Violence and the ’emilokan’ presidency, by Obi Nwakanma
Biodun Jeyifo (1946-2026), by Obi Nwakanma
On the rights and privileges of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan
Achebe coloquium: The irrelevance of Nigeria-America relations
Still on Yar’Adua
There goes the president, again to Saudi Arabia
National Assembly budget blues
Azikiwe, 1904-1987
On Ojukwu and war
China in Africa
Restoring Nigeria will require hard choices
Revisiting the Asaba massacres
Falae’s lament, and the vile legacy of Nigeria’s elite
The trouble with Nigeria
The reforms in the civil service
Gani
The Akanu Ibiam international airport
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SubscribeKidnapping in the east is the revolt of the oppressed
Military governors sent to the East, including those who were Igbo military officers, often thought their assignments to the East was a continuation of the civil war by other means. Their mandates, it seemed, was not to develop the East, but to slow it down.
The new face of Imo is all on the billboards
I WAS home to Imo State this past May to bury my father who died on May 3 at the Federal Medical Centre in Umuahia and was buried on June 6, 2009 in his home at Mbaise. Just as an aside, I wish to thank all those who through their messages, gifts, prayers and presence supported and stood by my family throughout the period of the funeral rites.
The proposed petroleum university in Kaduna is a distraction
I should concede upfront that I have personally not read this bill and cannot talk with facility or insight about its content and form, and thus particularly, its implication in the evolution of the oil industry in Nigeria.
Boko Haram and the sin of the fathers
The police alert was quite significant given that the theft of that material marked two possible scenarios: the vulnerability of Nigeria with the increase of insecurity in that region, and secondly, the fact that the loss of this material which could in fact be weaponized happened without a trace.
To Save Nigeria: the Revolutionary Coup and the Civil War
“The truth is†said Onyefuru, “I was his only troop!†in response to my question about the failures of troop mobilization that night. “I returned with him to the Ikeja barracks that morning. We had walked across the front of Colonel Njoku’s home.
Omafume onoge was an organic intellectual
We shall all certainly pay our debts with death, and in good time too. Onoge was 70 years. I would personally have thought that he lived beyond his mathematical years. I was a student in Jos in the years that Omafume Onoge held sway as the titan of the intellectual left in that city and in that university.
Obama’s visit to Ghana signals the shifts in Nigeria-America relationship
By Obi Nwakanma DOES America’s President Barrack H. Obama’s choice of Ghana as his first port of call to sub-Sahara Africa really matter in determining the new directions of America’s foreign policy on Africa in the coming era? Diplomatic sources on the Nigerian end seriously think so.
The ASUU strike highlights the rot in Nigerian higher education
First, the solution to the crisis in Nigerian public education is not in
the creating of more second rate degree mills that have neither reason nor rhyme. It is in the proper funding, planning, and elevation of existing public universities. Second, it must be emphasized that not everybody currently in the university is made for university education.
Why Yar’Adua’s amnesty is not an olive branch
In short, MEND’s demands seek plainly to revisit the national question, and this is the true olive branch that would provide grounds for disarmament. Let us, of course, not overlook the subtle threat behind the federal government’s offer of amnesty and the six-month window for disarmament.
Of Harvard and upstart governors
LET us be quite upfront with truth: Some of the individuals who are the governors of Nigerian states today could not pass their basic West African Schools Certificate examinations even in more than one sitting; some could not pass the Joint Matriculation Exam when it was the gold standard for academic performance in Nigeria; as a result they did not have the kind of standard university education available to the more talented of their peers in Nigeria, many of who probably ended up in academia, the first call in those now seemingly halcyon years, for the best products of the then highly competitive Nigerian university system. Yes, indeed, the very best were immediately recruited and retained to teach in the Universities.
Robes of the militant
Though those there took the decisions they wanted to take in respect of resource control in the name of a democracy mantra that though the minority may well have their say, the majority would have their way, the people of the South-South have by and large fought for that measure of control that they believed would make for peace in the area and the country.
The lost years
That we have postponed this question to this moment is a futile delay tactic, but it also signals the loss of these past ten years because it is a question that must be asked before we begin to practice democracy. And that question? What is Nigeria to me?
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