Abubakar A. Nuhu-Koko
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Date Item Title Author Hits
Monday, 05 January 2009 The Return Of Dr. Rilwanu Lukman As Petroleum Minister Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 185
Friday, 02 January 2009 Senator Adamu Aliero And The Challenges Of Ministering Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 155
Tuesday, 30 December 2008 From ‘Washington Consensus’ To ‘Washington Confusion’ Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 86
Tuesday, 23 December 2008 ICRC Or Competition Commission? Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 104
Monday, 22 December 2008 The Kaduna Refinery Turn-Around Maintenance (TAM) Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 196
Wednesday, 10 December 2008 Power Sector Crisis: From Emergency Declaration To Strategic Action Plan & Its Implementation Abubakar A Nuhu-Koko 239
Tuesday, 18 November 2008 Nigerian Communications Satellite-1 (NigComSat-1): Missing in Action (MIA) Abubakar A Nuhu-Koko 315
Monday, 22 September 2008 Information Super Highway and Nigeria’s National Security Concerns Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 176
Wednesday, 17 September 2008 Ministry for the Niger Delta: Breaking the Resource Curse Paradox Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 286
Monday, 15 September 2008 Foreign Policy and President Yar’Adua’s Impending Cabinet Shake-up Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 175
Thursday, 17 July 2008 Addicted to Fuel and Electricity Subsidies: Getting the Reform Strategies Right Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 334
Monday, 14 July 2008 Stolen Crude Oil versus Conflict (Blood) Diamonds: The Case of Comparing Apples and Oranges? Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 358
Monday, 14 July 2008 Power Sector Emergency Declaration: Getting It Right. Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 403
Friday, 11 July 2008 Power Sector Emergency: Is Demand Management Stupid? Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 360
Tuesday, 24 June 2008 The Proposed Niger Delta Summit – Any Hope For A Breakthrough? Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 310
Monday, 16 June 2008 A Minimum Framework (Charter) For Sustainable Human Development For The Northern Governors Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 445
Sunday, 01 June 2008 Umaru Musa Yar’Adua: The Challenging Times Ahead. Abubakar A Nuhu-Koko 266
Tuesday, 27 May 2008 The Nigerian Financial Sector Aids and Abets Public Treasury Looting Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 294
Monday, 26 May 2008 Hiring of Niger Delta Militants as Pipelines Security Guards: An Exercise in Futility! Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 410
Thursday, 22 May 2008 Professor Gambari’s Prescription for a Solution in the Niger Delta: A Recipe for No Action Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 330
Monday, 19 May 2008 The Clash: Speaker ‘Dimeji Bankole versus Prof. Tam David-West on Oil Industry Data Paucity Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 467
Friday, 16 May 2008 House of Representatives’ NNPC Investigation – The right steps needed to take Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 281
Thursday, 15 May 2008 Speaker Bankole’s NNPC Investigation: How Far Can He Go? Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 323
Saturday, 22 March 2008 20th Anniversary of Transforming the NNPC Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 786
Monday, 25 February 2008 Tribute to Former President Alhaji Shehu Usman Aliyu Shagari, GCFR, at 83 Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 481
Wednesday, 21 November 2007 Late Chief Adisa Akinloye (1916 - 2007): 30 Minutes of Chance Meeting Abubakar Nuhu-Koko 960
Thursday, 18 October 2007 Response From Galaxy Backbone Plc Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 683
Sunday, 07 October 2007 Galaxy Backbone Plc – Nigeria’s paradox of Privatization policy? Abubakar A Nuhu-Koko 1222
Wednesday, 19 September 2007 Re-organising Nigeria’s Power Sector – The Challenge before the National Energy Council (NEC) Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 386
Monday, 10 September 2007 National Energy Council (Oil, Gas & Power Reform Committees): A Return To The Drawing Board? Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 677
Monday, 10 September 2007 The National Energy Council (NEC) And Sustainable Energy And Power Sectors Reforms In Nigeria. Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 231
Saturday, 08 September 2007 National Energy Council (NEC): Oil and Gas and Power Reform Committees – A Return to the Drawing Boa Abubakar A Nuhu-Koko 312
Tuesday, 04 September 2007 The National Energy Council (NEC) and Sustainable Energy and Power Sectors Reforms in Nigeria Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 245
Tuesday, 04 September 2007 The Restructuring of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC): Some Pertinent Observations Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 474
Tuesday, 28 August 2007 Lost in Space: Chaos in Nigeria’s Telecoms and IT Policies Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 714
Friday, 24 August 2007 The North – Nigeria’s “Niger Delta” of Renewable Energy Resources Abubakar Nuhu-Koko 710
Friday, 24 August 2007 The North – Nigeria’s “Niger Delta” of Renewable Energy Resources Abubakar Nuhu-Koko 271
Thursday, 02 August 2007 Lost in Space: Nigeria’s Telecoms and ICT Policy Abubakar Nuhu-Koko 750
Sunday, 15 July 2007 Nigeria’s Unending Fuels Price Crises – Issues and Matters Arising (Parts 1-4 of 5) Dr Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 561
Wednesday, 11 July 2007 Nigeria’s Unending Fuels Price Crises – Issues and Matters Arising (Part 1 of 5) Dr Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 175
Sunday, 17 June 2007 President Yar Adua: Getting Nigeria into the global Information Superhighway Abubakar Atiku Nuhu-Koko 450
Tuesday, 05 June 2007 Time to Dishonour those undeservedly honoured Abubakar A Nuhu-Koko 462
Saturday, 30 December 2006 Alternative Strategy for balloting and voting for Nigeria’s 2007 General Elections Abubakar Atiku Nuhu Koko, Director SSWI 390
 
