nigeria
President Muhammadu Buhari has concluded his visit to Cameroon. He’s back in Nigeria.
The lives of drivers and commuters trying to navigate Thursday morning’s rush hour almost took a turn for the deadly after a naked man jumped into the path of speeding vehicles.
The Nigerian Air Force said it has blocked routes through which petroleum products and other materials are supplied to terrorist group Boko Haram.
Audu: “The government abandoned me, but my family and friends did not. I wouldn’t have made it without them.”
A billboard with Buhari’s picture, and five other things Cameroon did to welcome the Nigerian president. Enjoy.
Boys who should be busy schooling are handed rifles and deployed to fight Boko Haram in Nigeria’s northeastern state of Borno, the American government is alleging.
”I hereby dispel the rumour that our baba, the Olubuse is dead.”
Political campaigns, no matter how bruising, should not rob us of our essential humanity.
A source said some palace workers had been shedding tears since the monarch was flown to the UK for medical treatment.
Will Nigerians call for government ban on handbags like they did for the Muslim hijab worn by suicide bombers?
Pictures of the cadets of the Nigerian Defence Academy “punishing” the civilians went viral on social media, Tuesday morning.
We all know what Nigerian governor Rochas Okorocha did with the picture of him having a handshake with America’s President Barack Obama. He put the image on a gigantic billboard on a busy highway!
BVAN: “The bomb blasts in Northern Nigeria have not stopped, and so more and more victims who need care, attention and support are birthed with every blast.”
Twitter seems to be entertained by Okorocha’s seeming inability to contain “the Obama effect.”
At a point the hoodlums jumped out of the vehicle abandoning same and ran inside the bush. Police continued the chase on foot.
Abati: “On one occasion, after a whole day of silence, I had to check if the phones were damaged!”
JAMB chief Dibu Ojerinde is under fire for the new policy he said was done to help unpopular tertiary institutions get more candidates.
Many Nigerians are still wondering when university admission became youth-corps-service-like deployment.