Violence and the ’emilokan’ presidency, by Obi Nwakanma
Biodun Jeyifo (1946-2026), by Obi Nwakanma
Let us invite the Americans to colonise us
Boko Haram’s threat
The NATO war in Libya
A legislative agenda for new parliament
A note to the President
Rochas: Enter the dragon?
Post-election violence in Nigeria
Buhari tears up for Nigeria
Election fever nko?
Election fever nko?
The Presidential debate
Dangerous moves in Libya
As the campaigns heat up
NASS, sack the judges

Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up for our newsletter, and be the first to get the latest news on Vanguard.
Subscribe
The example of Egypt
The swell of public anger rose so high in the last three weeks in Egypt, it sustained the push for what many now call the “Egyptian Revolution.” The protests and the popular movement ousted President Hosni Mubarak who had led Egypt under the emergency law since the assassination of Anwar Sadat on October 6, 1981.
Katsina-Alu & Ayo Salami: Scandal of judicial corruption
An old school friend of my father’s, a judge, never accepted private invitations to parties, or government cocktails, so as not to be corrupted or seen to be compromised by his public associations and gestures. Judges lived intensely private lives, isolated by the burdens of their responsibility. They had moral authority.
President Saviour? Not a chance
An amusing cartoon last week in the Vanguard raised the question of whether President Goodluck Jonathan is finally the political saviour Nigerians have long awaited.
President Saviour? Not a chance
An amusing cartoon last week in the Vanguard raised the question of whether President Goodluck Jonathan is finally the political saviour Nigerians have long awaited.
Killing Chidi Nwosu
In a quiet and obscure corner of the world; a little and hardly known place called Ameke Abam, in Abia State, a gruesome crime took place last December 29. Chidi Nwosu, a human rights activist and campaigner for democracy in the state was brutally murdered in his home.
The arrest of Okey Ndibe
Just last Friday, on my way back to the United States, I had called the Minister of Information, Mr. Labaran Maku, to congratulate him on certain aspects of this government’s programme to which he is associated. I had, in fact, assured him of my willingness to help further the cause of this particular project if in the future he needed volunteers.
Zoning to unzone
Dr. Kingsley Ozuomba Mbadiwe was an astute and consummate politician who brought a colourful dash to Nigerian politics. With graduate degrees in political science from the American ivy-league Columbia University, New York, earned in a very auspicious moment in 20th century America, Mbadiwe knew a thing or two about political strategy and horse-trading.
Wikileaking Nigeria
I confess to a frequent feeling of ennui and a sense of futility about Nigeria and Nigerian affairs arising, I daresay, from the large and gnarled picture of its undertaking.
Who’s more corrupt?
MR. Dimeji Bankole, the young speaker of the Nigerian House of Representatives is built like boxer. He’s also been known to have had at least one good brawl in office. Once, in fact, with my good friend and brother, the Honorable Independence Ogunewe, and this in the Chambers of the Federal House – and he did not pull his punches.
These killings in Imo
In the last two months, there has been a spike in brutal killings of individuals in Imo state. These deaths have been unmistakable contract killings. The manner of execution seems clearly clinical, unambiguous, calculated to create fear and exact maximum symbolic threat.

Subscribe to our E-EDITIONS
Subscribe to our digital e-editions here, and enjoy access to the exact replica of Vanguard Newspapers publications.
Subscribe