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Results 1 - 43 of 43
  • Abdulmumuni Yinka Ajia   ( 27 items )

  • Abiodun Ladepo   ( 6 items )

     

  • Adebayo Adejare   ( 10 items )

     

  • Adebayo Adejare   ( 2 items )

     

  • Adebayo Animashaun   ( 8 items )
  • Adebayo Kareem   ( 9 items )
  • Adeola Aderounmu   ( 91 items )
  • Afolabi Ogunleye   ( 7 items )
  • Ahaoma Kanu   ( 65 items )
  • Akinseye Agunloko   ( 14 items )
  • Akintokunbo A Adejumo   ( 60 items )

    Akintokunbo Adejumo, M Sc., ACIH, MCMI, a social and political commentator on Nigerian issues, lives and works in London, UK as a housing professional. He is a graduate of the University of Ibadan, Nigeria (1979) and University of Manitoba, Canada (1985). He is also the Coordinator of CHAMPIONS FOR NIGERIA, an organisation devoted to celebrating genuine progress, excellence, commitment, selfless and unalloyed service to Nigeria and the people of Nigeria.

  • Akinyemi Akinlabi   ( 8 items )

     

  • Aloy Ejimakor   ( 15 items )
  • Alvan Amadi   ( 8 items )

     

  • Aminu Magashi   ( 3 items )

     

  • The Canary Series with Anne Oboho   ( 18 items )
  • Anthony Okosun   ( 15 items )
  • Aonduna Tondu   ( 44 items )
  • Around Town   ( 24 items )
  • Atinuke Badejo   ( 5 items )
  • Awa Ikoro   ( 15 items )
  • Ayo Akinfe   ( 8 items )
  • Ayomide's Misty Blues   ( 6 items )

     

  • Babatunde Fajimi   ( 23 items )
  • Banjo Odutola   ( 30 items )
  • Bankole A. Okuwa Ph. D.   ( 19 items )
  • Bankole Arowobusoye   ( 8 items )
  • Ben Oghre   ( 6 items )

     

  • Benedicta Onyero Droese   ( 12 items )
    Bennie Onyero Droese, a stay-at-home mother of three young children is pretty much a 'Jack of many trades' who likes to dabble in subbing, freelancing, designing and blogging on MyFamilyScene.
  • Bennie Attoh   ( 23 items )
  • BisiKay Ayedun   ( 11 items )

     

  • Blessing Otobo   ( 16 items )
  • Bode Eluyera   ( 37 items )
  • Carlisle U.O. Umunnah   ( 55 items )
     
  • chichi layor   ( 5 items )
    Chichi Layor's first collection, BREAK EVERY RULE, was published in 1989, and her poems have subsequently appeared in various magazines and journals in Nigeria and the United States. In addition to writing poetry, she has written a weekly column for a national newspaper in Nigeria. She currently lives in London where she works in the field of human rights.
  • Chidi Anyaeche   ( 31 items )
  • Chidi C. Achebe   ( 8 items )
  • Chidi Giniji   ( 17 items )

