48-door feast: Why Nigeria’s 2026 World Cup failure hurts most, by Stephanie Shaakaa
The emotional economy of love, by Stephanie Shaakaa
Airtime became Oxygen, by Stephanie Shaakaa
Are we all side chics now?, by Stephanie Shaakaa

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The state cannot tax through illegitimacy, by Stephanie Shaakaa
This is not merely an administrative contradiction. It is moral, legal, and deeply political. It strikes at the foundation of trust
Can they own the road they divided yesterday?, by Stephanie Shaakaa
Each of these men carries something heavier than the loss itself. Atiku Abubakar leaves behind a structure that could not close the deal despite nearly seven million votes
Is the nation’s democratic whistle still trusted?, by Stephanie Shaakaa
An electoral body loses legitimacy when it acts with provable bias, and citizens cannot distinguish constitutional independence from political convenience
When Constance Ikokwu steps into House of Reps . . ., by Stephanie Shaakaa
Idemili, the question is no longer whether you can recognize integrity and capability when you see it. The question is, will you step forward?
When lying is allowed
By Stephanie Shaakaa You know that feeling when something seems real for a moment, and then you realize… you’ve been fooled? That’s April Fools’ Day. One day in the year where lying is allowed, where reality bends just enough to make you laugh, gasp, and maybe even question yourself. Some people announce surprise weddings, others […]
Palm Sunday: He chose a donkey instead of a horse, by Stephanie Shaakaa
Kings who came riding horses came to fight, to conquer, to show their strength. A horse announced force
One case, too many agencies, by Stephanie Shaakaa
The problem is no longer whether institutions exist. It is whether anyone can clearly say where one ends and another begins.
OZORO: Not tradition, not culture, just violence, by Stephanie Shaakaa
In mid March 2026, images and videos from Ozoro, in the heart of Isoko land, spread quickly across Nigeria and beyond. Young women were chased, assaulted, and humiliated
Our highest note cannot buy you a meal, by Stephanie Shaakaa
There is a number we carry every day. 1000 naira. It used to mean something. Not a fortune, not comfort, but enough to get through a moment

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