How Nigeria can achieve happiness in 2019
In Nigeria, presidential debates have no impact!
2019 and the prospects of a better Nigeria
Sustainable peace can only be built on a tripod
2018 Electoral Bill: Cunning man die, cunning man buryam
The new threats to a challenged economy
Getting the best price for our votes
Nigeria: high on religiosity, low on spirituality
Need to halt drug misuse and abuse in Nigeria before it gets out of hand
Frequent labour strikes: time for a new engagement strategy
Restoring inter-professional harmony to the healthcare team
The final return of Atiku Abubakar
Osun inconclusive election and matters arising
Thieving, faking and the widening dimensions of corruption
Total reinvention of Nigeria fully indicated
Good corporate governance-a hedge against corporate embarassment

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Nigeria’s healthcare: Both the poor and the rich cry
I believe that I am not alone in feeling distressed about the situation of healthcare in Nigeria. Everywhere you look, the problems stare you in the face. In the public health care space, you face poor infrastructure, old or inoperative equipment and generally poor attitude. Even skill and competency levels are often suspect. If you have taken a seriously ill patient to our public health facilities – be they primary, secondary or tertiary institutions, you will have known that many more people are healed by faith in Nigeria than by medical care.
Why Nigeria’s economic recovery is slowing down
Ordinarily there should be so much going for Nigeria’s economy. Production of crude oil at about 2 million barrels per day at a good price of about 70 dollars per barrel is yielding good foreign exchange for the Nation, helping to boost foreign reserves which today stand at about 47.25 Billion dollars. Inflation has continued to decline steadily over several months coming to the current level of 11.4% as the CBN and its MPC retain monetary policy index at a tight stance.
Parallels & Congruences Between Buhari & Trump
I have been in the United States of America attending family events and attempting a vacation. Before I left Nigeria,I was really downcast with the turn of events in the country, especially the show of shame happening in the political circles: rumours of planned decamping, mass decamping and some des-camping; threats of impeachment and attempted impeachments in the midst of worsening insecurity and growing poverty.
Nigeria and the rites of insanity
Those who are familiar with how madness begins to manifest in a person, will tell you that no man becomes mad in just one day. Madness follows a sequence. Of course psychiatrists and those who work in the mental health area can easily notice when a patient goes through the stages or sequence. But for the ordinary folks like us, we also some times notice this sequence more so when the subject is closely related to us. Signs of mental illness may start with the subject being unusually moody which could represent depression or in some cases the subject may become unusually aggressive and hyperactive called hyperactive disorder.
Regrouping of the conservatives and challenges ahead
SO very often, we pray for something and sometimes when the prayer is answered, a new problem emerges, that of managing the outcome. The problem is sometimes exaggerated when God decides to ‘embarrass’ you and give you more than you asked for or were expecting. There was this story of an Okada driver who had been praying for a child for seven years and eventually his wife became pregnant.
Political quake in APC: Contrived or retributive?
NIGERIA has experienced a couple of incomplete military coup d’états. An incomplete coup is one in which the intended objectives are not fully accomplished in one fell swoop. In Nigerian history, we have seen all types of coups-attempted, aborted, failed, phantom, incomplete and complete. They are all different, though they all share a common foundation.
Decentralizing port operations and ending the chaos in Lagos
LAST week, I was trapped for hours on the Isolo-Apapa Expressway in an unprecedented traffic gridlock. Many lanes of the so-called expressway were seized by articulated vehicles especially trailers carrying containers and fuel tankers, forcing other vehicles to drive against the traffic, in an effort to move forward since most of the articulated vehicles seemed stationary.
Mixing insecurity with political vengeance
It was clear that the Police was on an assignment to assault the PDP politicians and their supporters, perhaps with intention to intimidate them
APC – A house divided against itself
I am sure there would have been a war in the Senate Chambers to forcefully remove such audacious president
Plateau massacre: Why political niceties will not suffice
Which kind of government is this that has repeatedly failed to perform its primary role of protecting its citizens?
Govt funded cattle ranches: Doing the right thing in a wrong way
It will be patently unethical for the cattle owners to use public funds to further their private interests; again that smells like corruption in my nose
June 12, national reconciliation and the Igbo situation
When we talk about national healing, is the Igbo nation not currently part of Nigeria?
Bringing Abiola’s government to power
How will it be wrong to hear tomorrow that he has accepted the recommendations of the 2014 political conference?
2019: How does Buhari play his last card?
The decision of Justice Abang to go ahead with the case against Olisa Metuh, whether he is alive or dead sign posts the present desperation to get convictions by all means
Leadership failure and crisis in the health sector
Medical doctors lost the right to leadership of the medical team in Nigeria when they became selfish and self-centered

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