  • Chika Ezeanya   ( 3 items )

    Chika A. Ezeanya is a Ph.D. student of African (Development and Policy) Studies at Howard University in Washington DC. She holds an M.A. in International Relations from the University of Warwick in Coventry England, with specialization in International Trade. Prior to taking up temporal residence in the United States for graduate studies, Chika worked at the Oil & Gas Desk of one of Nigeria’s foremost commercial banks. As part of a larger group concerned with portfolio management and business development, Chika was in charge of the financial transactions of the major upstream and downstream oil companies operating in Nigeria. She was able to garner invaluable firsthand experience of the Nigerian economic and business climate and the operations of multinational companies in developing countries. Her one year stint with the Foreign Operations Desk also exposed her to global import and export regulations, and the dynamics of international trade between sub-Saharan Africa and Asia, Latin America and Western Europe.  

    At the age fifteen after reading Walter Rodney’s book, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, Chika Ezeanya took up African development as a matter of personal responsibility and later, scholarship,. She believes that the future of Africa lies with Africans and not with the morsels offered by Europe and America directly, or through their agents. She is persuaded that until Africans start looking inwards to promote their authentic selves, devoid of self loathing and inferiority complex, the reality of a developed Africa would remain a mirage. 

    Chika writes to build, to instill in every person of African origin, resident and in the Diaspora a sense of self-worth, a re-discovery of the personality trait of the ancient black man that enabled him conquer territories, build the pyramids and export the knowledge, which formed the basis of modern civilization to Greece. At the dawn of self realization, Chika believes the African would realize that the task ahead of him is not greater than the power within him. Unmovable power, dating millions of years, but being overshadowed by the forces of oppression fostered by the absence of a knowledge of the truth by the oppressed.

  • Achebe Foundation   ( 59 items )
  • Chinweizu   ( 25 items )

     Chinweizu is an institutionally unaffiliated Afrocentric scholar. A historian and cultural critic, his books include The West and the Rest of Us (1975), Second, enlarged edition (1987); Invocations and Admonitions (1986); Decolonising the African Mind (1987); Voices from Twentieth-century Africa (1988); Anatomy of Female Power (1990). He is also a co-author of Towards the Decolonization of African Literature (1980). His pamphlets include The Black World and the Nobel (1987); and Recolonization or Reparation? (1994) He lives in Lagos, Nigeria.

  • Chris Ngwodo   ( 38 items )
  • Chris Odetunde   ( 83 items )

    Christopher Odetunde attended St. John’s College Kaduna, and the Federal School of Science, Onikan, Lagos.   He obtained a B.Sc. degree from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, Florida;  a M.Sc. in Aerospace Engineering from Iowa State, Ames-Iowa; and Ph.D. in Aerospace/Mechanical Engineering from Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas.  He obtained a M.Sc. degree in Project Engineering/Project management from Southeastern Institute of Technology, Huntsville, Alabama. 

    Christopher Odetunde was a lecturer in the Mechanical Engineering Department at Obafemi Awolowo University, (Unife), Ile-Ife Nigeria. He was a senior computational fluid-dynamics/Aerodynamicist engineer with the department of Strategic Defense Command and Teledyne Brown Engineering, Huntsville, Alabama.  Some of the notable projects he worked on are: the High Endo-Atmospheric Defense Interceptors (HEDI), Heat Transfer analysis of Space program – Crystal Growth Furnace; ARROW missile design and analysis.  He was a Professor of Aerospace engineering and applied mathematics at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, Florida.  He currently has a consulting (in Aerospace, Mechanical, Environmental engineering and in Oil & Gas) engineering firm.  The firm was established to absorb some of Nigerian’s smartest and brightest engineers for possible technology transfer.  He is a member of the Council of Registered Engineer of Nigeria (COREN) and Nigeria Society of Engineer, NSE. 

    He was the General Secretary, Yoruba Omo Oduduwa, Houston Chapter and currently the National President of Kwara State Association of Nigeria, KSANG – North America.

