How UNESCO got it wrong in Africa
May 30, 2017
Nigeria’s leaders speak of growth, stability, and recovery, yet millions of citizens confront daily hunger and shrinking livelihoods. The contradiction...
Read moreDetailsA group of Nigerian academics has launched a petition against the misuse of “Dr.” and “Professor” titles. Their outrage is...
Read moreDetailsIn Lagos, Nigeria, like other African cities, Johannesburg, Cairo, Nairobi among others, the pressure to appear rich has reached disturbing...
Read moreDetailsAgainst the backdrop of dwindling international funding for Africa’s health sector, it looks like the East African country of Tanzania ...
Read moreDetailsThe Nigerian financial value chain has been a mixed experience between the super top and the needy. There exist serious...
Read moreDetailsFinancial inclusion is a sustainable scheme that supports individual wealth creation, entrepreneurship and business growth. Access to credit and capital,...
Read moreDetailsNearly sixty years ago, a book titled: “Planning without Facts: Lessons in Resource Allocation from Nigeria’s Development” was written by...
Read moreDetailsNIGERIA, THE LARGEST COUNTRY in Africa by population, got independence on October 1, 1960. That, ipso facto, was supposed to...
Read moreDetailsHuman + Kind = Humankind — Dr Joshua Awesome Judge Frank Caprio’s courtroom was unlike any I had ever encountered...
Read moreDetailsSUNNY CHUBA NWACHUKWU SunnyNwachukwu (Loyal Sigmite), PhD, Fellow (ICCON, CSN, SM), a pure and applied chemist with an MBA in...
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