It’s less than 100 days until the 2023 general elections but the government has to resolve these issues to ensure a free, fair and credible process.
119 results for "boko haram"
As if the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu, hadn’t already surprised Nigerians enough for one week with a rare presidential town hall at Chatham House, he also granted a rare interview with BBC Africa. Hosted by BBC correspondent, Peter Okwoche, the eight-minute interview caused a flurry of conversation online. Tinubu had some […]
The Nigerian Voter is a series that seeks to understand the motivations that drive the voting decisions of Nigerians — why they vote, how they pick their candidates, why some have never voted, and their wildest stories around elections. The subject of today’s The Nigerian Voter is Safiya, a Muslim lady from Kaduna State in […]
Our first subject of The Nigerian Voter is a market woman who’s only voted once in her life. She wants to vote in 2023 because she is tired of agberos extorting her daily 2k.
In 2020, this 33-year-old got a ₦10m loan to start a farm. Today, the farm is not operational. He’s also been a teacher, gym instructor, HR manager, tailor, marketer, admin assistant and army recruit. He hopes to add ‘governor’ to that list. You’ll enjoy his #NairaLife.
On last week's Game of Votes, we talked about Buhari's new anti-terror promise, and why okada riders are taking the wives of police officers.
The choices Nigerian voters make in electing the next president in 2023 can determine if Nigeria becomes a Wakanda or an African Venezuela. What electoral issues will guide their choices?
The Buhari government is thinking about a nationwide ban on okada to fight those pesky terrorists, but we have a few ideas on actual things that need banning in order to become the safest country in the world.
More than 4,000 prison inmates, including convicted terrorists, are currently roaming the streets of Nigeria following a string of prison attacks that started in 2020. What's the Nigerian government doing to recapture them (since begging isn't working)?
Terrorists attacking a presidential convoy is all the proof you need to know that no one is safe in Nigeria these days. But the one man that’d disagree with that also happens to be Nigeria's president. Will this attack change anything?