  • Christian Dimkpa   ( 6 items )
  • Chukwudi Okeke   ( 8 items )

     

  • Chukwudi Ede   ( 17 items )
  • Chukwudi Nwokoye   ( 27 items )
  • Churchill Okonkwo   ( 82 items )
  • Crispin Oduobuk   ( 38 items )
  • Dan Azumi Kofarmata   ( 25 items )
  • Daniel Bankole Afilaka   ( 10 items )
  • Danny Elombah   ( 31 items )
  • Dapo Oyewole   ( 2 items )

    Dapo Oyewole is a World Fellow at Yale University & Director of CAPPS, a Lagos-based policy think tank. E-mail: dapo@thinkafrica.org

  • Dele A. Sonubi   ( 25 items )
  • Dele Oluwole   ( 15 items )

    Dele Oluwole (MBCS) 

    Dele who is a member of the prestigious British Computer Society (BCS) graduated in England with a BSc and master’s degree in computing from Staffordshire University.

    He began his IT career as a software test engineer (ISEB certified) with Argos Retail group. He has several years of experience in software validation with focus on software quality assurance engineering. Presently consulting for Virgin Mobile Telecoms in the UK Dele is also an avid sports man.



  • Dennis O. Balogu   ( 5 items )

     

  • Dr Abayomi Ferreira   ( 6 items )
  • Dr Gary K. Busch   ( 32 items )
  • Dr Olusegun Fakoya   ( 20 items )
  • Ebi Bless Asain   ( 8 items )

     

  • Ebi Bozimo   ( 9 items )
  • Elie Smith   ( 40 items )
  • Emmanuel Chukwura Achife   ( 10 items )
  • Emmanuel Franklyne Ogbunwezeh   ( 52 items )
  • Emmanuel Ogebe   ( 3 items )

     

  • Nigerian ICT with Emmanuel Okoegwale   ( 18 items )
  • Emmanuel Omoh Esiemokhai   ( 25 items )
  • Ephraim Emenanjo Adinlofu   ( 20 items )
  • Eric Terfa Ula-Lisa   ( 65 items )
  • Eucharia Mbachu   ( 54 items )

    Eucharia Mbachu works with Afriqevent Magazine in Washington, DC, where she serves as an Assistant Editor. Ms. Mbachu writes for several national and international news agencies. She has great experience in the Middle East where she worked as a staff reporter with the Emirate News. She has written several articles ranging from different local and international interests. Some of her articles have appeared in African, Asian, American and European news agencies. She has also taught in different schools in Maryland, with an emphasis on an Early Childhood Education. Ms. Mbachu currently is based in the United States. She holds a masters degree in communications with a major in print journalism.
     

  • Eugene Uzum   ( 15 items )
  • Ewaen Edoghimioya   ( 5 items )

     

  • Farooq A. Kperogi   ( 8 items )

     

  • Farouk Martins   ( 129 items )
  • Felix-Abrahams Obi   ( 39 items )
  • Femi Oyesanya   ( 34 items )
  • Femi Sobowale   ( 19 items )
  • Folasayo Dele-Ogunrinde   ( 7 items )
  • Folayan Osekita   ( 26 items )
  • Fred Igbeare   ( 33 items )
  • Frisky Larr   ( 58 items )
  • Gaga Ekeh   ( 11 items )
  • Gbenga Badejo   ( 13 items )
  • George Onmonya   ( 22 items )
  • Guest Articles   ( 1070 items )
  • Habu Dauda Fika   ( 6 items )

     

  • Hafsat M. Zanna   ( 5 items )

     

  • Hakeem Babalola   ( 162 items )
  • Halima Sadiya Mamud   ( 7 items )
  • Harry Nasir Dirisu   ( 6 items )

     

  • Homefront with Mutti   ( 33 items )

  • Ike Anya   ( 4 items )

     

  • Idang Alibi   ( 7 items )
  • Ikechi Udegbunam Chukwunonye   ( 26 items )
  • Ikechukwu Amaechi   ( 31 items )
  • Ikechukwu Ude-Chime   ( 14 items )
  • Ikenna Ellis-Ezenekwe   ( 5 items )

     

  • Ikhide R. Ikheloa   ( 33 items )
     
  • Ilejeun Jadesola with Derbrah   ( 38 items )
  • Ilobi Austin   ( 4 items )

     

  • Ishola Taiwo   ( 10 items )

