Viewpoint

IMF, President Tinubu and the transparency challenge

By Moshood Oshunfurewa If we are to reincarnate the late Chief Gani Oyesola Fawehinmi (1938–2009), a legendary Nigerian human rights lawyer, publisher, author, social critic, and Senior Advocate of the Masses (SAM), on the current budget imbroglio, 2% of GDP, and Gbaja/Adeyemi scandal, I might not mistake his line of words as thus: “Let us call […]
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Between the message and the messenger

Characteristically, an average liar also suffers a combination of two things- great deal of verbal hemorrhage and loss of memory. For the first lapse, he talks so much that he often colours his points so much that he is never comfortable until every word he utters is well embellished beyond what it ordinarily should be.

FEMI FANI-KAYODE: The rage and the Wikileaks fever

The fever that is raging in Nigeria todayis “Wikileaks”. Yet as entertaining as these secret communications are the truth is that if you believe everything that you read in Julian Assange’s “leaks” then you will believe anything. I say this based on my own personal experiences.

Much ado on Abia civil service reforms

IT is baffling, indeed worrisome how people often and unconstructively criticize government policies without providing alternatives or superior arguments, rather relying on emotions and sentiments to project their views.

Orphan status of Nigerian secondary schools

THE May/June 2011 West African Senior Secondary School certificate Examination result released by WAEC shows the grave state of our secondary education. According to Dr. Iyi Uwaedia, head of WAEC National Office, only 30.9% of the 1,540,250 candidates made five credits and above, including English and Mathematics.

GANI: A flame that glows eternally

AFTER about four months on active duty in the Far- Eastern country of Afghanistan and returning home to the warm embrace of family and friends, the just ended holy month of Ramadan was an opportunity to reflect again on our past and the future of our country.

Jonathan’s strategic roles and transformational agenda

The world over, labour and industrial sector is central and sine-qua-non of the government’s agenda. Little wonder countries like the United States of America, France, Germany and the rest of the advanced or developed countries do not take for granted the industrial sector of the economy because of the identified and known important roles the labour sector plays in the attainment of the government’s agenda and development of any nation.

Celebrating Anambra at 20

ANAMBRA, a state blessed with enormous and unbelievable human potential recently celebrated its 20 years of existence. After tottering, falling and groping for direction, the state has finally steadied its legs and is up and walking at an admirable pace.

Yes, Anenih is not God

Okharedia Ihimekpen, the Edo PDP spokesman is at it again. This time, a failed attempt to re-write history of a political force in Edo State that he knows next to nothing about as encapsulated in his warped treatise published on Page 41 of Monday August 22, 2011 issue of the Nigerian Tribune. Those of us, the founders of the Grace Group that he thoughtlessly referred to are not surprised as the month draws to an end, a time for him to get to Uromi to pick some crumbs.

Et tu Jonathan?

In 1999, when ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo mounted the mantle of Nigeria’s leadership, he shunted the Urhobo, the fifth largest ethnic group of Nigeria, from his constituted Federal Executive Council, FEC. This was after the Urhobo nation had massively given him their mandate through the electoral process.

A river without fishermen: Lamentation on alleged water pollution

Rather then a conjecture, it is now a stern reality that tough times await fishermen in Koko and environs. The cause of the latest and pulsating alarm is not unconnected with the activities of illegal crude oil bunkers that operate fearlessly, and right under the ‘watchful’ eyes of security operatives in the Warri North LGA, Delta State. The condition of the Koko river has deteriorated to the extent that no meaningful fishing can take place there, needless to mention putting the water from it into any domestic use.

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