Orji Uzor Kalu’s continued relevance in Nigeria’s politics reveals a deeper story — about political recycling, national amnesia, and the culture of immunity that keeps old politicians forever young in power. If Nigeria were a reality show, Orji Uzor Kalu would be one of its longest-running cast members — unvoted, unbothered, and unretired. Each time …
“One Year of Monday Okpebholo: From Edo State Governor to Tinubu’s Chief Praise Singer” By Lawson Akhigbe
A Year of Echoes and Eulogies It’s been one full year since Monday Okpebholo ascended the Edo governorship throne — and if the Guinness Book of Records ever introduces a category for “Most Public Compliments to the President in a Calendar Year,” Edo’s number one citizen would be miles ahead of his nearest competitor, possibly …
Judicial Whiplash: How the Nigerian Courts Are Turning the Rule of Law into a Gymnastics Routine by Lawson Akhigbe
If Nigerians needed a new Olympic sport to dominate, forget sprinting or football — judicial acrobatics is the one medal we are snatching with two hands. The Nigerian judiciary is performing backflips so intense that even Simone Biles would whisper, “Calm down, togba nau, this is too much.” At this point, citizens no longer follow …
The Forgery Republic: When Forger Accepts Forger’s Resignation By Lawson Akhigbe
Uche Nnagi and UNN and NYSC certificates In Nigeria, where reality takes its morning tea with satire and swallows it whole, we have reached yet another record-breaking level of irony. Only here can a certificate forger formally accept the resignation of another certificate forger—and both parties still leave the ceremony feeling accomplished. Somewhere, irony packed …
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The Gavel and the Ballot: How Nigeria’s Judiciary Has Become an Impediment to Electoral Development by Lawson Akhigbe
The judiciary beating down the voter In a healthy democracy, the judiciary is the guardian of the electoral process, the final arbiter that ensures the will of the people, as expressed at the ballot box, is respected. In Nigeria, however, the judiciary has increasingly come to be seen not as a protector of electoral integrity, …

