Shettima: From “Boko Haram Sponsor” to Anti-Muslim Muslim?
The Fulani herders were labelled “Boko Haram terrorists” with whom Shettima was allegedly hatching sinister designs.
The reign of pillow talk law
Not for the first time, the list featured some prominent nominees defined by credentialled propinquities, confirming the notion that pillow-talk and kitchen-table are currently the ascendant sources of law in Nigeria, if not supreme.
The begging epidemic in Nigeria
Begging by men and women in uniform and other workers should be frowned at by all the three levels of government.
Godwin Emefiele’s overdue desserts
In pursuit of his presidential project, Emefiele did not encounter any guardrails that he was not willing to destroy.
Why Northerners don’t call Tinubu “Jagaban”
Nigeria’s southwest is, after all, the country’s sociolinguistic pacesetter because of the centrality of Lagos as the cultural capital.
When preparation meets leadership, Tinubu happens
Under a haze of threats of strike by labour unions over the abrogation of petrol subsidy, President Tinubu showed peerless leadership, preparation, and attunement.
Fuel subsidy and the god of Jonathan
Nigerian economists also agreed that the subsidy regime was unsustainable.
President Tinubu and dangers of subsidy removal
America and Nigeria share one thing in common: they both lack a well-developed, subsidized public transportation system.
Gbajabiamila’s appointment as Tinubu’s Chief of Staff is a constitutional aberration
The principle of separation of powers under our constitutional framework applies both to functions and personnel of the different organs of government.