Feed a Bully, Lose Your Lunch: A Brief, Tragicomic History of Labour Playing Tough on Immigration by Lawson Akhigbe

Labour Home Secretary Shabana Mahmoodq Let’s paint a picture, shall we? A Labour politician, let’s call her… oh, I don’t know, Shabana Mahmood, steps up to a podium. She adjusts her dress, clears her throat, and prepares to deliver a message so tough, so robust, so unflinchingly stern on immigration that it would make a …

Two museums two different paths.

In 1973, the Benin City National Museum stood proudly in the heart of the city, on King’s Square. Within its walls were housed an impressive collection of artefacts from the great Benin Empire — terracotta pieces, bronze figures, and cast iron works — each a silent testament to the kingdom’s artistic genius and spiritual depth. …

Nigeria: The Republic of the Unindicted by Lawson Akhigbe

In a country where every politician walks free but none walk clean, the recent “wanted” poster for Timipre Sylva by the EFCC felt less like a law enforcement action and more like a comedy skit gone national. The EFCC must have run out of fresh faces to parade, so they reached back into the political …

The People’s Republic of Britain: How Compassion Became a Crime

When the delicate sensibilities of Israel were apparently offended by protests against its genocidal actions, the British establishment sprang to its defence with the zeal of a colonial viceroy protecting imperial interests. The government’s response was not diplomacy or dialogue—it was prohibition. In a legislative sleight of hand, a protest group, Free Palestine, was banned …