Politics and its disguises, by Rotimi Fasan
The ADC crisis, by Rotimi Fasan
Will the budget rats shame Buhari?
Fayemi, Fayose and the perjurer called Tope Aluko
Nigerians, social media and public office holders
Abdulrahman Dambazau and the arrogance of power
Buhari and Saraki: What happened to 2016 budget document?
More from the cesspool of Dasuki’s arms scandal
Prophecies, Nigerians and 2016?
Victory over insurgency?
Buhari, the Army, ethnic and religious militias
Nigeria’s blood-sucking elite
Dasuki’s arms deal scandal and blood of the innocent
Can Buhari be more selective of his international trips?
Which way Nigeria?
Diezani Alison-Madueke’s plea for mercy
Buhari’s ministers without portfolios
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SubscribeOf unfit soldiers and obese legislators
The fortunes of the Nigerian Army have of late been going down precipitously. A military force that was for a long time the pride of the country, and was deservedly celebrated for its peace keeping skills across the continent and beyond, has suddenly descended into disgrace. To be sure, the responsibility for the illfortune of the Nigerian military as a whole and the Army in particularly lies with the military.
Goodluck Jonathan’s rise to statesmanship
SINCE his ouster from power via the March 28 presidential election, President Goodluck Jonathan has maintained a rather low profile. He has minded his business and has said little that could even been vaguely interpreted as political.
What makes Nigerian leadership a haven of thieves?
IT may sound too sweeping a statement to make but it is true to say that most people who find their way into leadership positions in Nigeria deep their hands in the coffers. Most of our so-called leaders have criminal tendencies and they have no greater purpose for seeking public office than to help themselves to and keep in perpetuity what belongs to all.
Buhari’s incomplete list of ministers
IN a piece entitled ‘Buhari’s dilemma: Nigerians’ anxiety’ that appeared here a fortnight ago, this column commented on the dilemma in which President Muhammadu Buhari seemed to have found himself naming his ministers.
Allison-Madueke’s long walk to justice
FIRST a disclaimer: let the reader understand that nothing said in this space this week denies the subject’s claim to protection on that principle that guarantees an accused person’s right to presumption of innocence until proven guilty.
Saraki’s travail: Buhari’s connection, Tinubu’s input
THESE are not the best of times for Bukola Saraki, Senate President and chairman of the so-called 8th National Assembly that has done virtually nothing about its law-making responsibilities, but has continued to rip Nigerians off collecting huge allowances for practically sitting on its palm and watching the sun go down each day since it was inaugurated last June.
What about governors yet to appoint commissioners?
IT is not uncommon for Nigerian politicians to make a norm of the abnormal and by that pretend to be making some profound statement. These politicians who many times cannot think outside the box are too quick to copy habits and ways they know nothing about. I say this in the wake of criticisms that have been levelled against state governors yet to constitute their cabinets by appointing commissioners.
Another reason Buhari is the right man for now
LESS than 48 hours before he clocked his hundredth day in office, Muhammadu Buhari, President of Nigeria since May 29, 2015 and his deputy, Yemi Osinbajo, publicly declared their assets. Both men had made the pre-election pledge to declare their assets publicly not later than their first hundred days in office.
Is Buhari naive or just a plain hegemonist?
PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari may have started moving into dangerous territories. He may indeed have begun the process of his own unravelling and ultimately of the destruction of his presidency by his own action.
Power supply: NERC, DISCOs and the National Assembly
THERE are not many things on which Nigerians agree as far as the achievements or non-achievements of the Muhammadu Buhari and Goodluck Jonathan governments are concerned. One of these contentious issues is about who should take credit for the observable improvement in power supply across the country in the last three months.
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