Special Report

West Africa’s healthcare investment momentum builds as WHX returns to Nigeria 

Nigeria’s healthcare sector is undergoing rapid transformation, with forecasts predicting a 7.1% expansion and an anticipated market value of US$161.7 million by 2027. This growth is fuelled by a US$1.2 billion Federal Ministry investment in infrastructure and workforce, major oncology and diagnostic expansions by the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority, and increased imports under the African Continental Free Trade Area […]
Visible Articles 5 10 15

UNILAG Renamed : Thank you Mr. President ,but …

Within the matrix of African cosmology, a name has connotations. Hence, children were named following the circumstances surrounding their birth. A child born on a Sunday in Yoruba land could be named Bose. In Igbo land, a child whose birth heralded progress in the family may be called Ngozi, which means blessing. The story is the same among the Hausa speaking people of Nigeria .

Epe, a community where electricity is a mirage

Esther Oluwafunmilayo Ololade, a 300 level student in Lagos State University in Epe area of Lagos, might not be able to recount the ordeal she has been going through since she gained admission into the school three years ago.

As UNILAG buries VC, ASUU vows to fight back over name change

The controversy that trailed President Goodluck Jonathan’s Democracy Day national broadcast announcing the decision to rename the prestigious University of Lagos after late Chief Moshood Abiola, acclaimed winner of June 12, 1993 presidential election, but annulled by the military regime at that time, may not be resolved for a long time as major stakeholders have vowed to resist the change.

New tariff or stable electricity: Which one comes first?

The Nigerian people, accustomed to life with frequent interrupted power supply at homes and business places, except those few having private generators, are suddenly to pay more for electricity as a new tariff regime comes into effect on June 1, 2012.

Re-naming of UNILAG: Pat Utomi, others condemn FG’s decision

For Sesan Gbadamosi, an alumni of UNILAG and proprietor, Bell Time School, renaming the institution is an improper step taken by the Federal Government. “UNILAG is an old institution of 50 years and it is not proper to put down the reputation of the institution.

Vanguard Detty December

Exit mobile version