Delta 2027: Great Ogboru on a rescue mission…
Ghost workers, IPPIS fraud, and the ₦941m forfeiture
FoI Act: Why state govts should not step back into the dark
BENUE: Development is about collective responsibility
The Communist Party of China: 90 years after
Open letter to elected reps
The return of Diezani
Boko Haram means terror (2)
Ore road and the task before Onolememen
Abia and the slain police officer
Boko Haram means terror
A Muslim’s thought on Christian banking in Nigeria
The lexicon of Boko Haram
Anambra: Gender bill for what? (2)
Adieu Tosanwumi
Anambra: Gender bill for what?
On the trail of Boko Haram
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SubscribeMinimum wage brouhaha, salary payment punch-ups (2)
AND even in some states like Delta, thetake-home of the so-called elected class with their political appointees may well be anything five and 10 times that of the civil service.
The culture of political blackmail
MOHAMMED Haruna has used two successive editions of his People And Politics column to assail and denigrate the personality, integrity and professional competence of Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (The Nation Wednesday July 6 & 14, 2011). He called the former and new Minister of Finance incompetent. He called her unpatriotic. He called her a saboteur.
Save Nigeria – diversify the economy
AS a matter of priority, the President must encourage the diversification of Nigeria’s economy. It is the only viable way to survive the current environment of global economic uncertainty. It is crucial that President Goodluck Jonathan and his economic team do not believe, like most Nigerians, that oil provides an endless source of revenue.
Minimum wage brouhaha, salary payment punch-ups
IF governance is all about tackling and surmounting daunting challenges on entirely sacrificial note with huge results, you will need the likes of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and David Ben-Gurion. Those beautiful ones are not yet born in Nigeria.
Imuekemhe: Technocrat in a revolution
THE public jubilation that greeted the appointment of Dr. Simon Imuekemhe as Secretary to the Edo State Government re-enforces the high fidelity and depth of the Oshiomhole vision in a revolutionary process never before witnessed in the annals of the heartbeat state.
Birth of South Sudan
SATURDAY, July 9, 2011, the continent of Africa recorded another historic landmark, this time away from liberation from the shackles of colonialism to the birth of a new nation, South Sudan. South Sud an becomes Africa’s 54th nation and the world’s 193rd independent nation.
Tribute to Abdullahi Jega
OUR paths crossed per chance, one coldwindy morning of December 1963 when we were barely nine years old and we remained intimate, until that fateful Tuesday the 26th of April, 2011 when Alhaji Abdullahi Yusufu Jega breathed his last in a Cairo hospital, leaving me to face the horrifying vacuum his departure has created. When we first met, young Abdullahi was living with an uncle in Gusau (the present capital of Zamfara State) but his family was based in Sokoto.
Alarming rate of maternal mortality among Nigerian women
NIGERIA as a nation is blessed with both human and natural resources, yet women die everyday from the scourge of maternal mortality.
An x-ray into El-Rufai’s insightful revelations
The open admission by theformer FCT Minister, Malam Nasir El-Rufa’i that he had no concrete proof that former Vice President Atiku Abubakar was involved in corruption at the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) is a very interesting revelation of how private vengeance became the official policy of the former President Olusegun Obasanjo administration.
Why would the Oba not endorse Oshiomhole?
AN issue that is generating so much interest now in Edo State is the Oba of Benin’s purported endorsement of Comrade Adams Oshiomhole for a second term as the Governor of Edo State. While the ACN machinery and the Governor himself are going the whole length to drive the point home by articulating it in as many print and electronic media as they possibly could, the opposition, it seems, is waking up to check them in their strides.
Musings on a teetering estate
EACH time political campaigns and elections visit Nigeria, the nation’s media are thrown into hyperactivity. The same is true of other democracies. What might be different is this country’s apparent inability or unwillingness to use the opportunity of extraordinary exposure to gauge the worth of its news organs.
Avoidable catastrophe on the Niger Bridge
“I have never seen anything remotely like this before” –Lt. Amelia Huffman, Minneapolis Police Dept.
“There was a very eerie silence right after the collapse. It was 5 to 10 minutes before I heard any sirens…” –Joe Costello
“I got out of my car and the first thing I heard was [were] the kids screaming on the bus. I called 911. I didn’t really know what else I could do.” –Flip Saunders
Anenih, Oshiomhole and development in Edo State
NOW the balloon has been deflated, the bubble has burst and I can see clearly now. All my veneers of euphemism and dream like visioning have been washed bare.
Joy for Joy Emodi
THE announcement of Senator Joy Ifeyinwa Emodi as the Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly Matters came as a relief and source of delight and satisfaction to the numerous well wishers and admirers of this outstanding politician.
Combating the menace of flooding in Lagos
Flooding is a global phenomenon that has continued to constitute a major threat to cities and indeed nations across the world. At present, over 7500 people have been displaced by flooding in China while cities such as California, Mississippi, Sydney, Ibadan, to mention just a few, have at different times, faced the menace of flooding .
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