     

  • Iwedi Ojinmah   ( 35 items )

    The Suya Spot – featuring Iwedi Ojinmah



  • Jide Awe   ( 7 items )
  • Jide Ayobolu   ( 7 items )

     

  • Jideofor Adibe   ( 5 items )

     

  • John Igoli   ( 5 items )

     

  • John Iteshi   ( 20 items )
  • Joseph Inyang   ( 8 items )

     

  • Jude Uzonwanne   ( 13 items )
  • Jumoke Giwa   ( 65 items )
     
  • Kate Chukwu   ( 18 items )
  • Kay Soyemi (Esq.)   ( 12 items )
  • Kayode Oladele   ( 18 items )
     
  • Kelechi Omwumereh   ( 6 items )

     

  • Kennedy Emetulu   ( 43 items )
  • Kingsley Ewetuya   ( 4 items )

     

  • Kingsley Odinaka Iwu   ( 4 items )

     

  • Kingsley Omose   ( 23 items )

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  • Kunle Owojori   ( 7 items )

     

  • L. Chinedu Arizona-Ogwu   ( 16 items )
  • Laolu Akande   ( 167 items )
  • Lawrence Chinedu Nwobu   ( 71 items )
     
  • Lekan Fatodu   ( 5 items )

     

  • Levi Obijiofor   ( 87 items )

    Levi  Obijiofor is a Senior Lecturer in Journalism at the School of Journalism and Communication, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. He was at various times Sub-Editor, Production Editor and Night Editor of The Guardian newspapers in Lagos, Nigeria. Between March 1995 and May 1996, he worked in the Division of Studies and Programming (BPE/BP) at the Paris headquarters of UNESCO where he edited the bulletin FUTURESCO and also coordinated the future-oriented studies program.


    Levi has taught postgraduate and undergraduate classes across a range of journalism and communication courses and has successfully supervised PhD, Masters and Honours students. 

    He holds a PhD and a Master’s degree in Communication from the Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Brisbane, Australia. He also holds a Bachelor’s degree (BSc First Class Honours) and a Master’s degree in Mass Communication from the University of Lagos, Nigeria. In May 2000, he completed a Graduate Certificate in Education (Higher Education) course at the University of Queensland.


  • Mark Okin   ( 10 items )
  • Marshall Ifeanyi   ( 9 items )
  • Max Siollun   ( 17 items )

    Max Siollun is a historian and commentator on Nigerian political and governmental issues, with a focus on those pertaining to Nigerian history and the Nigerian military’s participation in politics.  He has written a number of articles regarding Nigeria ’s military coups, and is the author of a forthcoming book on the origins of military engagement in Nigerian politics.  Mr Siollun welcomes reader feedback on his articles and may be contacted at maxsiollun@yahoo.com.

  • Michael Egbejumi-David   ( 40 items )
  • Michael Femi Ewetuga   ( 68 items )
  • Michael Oluwagbemi   ( 105 items )
     
  • Mobolaji Aluko   ( 112 items )
  • Moses Ebe Ochonu   ( 44 items )
  • Musa Ilallah   ( 7 items )

     

  • Nafata Bamaguje   ( 5 items )

     

  • Ndubueze Godson III   ( 5 items )
  • Neop   ( 12 items )
  • Newsflash   ( 46 items )
  • Nnaemeka Oruh   ( 9 items )
  • Norris Benedict   ( 5 items )

     

  • Nosa Olotu   ( 28 items )
  • NVS   ( 346 items )
  • Nwachukwu Egbunike   ( 4 items )

     

  • Obianuju Chiamaka Amamgbo   ( 10 items )
  • Odimegwu Onwumere   ( 21 items )
  • Ogaga Ifowodo   ( 15 items )

    Ogaga Ifowodo

    Ogaga Ifowodo, was born in Oleh, Delta State. Trained originally as a lawyer, he holds an MFA from Cornell University where he is currently finishing a Ph.D in English. He has published three collections of poems: Homeland and Other Poems, winner of the 1993 Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA) poetry prize; Madiba, winner of the 2003 ANA/Cadbury poetry prize; and The Oil Lamp, winner of the 2005 ANA/NDDC Gabriel Okara poetry prize.

