Articles
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2 weeks ago |
lucky-wap-ams.op-mobile.opera.com | Majeed Dahiru |Rotimi Fasan
Over 24 communities in Edo Central, Edo North, and Edo South senatorial districts have already been sacked and placed under siege by criminally minded herders from northern Nigeria, while over 30 communities in Delta and Bayelsa states have also faced similar threats. The residents in these states, especially farmers, are terrified of the brazen Fulani herders who invade their farms, destroy crops, feed their cattle, sexually assault women, and kidnap people for ransom.
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2 weeks ago |
lucky-wap-ams.op-mobile.opera.com | Majeed Dahiru |Rotimi Fasan
…Youths Insist Victims Are Not Hunters, Say Extrajudicial Killing Unacceptable ..Residents Warn Security Agents Not To Politicise Brutality The brutal killing of alleged 16 hunters in Uromi, Edo State has thrown the region into a deeper crisis of insecurity. This incident, while shocking, appears to be a symptom of a larger problem plaguing Edo Central.
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Oct 8, 2024 |
africatopforum.com | Rotimi Fasan
Action Peoples Party, Sim Fubara’s proxy party, the special purpose vehicle through which he is establishing his own hegemony, is certainly full of action, having made a near clean-sweep of the available seats in the 23 Local Government Areas of Rivers State. Twenty two of these seats are now under the control of the APP, an unknown quantity of a political party that has suddenly emerged and taken over control of the LGAs in that state in the last couple of weeks.
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Sep 5, 2024 |
allafrica.com | Rotimi Fasan
IN SPITE of the controversy that has surrounded its announcement, it is clear that most Nigerians are neither asking the right questions nor is Professor Tahir Mamman's Ministry of Education taking the right steps about implementing the 18-year admission policy into tertiary institution or sitting the School Certificate Examination(WASCE/NECO). Without any provocation the minister two months ago chose to kick awake a sleeping dog that is best left lying down.
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Aug 27, 2024 |
opinionnigeria.com | Rotimi Fasan
The reception given Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, the Nigerian-born Director-General of the World Trade Organisation, at the conference of the Nigerian Bar Association, must be one of the warmest she has received in her career in the public space. She had headlined the conference as a keynote speaker with a lecture titled: “A Social Contract for Nigeria’s Future”.
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