The trials of Dasuki and Malami: A study in nemesis By YUSHAU SHUAIB

Some call it the law of karma. I prefer the older formulation: what you do unto others shall, in time, be done unto you. Nigeria’s recent political history offers few more instructive illustrations of this truth than the parallel fates of Sambo Dasuki and Abubakar Malami. Those expressing sympathy for former Attorney-General of the Federation, …

Political Parties Without a Soul: From Organic Roots to Hollow Vehicles by Lawson Akhigbe

In 1977, as Nigeria prepared its cautious return to civil rule, a constitutional conference convened to midwife a new political order. What emerged in its aftermath, particularly in the transition to the Second Republic, bore the unmistakable imprint of history. Political formations were not conjured from thin air; they were, in large measure, reincarnations. Birds …

When War Becomes Business: From Biafra to Boko Haram by Lawson Akhigbe

There is a comforting lie societies tell themselves during war: that conflict is about ideals—territory, sovereignty, justice, survival. It sounds noble. It reads well in communiqués. It justifies sacrifice. But beneath the speeches and slogans lies a far less flattering reality: war is also an economy. And if you want to understand how that economy …

The Billions Spent on Security — and the Missing Results by Lawson Akhigbe

Nigeria Army Nigeria’s security crisis has become one of the most expensive in its history, yet the results remain painfully limited. Over the past decade, defence and security spending has expanded dramatically. In recent budgets, the sector has consistently received one of the largest shares of government expenditure. For example, Nigeria allocated roughly ₦3.1 trillion …