    Ifowodo was a frontline student leader as an undergraduate at the University of Benin. He worked for eight years with the Civil Liberties Organisation, Nigeria’s premier human rights group, and between 1997 and 1998 was held under preventive detention by the Abacha military regime; a memoir of his prison experience, excerpts from which have been featured in Gathering Seaweed: African Prison Writing (edited by the Malawian poet, Jack Mapanje), New Writing 14 (published by Granta), Nigeria’s Vanguard newspaper, and at www.africanwriting.com is in progress. His poems have been translated into German, Dutch and Romanian and have also been widely published in anthologies and magazines, including Voices from all Over: Poems with Notes and Activities released last year by Oxford University Press, Step Into a World: A Global Anthology of the New Black Literature, The Times Literary Supplement, Poetry International, English in Africa, The Massachusetts Review, among others. Ifowodo is a regular contributor to the op-ed pages of The Guardian, Nigerian Village Square and other major Nigerian newspapers.

    In 1998 Ifowodo was named recipient of the PEN USA Barbara Goldsmith Freedom-to-Write Award and of the Poets of All Nations (Netherlands) “Free Word” Award. He is an honorary member of the PEN Centres of the USA, Canada and Germany and a fellow of the Iowa Writing Program.


  • Okechukwu E. Asia   ( 4 items )

     

  • Okechukwu Peter Nwobu   ( 20 items )
  • Okey Ndibe   ( 157 items )

     Okey Ndibe is currently an associate professor of English at Simon's Rock College in Great Barrington, MA. In 2002, he won the college's New Faculty Teaching Award. During the 2001-2002 year, Ndibe was a Fulbright Lecturing/Research Scholar at the University of Lagos, Nigeria. 

    Ndibe was the founding editor of African Commentary, a magazine published in the U.S. by novelist Chinua Achebe.  Ndibe also served as a member of the editorial board of Hartford Courant.  A piece he wrote in the Courant titled "Eyes to the Ground: The Perils of the Black Student," was chosen by the Association of Opinion Page Editors in 2001 as the best opinion piece published in any American newspaper.
     
    From 1997 to 2000, Ndibe was a visiting professor of English and Creative Writing at Connecticut College in New London, Connecticut where he was named by the College
    Voice, the college's student newspaper, as one of the college's "Five Outstanding
    Professors."

    Ndibe has made editorial contributions to several publications in the U.S., England, and Nigeria including Hartford Courant, Transatlantimes Times, The Fabian Society Journal, Black Issues Book Review, BBC Online, Emerge, The Guardian, and now Nigerian Village Square 
  • Oladele O. Solanke   ( 5 items )

     

  • Olaide Omideyi   ( 6 items )

     

  • Olayiwola Ajileye   ( 23 items )
  • Olu Ojedokun Ph.D   ( 30 items )
  • Olumide Ogunremi   ( 17 items )
  • Olusegun Victor Mamora   ( 12 items )
  • Omo Omoruyi   ( 6 items )
  • Omoyele Sowore   ( 91 items )
  • Onyeka Nwelue   ( 5 items )

     

  • Ossie Ezeaku   ( 24 items )
  • Oyibo E. Odinamadu   ( 7 items )
  • Ozodi Thomas Osuji   ( 192 items )

    Ozodi Thomas Osuji


    Ozodi Thomas Osuji is from Umuohiagu (close to Owerri) in Imo State, Nigeria. Ozodi has doctorate degree from the University of California, Los Angeles. Upon completing his dissertation he secured a professorial position at California State University, Dominguez. After a while it occurred to him that he had spent his ten years in America at college campuses and, as such, does not know how the real America works. He, therefore, decided to leave academia for a while (his intention was to return to it) to go gain real world experience. Thus, he moved to Portland, Oregon and worked for the county mental health system and rose to be the director (N/NE Community Mental Health Center). From there he moved to Seattle and did a similar job (Administrator of Central Area Mental Health) and to Alaska where he was a city’s director of social services (Mental Health, Developmental Disability, Children’s services, Aging Services, Drug Treatment etc).

    After over ten years of managing agencies Dr Osuji decided to return to academia and secured a position at the University of Alaska. He taught Organizational Behavior (Psychology) and Political philosophy. Thereafter, Dr Osuji established Africa Institute Seattle. At the Institute they do research on African issues and conduct seminars on the same topics.

