Healing Kaduna: How Governor Uba Sani is rebuilding health system
NASS anti-devolution vote: North, Biafra, and the rest of us
Lagos House of gamble
Acting against reason: EDHA and its abandoned anti-grazing bill
Killing Nigerians softly with soft drinks
Omo-Agege: Re-defining constituency empowerment
The vindication of the Benue Anti-Open Grazing Law
Ministry of Power: Eligible customer declaration
The ubth: Striving for excellence
Amosun and artificial boundaries
James Manager, 57, a development architect
Secret of becoming a sensational author
Simply Daisy @ 65
Jungle justice as a time bomb
Wasted lives in Nigeria
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Subscribe“Only those looking for appointment want restructuring”: An open letter to AgP Yemi Osinbajo.
“Those that are calling for restructuring are looking for appointment. When they say they want restructuring what they mean is that they want an appointment……. some people told us Nigeria is a “geographical expression” although it was not even original to them”- Acting President Yemi Osinbajo.
Restructuring can start with you: Open letter to Acting President
The first thing to do Sir, is for you to sign an Executive Order banning the use of generating plants as source of electricity supply, in all Federal Government’s institutions
Is it right to seek self determination?
IS the right to self-determination, independence or self-governing legitimate or illegitimate? In other words, is it right or wrong for an ethnic or sociological group to demand independence from an existing nation to form a sovereign state, with its own constitution drawn to suit its peculiarities and aspirations? What do you think?
Between Boko and Borno Haram
When we make such confused or blind conclusions, those who are masterminding the latest incidents of suicide bomb blasts are convinced of their veiled protection and ennobled to sponsor the perpetration of more atrocities. They take an undue advantage of a society lost in its own peculiarly relaxed tendencies over what affects it.
Lending support to Innoson’s industrial moves
IN this era of Nigeria’s economic downtown following dwindling oil revenues, one area that has the potentials to sustain the economy is the automobile industry. Some years ago, a Nigerian company INNOSON ventured into this area that many thought was impossible, or only reserved for the ‘white people’. Indeed the gallant move by the first indigenous automobile manufacturer INNOSON has been described as revolutionary, as it re-focused the government’s attention to compel its ministries, departments and agencies to patronise mainly vehicles manufactured locally.
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