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The Nigerian University Student

The average Nigerian student is ignorant of the nature and purpose of the university, ignorant of his own status and roles in the university community, confused and misguided as to his duties and obligations to the society.

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At 49, Which Way Nigeria

In less than 24 hours, Nigeria will be celebrating its 49th anniversary as an independent nation: as usual with the celebrations, there will be speeches, prayer sessions, various formalities, parade and pomp will inundate the nation’s landscape. 2010 is 3 months away when you may expect talks of Nigeria at 50, the golden anniversary that is bound to come up in October regardless of the state of the nation. I can recall two years ago, Ghanaians trooped out in hundreds of thousands to celebrate the golden jubilee of their nationhood because they had every reason to rejoice. The leadership there is only building on a foundation laid by the founding fathers like Kwame Nkurumah. They have their problems, but they know they are on course. I read recently that the head of the Ghanaian electoral body will be coming over with a special envoy to Abuja to show our leaders how they midwifed two successive and internationally acclaimed civilian-to-civilian power transition programmes. Barack Obama ...

Nigerian Constitution: Immunity Clause

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Federalism: the Panacea for Nigeria’s Survival

For over 40 years, the Nigerian state has refused to address the key question of nationhood, and transform itself properly into a nation-state with a shared consensus on its identity and future. An invidious kind of conspiracy has sustained Nigeria as a country of many nations, surrounded by the explosives of political, economic and social differences. Successive civilian governments of Shehu Shagari, Olusegun Obasanjo and now Musa Yar’adua rather than address the defects in the 1979 and 1999 Constitutions, inherited from the military, have feathered the conspiracy and imbalance in the structure of the Nigerian federation which has been, and is still inimical to its development. The Obasanjo government had tried to re-invent the Petroleum Decree of 1969, abrogated by the Babangida administration, by re-introducing the onshore-offshore dichotomy in determining the allocation of oil and gas revenue. Before then, Governors of the South-South geo-political zone had fought bitterly to get ...