• Colors: Cyan Color

By Steve Osuji

Something eerie happened in Lagos last Saturday. It was a traffic logjam that one would rather describe as, 'the great Lagos lockdown'.

By Azu Ishiekwene

Friends, admirers, and the “Obidient” fanbase of the former Labour Party (LP) presidential candidate, Peter Gregory Obi, love to call him by the sobriquet “Okwute,” which in Igbo, Nigeria’s third-largest socio-linguistic group, means rock, boulder, or stone. Quite a nice alias – especially if you associate some doctrinal nuances of Obi’s faith with his first name, Peter.

By Bola Bolawole

This appears to be a season of anomy. Controversies, conflicts, and chaos wallop the atmosphere. People are still discussing and arguing over President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s state visit to London. Who were the gainers? And who were the losers? The economics of the visit, as some critics have argued, suggests that the British merely used us to feather their own nests.

By Max Amuchie

There is a particular kind of silence that follows a kidnapping. It is not the absence of sound, but the absence of certainty. Phones stay charged. Families stop sleeping. Every unknown number becomes both hope and dread. In that silence, the Nigerian citizen is reduced to a negotiable asset—waiting, not for justice, but for a price.

By Kio Amachree

Nigeria is not a country anymore. It is a personal enterprise — and the man running it is President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, a self-styled “godfather” whose methods of holding power bear more resemblance to organised crime than constitutional governance. With 2027 fast approaching, the question 230 million Nigerians must ask themselves — loudly, defiantly, and internationally — is this: How long will we allow one man’s hunger for power to consume an entire nation? Enough is enough. It is time to name the machine, expose its parts, and dismantle it piece by piece.

By Azu Ishiekwene

This is the last thing the African Democratic Congress (ADC) wants to hear, but it has to be said, even if the party digs its thumbs in its ear. It began with the party’s delayed registration. When things were not moving as quickly as the early defectors, mostly from the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), had expected, they accused the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) of stalling the registration and of using the Ralph Okey Nwosu-led faction to stoke the delay.

By Bola Bolawole

It is no longer news that Kayode Egbetokun has ceased to be Nigeria’s topmost police officer; the new sheriff in town, as it were, is Olatunji Disu. The change of batons took place less than a month ago. It was a case of one “family member” handing over to another “family member”. Both Egbetokun and Disu had served, respectively, as President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Chief Security Officer (CSO) and Aide-de-Camp (ADC) while Tinubu held sway as governor in Lagos state.

By Max Amuchie

There are debts that cannot be quantified.They are not financial. They do not accrue interest. They send no reminders. Yet they settle quietly on the conscience and refuse to leave. This is one of them. Some people also enter your life almost silently, almost accidentally, yet leave impressions so enduring that you only recognise their depth in their absence.

By Bola Bolawole

Leo Tolstoy, Russian writer and thinker (1828 -1910) and author of “A Confession”, was famously quoted as saying that “Wrong does not cease to be wrong because the majority share in it.” In like manner, wrong does not cease to be wrong because the strong says it is not; neither does right cease to be right because the weak lacks the capacity to enforce it!

SEAROUTE POWER Advert: NO POWER No Problem WE ARE The solution to all YOUR power issues Click/TAP TO CONTACT NOW!!!
No NEPA, No Problem SEAROUTE POWER GOT YOU COVERED - click to contact on WhatsApp