Insecurity and banditry are not just northern problems they are Nigerian problems. Until citizens feel safe in their homes, schools, and markets, true development cannot happen....
This moment is painful—perhaps one of the most humiliating in our recent history—but pain can serve two purposes: it can bury us, or it can break...
We build systems and then emotionally sabotage them. We complain about lack of infrastructure, but when infrastructure shows up, we treat it like an optional suggestion....
Dangote argues that the higher price of cement in Nigeria reflects broader systemic issues rather than deliberate price discrimination. According to him, addressing power supply, infrastructure...
Nigerians are repeatedly asked to pay more, yet roads are unsafe, public hospitals are overstretched, schools shut down over strikes, and insecurity remains widespread. When taxes...
The frequent party switching by Nigerian politicians highlights concerns about political opportunism and the quest for power. As the ruling party's popularity grows, it's attracting defectors,...
Since crossing over to the APC, the governor’s rhetoric has become disturbingly repetitive and excessively reverential. Every road now leads to Tinubu. Every sentence genuflects. Every...
Leader Akume must resist pressures—both within and without—that seek to set father against son. After all, Governor Alia is a Catholic priest, a priest within the...
This paper has been able to reveal that politics of godfatherism is an impediment to Nigeria’s nascent democracy. It has gained prominence and assumed dominant feature...
Nigeria’s new tax rules are a step toward economic reform, but their success will ultimately be judged by their impact on the country’s most dynamic economic...