    Dr Osuji has written on several topics. Some of his books are: Leadership Arts for Africa, Thoughts on Nigeria’s Constitution, Nigeria’s Political Economy etc. Dr Osuji is married and has three children (Ijeoma, Obi and Kelechi). He can be reached at: Ozodi@africainstituteseattleor ozodiosuji@gmail.com

  • Pat Utomi   ( 30 items )
  • Patrick Wilmot   ( 2 items )

     

  • Paul Adujie   ( 199 items )
  • Paul Agho   ( 15 items )
  • Paul Mamza   ( 14 items )
  • Peter Alexander Egom   ( 5 items )

     

  • Peter Claver Oparah   ( 58 items )
  • Phil Tam-Al Alalibo   ( 84 items )
  • Philip Emeagwali   ( 5 items )

    P H I L I P     E M E A G W A L I
    Profile from Time.com


    A     C a l c u l a t i n g     M o v e    

    It's hard to say who invented the Internet. There were many mathematicians and scientists who contributed to its development; computers were sending signals to each other as early as the 1950s. But the Web owes much of its existence to Philip Emeagwali, a math whiz who came up with the formula for allowing a large number of computers to communicate at once.

    Emeagwali was born to a poor family in Akure, Nigeria, in 1954. Despite his brain for math, he had to drop out of school because his family, who had become war refugees, could no longer afford to send him. As a young man, he earned a general education certificate from the University of London and later degrees from George Washington University and the University of Maryland, as well as a doctoral fellowship from the University of Michigan.

    At Michigan, he participated in the scientific community\'s debate on how to simulate the detection of oil reservoirs using a supercomputer. Growing up in an oil-rich nation and understanding how oil is drilled, Emeagwali decided to use this problem as the subject of his doctoral dissertation. Borrowing an idea from a science fiction story about predicting the weather, Emeagwali decided that rather than using 8 expensive supercomputers he would employ thousands of microprocessors to do the computation.

    The only step left was to find 8 machines and connect them. (Remember, it was the 80s.) Through research, he found a machine called the Connection Machine at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, which had sat unused after scientists had given up on figuring out how to make it simulate nuclear explosions. The machine was designed to run 65,536 interconnected microprocessors. In 1987, he applied for and was given permission to use the machine, and remotely from his Ann Arbor, Michigan, location he set the parameters and ran his program. In addition to correctly computing the amount of oil in the simulated reservoir, the machine was able to perform 3.1 billion calculations per second.

    The crux of the discovery was that Emeagwali had programmed each of the microprocessors to talk to six neighboring microprocessors at the same time.

    The success of this record-breaking experiment meant that there was now a practical and inexpensive way to use machines like this to speak to each other all over the world. Within a few years, the oil industry had seized upon this idea, then called the Hyperball International Network creating a virtual world wide web of ultrafast digital communication.

    The discovery earned him the Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers\' Gordon Bell Prize in 1989, considered the Nobel Prize of computing, and he was later hailed as one of the fathers of the Internet. Since then, he has won more than 100 prizes for his work and Apple computer has used his microprocessor technology in their Power Mac G4 model. Today he lives in Washington with his wife and son.

    "The Internet as we know it today did not cross my mind," Emeagwali told TIME. "I was hypothesizing a planetary-sized supercomputer and, broadly speaking, my focus was on how the present creates the future and how our image of the future inspires the present."

  • Philip Ikita   ( 24 items )
  • Photo-News   ( 2 items )
  • Pius Adesanmi   ( 32 items )
  • Podcasts   ( 18 items )

  • Point Blank News   ( 2 items )
  • Prince Charles Dickson   ( 163 items )
  • PRONACO   ( 12 items )
  • Raymond Tarek Belleh   ( 16 items )
  • Remi Oyeyemi   ( 25 items )

  • Remi-Niyi Alaran   ( 23 items )
  • Reuben Abati   ( 294 items )

    Born November 7, 1965, in Abeokuta, Ogun State, Reuben Abati, chairman, editorial board of The Guardian newspapers, is a very brilliant scholar cum journalist who has contributed greatly to nation-building through his unique style of discussing topical issues in his columns.

