paparazzi at Windsor. It’s not easy to find […]
Why walking away is hard to do, by Muyiwa Adetiba
Before the advent of digital media with its era of quick clicks, the print media was the most enduring means of reaching and influencing minds. This made its practitioners visible and its Editors powerful. And connected. There was therefore, the tendency to see the world as your oyster, or worse, to think the world owed you, […]
Bursting the BATified bubble! By Donu Kogbara
Ardent fans of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, BAT, are something else! They can’t abide anyone who doesn’t share their blind allegiance to their hero. They choose to wallow in intellectual dishonesty and to disbelieve deservedly negative stories about his performance and his past. They blame him for nothing that is going wrong in Nigeria. I […]
ADC’s problem is ADC, not APC, by Azu Ishiekwene
This is the last thing the African Democratic Congress, ADC, wants to hear, but it has to be said, even if the party digs its thumbs in its ear. It began with the party’s delayed registration. When things were not moving as quickly as the early defectors, mostly from the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, had expected, […]
Washington’s three blind mice, see how they destroy the world, by Owei Lakemfa
Washington’s three blind mice. Donald Trump, their President. Marco Rubio his Secretary of State and Pete Hegseth, Secretary of Defence, now transformed into Secretary of War. A trinity of the greedy, the liar and the lawless, nesting in territorial and colonial delusions. In carrying out mass destruction and massacres as they are doing in Iran, and […]
Misplaced tears over Iranian leaders when blood flows in Nigeria, by Adekunle Adekoya
THE war in the Middle East, being fought by the United States and Israel against Iran, is still raging, and its outcomes are being felt all over the world. In the early days of the war which began February 28, Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in the aftermath of air strikes on selected targets […]
Prebendalism: Tinubu is ‘governing’ for the few, not the many! By Olu Fasan
Nigeria has never had a president like Bola Ahmed Tinubu. For the first time in its recent political history, Nigeria has a president whose standards of political morality can be described as utterly amoral in the sense that he subscribes to the cynical saying, attributed to Vladimir Lenin, that “there are no morals in politics.” Indeed, […]
Let’s cut Tinubu some slack, by Ikechukwu Amaechi
Last week, I lamented that President Bola Tinubu has hollowed out Nigeria’s democracy. The article generated interested reactions. A regular reader of this column accused me of Tinubuphobia. How is it that you don’t see anything good in Tinubu, he asked. Another sent me a cryptically worded text: “Sour grapes from name-calling!” Some kindred spirits, nonetheless, […]
The delivery paradox: Why knowing your material isn’t enough, by Ruth Oji
You’ve prepared for weeks. You know your material inside and out—every statistic, every argument, every supporting detail is committed to memory. You step up to present, confident in your expertise. Yet within minutes, you notice it: eyes glazing over, attention drifting, the subtle shift of bodies in seats as minds wander elsewhere. By the time you […]
Night clubbers as political errand boys, by Ochereome Nnanna
On February 18, 2026, I wrote an article on this page titled: “City Boy’s South-East invasion”. It was all about the involvement of some Igbo socialites such as “E-Money”, “Obi Cubana”, “Cubana Chief Priest”, “Zenco” and others in Seyi Tinubu’s City Boy Movement which had just been imported into the South-East. Some Igbo activists felt affronted […]
Trump and the myth of strong American institutions, by Usman Sarki
“Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate for the government of any other“— John Adams Few observations capture the enduring dilemma of democratic governance as succinctly as this warning by John Adams. Long before the modern age of mass democracy, Adams understood that constitutions and institutions, however carefully […]
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