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A common thread to the indignation that greeted Mr. Nasir El Rufai's now infamous re/tweet is "can a Christian say something insulting about Prophet Mohammed (SAW) without Muslims embarking on a killing and burning spree"? (The SAW is mine). This raises the question why people educated enough to curse and fume in English on Twitter and Facebook would want to act [...]
[view whole blog postBy Oyedeji Aderemi He was just 28 and became unemployed when his sight started failing him, his means of livelihood was cut off and his ability to seek medical help went down the drain. Looking blankly into space, he tried to locate my voice welcoming him to the hospital. There, where his pupil should be, was a cloudy milky cover. [...]
[view whole blog postOn Wednesday February 5, British MPs voted on the question of whether or not to legalize same sex marriage. After a mostly civil five-hour debate, the legislation, proposed by Culture Secretary Maria Miller, Conservative MP from Basingstoke was passed by a majority of 225. Following this momentous outcome, the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Bill will now go before the House [...]
[view whole blog postBy Hezekiah Shobiye In Part 1 of this series, I wrote that the Nigerian health care system is unresponsive to both the medical and non-medical needs of its patients; the Nigerian brand of health worker-patient relationship is not working, there is paucity of human and material resources, long waiting times, lack of quality hospitals and a dearth of health professionals with [...]
[view whole blog postLast week, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) toughened its regulatory regime. Its review of risk weights on certain exposures in the computation of capital adequacy essentially did four main things. (1) It increased the risk weight on direct lending to government from 100% to 200%; (2) where a bank's exposure to a particular sector of the economy exceeds 20% [...]
[view whole blog postThe writer (and current winner of the Nigerian Prize for Literature) Chika Unigwe was at a Secondary School in Lagos about a week ago, on invitation, to talk to literature students about the process and vocation of writing. On the way out of the venue, one student who had not got a chance to ask questions during the programme ran up [...]
[view whole blog postby Emmanuel Iduma This didn't happen every day. A man and a woman were sitting by themselves beside a gutter.Her head was resting on his shoulders; his arm drew her close to himself like he had paid for her body and soul. Their belongings were collected in polythene bags that seemed to contain all the mundane things of this world. Yet [...]
[view whole blog postBy Obinna Udenwe Today is not a market day, so we are not packing brooms and beads into baskets to be taken to the market. I am just sitting on the pavement of our house, staring at the birds. Papa is preparing to leave for Nwida market, where he goes everyday to drink palm wine - for papa, everyday [...]
[view whole blog post's room 's neighbours to trees. The walls are lemon green. Gently the curtains blew as if they're clothes on two walking the dusk browned beach. A wave of her came at me. It was a dove out of a mist. by Yemi Soneye ____________ Yemi is a poet and freelance writer whose work has appeared in Istanbul Literary Review, [...]
[view whole blog postThe controversy triggered by Mallam Nasir el-Rufai's comments about Jesus Christ on Twitter is instructive on several levels. Here, I shall limit myself to two immediate implications. In the first instance, it is a sordid demonstration of the deterioration of public debate in Nigeria. Given the quality of most of the arguments (sic) on display, especially from so-called Born Agains, [...]
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