The fight to save Nigeria, by Rotimi Fasan
Power supply: What’s Buhari doing that Jonathan didn’t do?
Should Buhari probe the Jonathan administration or not?
A quick look at Buhari’s US trip
EFCC, big man syndrome and anti-corruption fight
Public officials: What manner of austerity?
Managing APC’s house of confusion
APC and the death wish turned prophecy
Buhari’s time to start running
Will Nigerians take up the oil marketers’ challenge?
So long Goodluck Jonathan!
Fuel crisis and the unending blame game
A legacy of incompetence and corruption
May 28 or 29: When is the inauguration day?
Scorecard for Jonathan administration

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PDP defectors will kill Nigerian politics
EVEN if nothing else comes out of the defeat of the Peoples Democratic Party in the presidential election of 2015, Nigerians should count themselves lucky once the defeat can lead to the consolidation of our politics by way of giving room for the formation of viable political parties. But this is if our politicians would allow it. From the look of things, however, Nigerian politicians are not prepared to see our so-called nascent democracy grow into something more enduring.
Buhari, PDP… and Attahiru Jega
IT’S been a week since Muhammadu Buhari was declared winner of the 2015 presidential election. After what seemed like an impossible mission having tried a number of times to be president without success, Buhari now becomes one of two individuals (the other being Olusegun Obasanjo) to occupy the office of an elected president after holding office as a military dictator.
Nigerian politics and the 2015 election campaigns
AS I write this about 2pm on the 28th day of March 2015, millions of Nigerians across the country have been out for several hours participating in the process of electing political office holders in an election that has been described by many as perhaps the most keenly contested in the years since Nigeria attained independence.
Buhari/Jonathan: Saturday’s hard choice
IN just a matter of three days the long anticipated 2015 elections would have been under way. What took several years of arduous planning and billions of tax payers’ money that both the government and the election planners may never be able to account for would have come. Six weeks ago Nigerians felt ready for the elections before top members of the Jonathan administration engineered a shift in the electoral date.
Lessons Dame Jonathan can learn from Simone Gbagbo
By Rotimi FASAN THESE are times when every statements made of political figures are read through partisan lenses. This is surely not the first time I will be making this point since the contest for the Nigerian presidency in the elections due next week became a two horse race between Muhammadu Buhari and Goodluck Jonathan. […]

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