The curious case of Gbaja and the Prince, by Rotimi Fasan
Miscellaneous thoughts on the state of our nation
Mohammed Abubakar – another tainted choice?
A curious escape
A week of fuel fury
Who sows the wind…
Time to think big and out of the box
A debate and two deaths
On the gay rights issue
Abuja, Nigeria’s divided capital city
Last of the titans?
A hasty farewell
Facts and fallacies of a cashless Lagos
A bloody Eid gift
Jonathan: How far can luck go?
Tinubu: Papa doc(ked)

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For Gaddafi, the bell tolled
IT’S all ending not with the promised bang but a whimper. After 42 years of what started as a patriotic attempt to return power to the people of Libya from the ruling monarchy of King Mohammed Idris, Muhammar Gaddafi, the one who bore the rank of a colonel but exercised powers beyond those of a Field Marshall was chased away with a $1.4 million prize placed on his head- dead or alive.
For Gaddafi, the bell tolled
IT’S all ending not with the promised bang but a whimper. After 42 years of what started as a patriotic attempt to return power to the people of Libya from the ruling monarchy of King Mohammed Idris, Muhammar Gaddafi, the one who bore the rank of a colonel but exercised powers beyond those of a Field Marshall was chased away with a $1.4 million prize placed on his head- dead or alive.
The EFCC arrest of past office holders
IT’S been five months, May to October, since baton changed hands among elected Nigerian leaders; for one group of their ‘excellencies’ to vacate office for another. And that’s how long it’s taken the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to ‘perfect’ its case against some past governors suspected to have abused their positions while in office.
‘Occupy wall street’: Cometh the Western Spring?
WHILE writing on the UK riots last August, I had, here, traced some of the impulses that gave rise to the riots to certain economic and social inequities within the British society. I did not stop at that. I had extended my reading of the developments in the British society with regard to the riots to what I saw as related developments in other parts of Europe and America.
Our besieged banks and their traumatised customers
THE last few years have been transformative for Nigerian banks. Beginning from the period under Charles Soludo to the last three years when Sanusi Lamido Sanusi has practically gripped the banking sector by the neck and shaken it out of slumber, Nigerian banks have not remained the same.

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