Nigeria’s worsening crime numbers
ECOWAS — beyond the glitter of new edifices
Fuel Subsidy ‘Beneficiaries’
ASUU – Strikes Don’t Work
No Apologies, We Are Nigerians
Threaten Us Please…
God-Made leaders V Nigerians
More Police Duties For Soldiers
Rising cases of bank robberies
Farida – Nothing To Applaud
A Minister’s Youth Anger
No, Not Money For AIDS
The new driver’s licence, number plates controversy
The Nigeria, UK BASA row
The Nigeria, UK BASA row
Standardising the National Awards
Our Misunderstood President
Subscribe to our newsletter
Sign up for our newsletter, and be the first to get the latest news on Vanguard.
SubscribeParty Discipline – PDP’s Example
THE Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, renders no apologies for its ways. The biggest party in Africa, as it calls itself, does what it wants, when it wants and prefers to leave its members dumbfounded. PDP is a party apart. It rejoices in the flexibility of its standards, though the flexibility is a poor excuse for the fact that the party may not have standards.
While They Haggle Over 2015
NIGERIA is a forward-looking country. It is making progress that the impatience of Nigerians and their own concentration on the present (and mostly the past) becloud. The politicians are thinking of the future and making great plans about them.
Even If We Panic
NIGERIANS have more than enough reasons to panic. It should be more so when the issue is security and government is not about to do anything about securing the country. The assurances have gone bare and the attacks are becoming deadlier.
Still Wanted – The President Must Remember
IT is time to wonder again if President Goodluck Jonathan remembers what he promised when he announced his intention to run for office in September last year. He promised to be a different President, one who would care for the poor.
Words Are Everything
IN a country of more than 42 Ministers, and more similarly ranked government officials, you would be forgiven if you have not heard about Mr. Samuel Ortom. He is the Minister of State for Trade and Investment.
Eid-el-kabir
MUSLIMS all over the world mark Eid-el-kabir, also known as Eid-el-Adha or Festival of Sacrifice, to commemorate the willingness of Prophet Ibrahim to sacrifice his only son, Ismail, as an act of obedience to God. According to the story, which is also recorded in the bible, God intervened by providing him with a ram to sacrifice in Ismail’s place.
Minimal measures won’t work
TOO much is being done to promote the nothingness that stands for legislations. Sometimes we wonder if we need legislators in the first place. Neither the executive nor the judiciary is doing better.
Who speaks for posterity?
The story is told of one contributor at the US Congress, who forced his colleagues to listen to him, barring interruptions with the curt retort, “I speak for posterity.”
A CBN Governor like no other
MALLAM Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria so likes the sound of his voice that keeping quiet is never an option. He must be heard, no matter the subject, no matter the forum and he seems to have formed the habit of delivering addresses at various occasions.
Of indigenes and Nigerians
THE controversy that has raged in the past few months about Abia State expelling non-indigenes from its civil service has been going the way of all Nigerian debates — aspersions, name calling, threats and more noise which when expended leaves the matter unaddressed.
Subscribe to our E-EDITIONS
Subscribe to our digital e-editions here, and enjoy access to the exact replica of Vanguard Newspapers publications.
Subscribe