Violence and the ’emilokan’ presidency, by Obi Nwakanma
Biodun Jeyifo (1946-2026), by Obi Nwakanma
EFCC: Expensive, fickle, corrupt and corpulent
Okorocha: My siren is louder than yours
Governor not-on-seat
Do they know it is Christmas?
At the Achebe colloquim
Sanusi’s call spotlights nation’s dilenma
Sanya Osha and his underground of summer bees
Nigeria’s State House: A budget for glutonny
Again, Obama
Nature as a Terrorist
On one Nigeria
Denying the genocide
Chinua Achebe: The lynch mob comes Out
Children in a Petrie dish
Chinua Achebe: Memories of another country

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The Bakassi purchase
At best, the Bakassi situation mirrors the extent of the Federal Government of Nigeria’s administrative incompetence even in handling matters of serious strategic relevance to Nigeria’s national security interest; at worse, it reflects the colonial conundrum – the result of the distortions in Africa’s national and cultural boundaries by, particularly, the Berlin conference where the famous “scramble for Africa” was enacted in the nineteenth century.
Speed is violence
I returned from Berlin on Wednesday nightwhere I had participated in the International Festival of Literature courtesy of Ulrich Schreiber, and met another delight: the just released copy of Chinua Achebe’s latest book, There Was A Country lying in wait for me.
World Igbo (re)construction
Some years ago, in the din of the conflict that had marred its promise, I had written a piece titled “the world Igbo confusion” in great frustration about the direction of the American-based World Igbo Congress (WIC). It had structural problems. Its raison d’etre had also become profoundly watered down to the point where the Igbo in the United States began to see no point in the thing.
State Police, no State Police
Imagine yourself on a Nigerian highway, say the interstate stretch between Enugu and Onitsha. The hazards are many, including uneven corrugations and potholes or craters formed from the culture of neglect of public utilities.
The Autumn of the General
This past Thursday, August 16, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida turned 71. He gave thanks to God. Just as the late K.O. Mbadiwe said of himself in 1983 at his official retirement from national politics, he was no longer “K.O,” said the juggernaut, he was then, “O.K;” Ibrahim Babangida is quite OK; he was satisfied with himself, he told reporters at his Hilltop home in Minna, and it was all the doing of Allah.

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