Editorials - Top News

  • December 7
  • Vanguard Nigeria: The Very Long Marks of Prince David [column]

    There is arguably none in the corridors of power today that may have endured as long as the President of the Senate, Senator (Brig. Gen.) David Mark.

  • Monitor Uganda: Voice Voting Method in Parliament is Archaic [opinion]

    The procedure of 'voice voting' by MPs in the Ugandan Parliament to pass bills is not only an insult to the intelligence of the humble constituents who elected them but also an abuse of the key democratic tool.

  • Monitor Uganda: Ghost Health Units; a Christmas Gift for Buturo [opinion]

    Recently, a local daily carried a story saying National Medical Stores (NMS) had discovered 100 ghost health centres. NMS should be commended for the discovery given that they were in the past known for stocking expired drugs. I hope the new NMS management will create a new chapter and ensure that they deliver drugs to only existing health units.

  • Monitor Uganda: UN Climate Change Talks, High Stakes for Citizens [opinion]

    In about two weeks, Ugandan delegation will join the rest of the world at UN Conference of Parties 15th session in Copenhagen - Denmark in an effort to establish climate change global policy.

  • New Vision Uganda: Rock Or Hard Place [opinion]

    IF you're caught between a rock and a hard place, where do you go? Well, of course, it can't be a rock unless you're a ghost. I see little "teacher me" hands waving impatiently in the air. The answer would obviously be a hard place, right?

  • Daily Champion Nigeria: As Camara, Junta Lead Guinea Towards Anarchy [opinion]

    SEVERAL weeks on, the people of the West African nation of Guinea are still reeling from the tragic incidents that were recorded on Monday September 28, in their national capital. Conakry, when gun-wielding soldiers loyal to the military junta of Moussa Dadis Kamara shot scores of innocent civilians dead.

  • East African Tanzania: God May Be On Kikwete's Side, the Rest Are Crossing the Street [opinion]

    It must take great insouciance for someone in President Jakaya Kikwete's position to sleep well at night these days, but if the man is even slightly worried, he's not showing it.

  • East African We Burn Our Schools, Bill Builds Virtual Ones [opinion]

    Visiting the Microsoft India Development Centre in Hyderabad last week was an eye-opener.

  • East African Kenya: It's Clear, an Immoral Deal is On the Table [opinion]

    We can expect at least a week of calm, courteous and reasonable behaviour on the political front. Phew!

  • East African Congo-Kinshasa: How Technology is Fuelling Conflict in the Country [opinion]

    In an effort to shine a light on the darkness at the heart of the world's deadliest conflict since the Second World War, the Enough Project travelled to eastern Congo to better understand how the 3Ts (Tin, Tantalum, and Tungsten) and gold make their way from Congo's killing fields to our cell phones, laptops, MP3 players and video game systems.

  • East African East Africa: Size Matters in Global Affairs, So Governments Must Cede Some Sovereignty to the Regional Bloc [opinion]

    When the East Africa Community celebrated its 10th anniversary by signing a protocol to introduce a Common Market in 2010, it was reaffirming that size matters in the global economy.

  • East African Tanzania: Mining - How Not to Dig the Country Into a Hole [opinion]

    The discovery of oil reserves in Uganda, Kenya's determination to locate and exploit its oil reserves and the impressive mineral wealth of Tanzania, all point to a prosperous future for the region.

  • Daily Champion Nigeria: Soludo is Anambra's Ijele [opinion]

    ONE or two persons may be tempted to consider Dr Okey Ikechukwu's "Still On Anambra's Ijele" (The Guardian, Monday, November 23, 2009) a neutral piece on the February 6, 2010 gubernatorial election in Anambra State. But the article is a veiled--but failed-- attack on the deep and popular conviction that with the emergence of Professor Chukwuma Soludo, the immediate past governor of the Central ...

  • Daily Trust Nigeria: Buhari - Their Worst Fear, Our Best Hope [opinion]

    The article of one Danlami Baban Takko, as guest columnist, in the Daily Trust of Friday, November 27, 2009 makes very interesting reading. He wrote his piece "Re:Saving Buhari, serving self" as counter-attack to the rejoinder of Bashir Yusuf Ibrahim, entitled "Saving Buhari, serving self", which appeared in the Daily Trust of November 22, 2009 in response to an earlier article by Shehu Mohammed ...

  • Daily Trust Nigeria: Buhari - Recognizing Reality, Making Amends [opinion]

    Certainly, Shehu Mohammed Funtua's article, "Saving Buhari" (Daily Trust, Friday Nov. 13, 2009) was one of the most controversial I have ever read. Unfortunately, most reactions to his arguments tend to be laden with sentiments and presumptuous assumptions by those who wrote to vilify Funtua rather than subjecting his points to critical objective evaluation.

  • Daily Trust Nigeria: Labour Party Convention [column]

    Labour party goes for its convention this weekend in Abuja. Political discourse has largely (and perhaps understandably) focused on the doings and perversities of the ruling People Democratic party (PDP).

  • Daily Champion Nigeria: Yar'Adua - How We Miss the Bigger Points [column]

    Even while former President Olusegun Obasanjo was busy playing the typical Nigerian type of politics over who will succeed him, the issue of bad health has been associated with President Umaru Yar'Adua, who at the time was the governor of Katsina State. Some then had claimed he had a terminal illness, while some said he was just simply ill. We all were on this when suddenly he emerged the Peoples ...

  • This Day Nigeria: A Nation On Auto Pilot [opinion]

    As I write this piece, Nigeria is still without a functioning President. The regularity of our President's disappearing acts reminds me of Ola Rotimi's play, Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again.

  • Namibian Namibia: 20/20 Behind Sight! [opinion]

    WOW, 20 years since we first voted in Namibia. We are all still here and not doing so badly! But it was this 20 year interval that got me thinking as it seems, on reflection, to conveniently divide life into the four stages of man. Infancy, adolescence, adultery and, well something!

  • Vanguard Nigeria: ASUU's Strikes and the Day After (3) [column]

    SUCH a technocrat, with a track record of good performance in his or her chosen field, of course, should be supported by deputy vice-chancellors who are thoroughbred academics.

  • Monitor Uganda: Cheap Lessons on Patriotism From MTN Marathon [opinion]

    The November 22 MTN Marathon brought a bit of relief to many Ugandans whose daily menu is about robbery of state coffers by those entrusted. I think these marathons ought to be held more often for two reasons. First is that marathons are just fun and healthy too. But also, I think that frequent marathons (at least on a quarterly basis) would give people a drive to practice because they would want ...

  • Daily Champion Nigeria: Much Ado About Our President [opinion]

    If the Nigerian rumour mill were to be human and wealthy, resourceful Nigerian lawyers would have by now grossed billions in pay offs and commissions from litigations instituted by aggrieved individuals. But since Mr Rumour is so faceless, it gets away with practically every crime and injury known to law. Law enforcement agencies are impotent in reining in this fellow, even when it can be ...

  • Vanguard Nigeria: Mark His Leadership [editorial]

    WHO does Senate President, David Alechenu Bonaventure Mark think he is? Is he anything more than the President of the Senate?

  • Vanguard Nigeria: Vultures on the Rooftops [column]

    THERE has been a tendency to play safe on the part of the Nigerian media with regard to the latest hospitalisation of President Umaru Musa Yar'Adua. The Tribune Newspapers have been the boldest in covering all angles it believes relevant to the developing news.

  • New Vision Uganda: Know the HIV Status of Your Partner [opinion]

    THIS week we celebrated World AIDS day. Though celebration is hardly the right word for such an occasion, it was an opportunity to highlight the fact that AIDS is still with us and take stock of the progress which has been made in combating this epidemic. In Uganda, the picture regarding AIDS is mixed - we have taken some steps forward and also gone backwards. The overall rate of HIV is now lower ...


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