    Abati's approach of using dialogue, narrative, essay and satire to deal with serious national issues has made his columns captivating to many readers. Most of his articles are laced with humour and this makes readers to be carried along. What exactly informed his style of writing?

    Abati had a First Class Honours degree in Theatre Arts at the University of Calabar and won the Vice Chancellor's prize as the overall best graduating student of the university in 1985 among several other prizes for academic excellence. At the University of Ibadan where he did his masters and Ph.D in Theatre Arts, he distinguished himself as a university scholar between 1987 and 1990. He completed his Ph.D at the age of 24 within just two years, specialising in Dramatic Literature, Theory and Criticism.

    He also did a journalism programme as Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow, College of Journalism, University of Maryland, College Park, United States between 1996 and 1997. And in 1997, he earned an LL.B (Hons) from the Lagos State University, Ojo. The training in these three fields has immensely impacted on his writings.

    As a scholar who taught a course on the aesthetics of laughter in the university, Abati finds it easy to use humour to convey his message in a dramatic and impactful manner.

    As a columnist, Abati is motivated by happenings within the society and because there is never a dull moment in Nigeria, he finds the task of writing on topical issues very exciting. He is quite aware that columnists are agenda-setters who use the newspaper platform to provide leadership by assisting the public in formulating their own reaction to issues.

    Over the years, Abati has won several awards for his well-informed commentaries and professional excellence both nationally and internationally. They include: The Cecil King Memorial Prize for Print Journalist of the Year, 1998; The Diamond Award for Media Excellence for Informed Commentary, 1998; Fletcher Challenge Commonwealth Prize for Opinion Writing, 2000; and Diamond Award for Media Excellence for Informed Commentary, 2000.

    Abati who was a university teacher between 1985 and 1996 found it very easy to transit from the academia to journalism because both as a student and lecturer, he was consistently contributing articles to virtually all the leading Nigerian newspapers. From 1989 to 1991, he was contributing editor, Hints and Channele, both Lagos based romance magazines. He also freelanced during the period for The Guardian, Daily Sketch, Democrat, Nigerian Tribune and Daily Times. Between 1994 and 1995, he was contributing editor, Hearts, a romance magazine which he assisted in setting up. For eight months he maintained two columns under a pseudonym.

    But before Abati went into journalism on a full-time basis, he was having a promising career in the academia. He was a graduate assistant, Department of Theatre Arts, University of Benin, 1985-1986 where he served as a member of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC. While pursuing higher degrees at the University of Ibadan between 1986 and 1990, he was a teaching assistant in the "Premier University." Immediately after the completion of his Ph.D in 1990, he was appointed Lecturer II at the Department of English, Ogun State University.

  • Ronke Macaulay   ( 12 items )
    Ronke Macaulay is a writer, linguist and Media practitioner who views the world through a compassionate yet unsentimental lens tinged with humour. She is always searching to understand people and their motives, and this has led her to some surprising conclusions. She is passionate about the Nigerian condition. 
  • Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo   ( 147 items )
  • Sabella O Abidde   ( 312 items )
  • Sam Kargbo   ( 14 items )

  • Samuel Akinyele Caulcrick   ( 42 items )
  • Samuel Uwhejevwe-Togbolo   ( 28 items )
  • Segun Imohiosen   ( 11 items )
  • Seyi Oduyela   ( 25 items )
  • Seyi Olu Awofeso   ( 12 items )
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  • Sheyi Oriade   ( 32 items )
  • Shoko's Mixed Bag   ( 93 items )
  • Sokari Ekine   ( 16 items )
  • Sonala Olumhense   ( 106 items )
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    Daily Entries of a Lively Nigerian Couple
  • Stanis Laus   ( 8 items )

     

  • Stephen Lonewolf Makama   ( 11 items )
  • Sunny Chris Okenwa   ( 183 items )
  • Sylva Nze Ifedigbo   ( 34 items )
  • Sylvester Ojenagbon   ( 45 items )
  • Taju Tijani   ( 38 items )
  • Taslim Anibaba   ( 52 items )
  • Teni Atalabi Osundeko   ( 11 items )

     

  • Terver Atsar   ( 21 items )

    Terver Atsar writes with a radically different perspective on public affairs. An author and preacher, he has anchored 'Echoes'- a Special Column on NigerianNews (www.nigeriannews.com) since 2004 with prolific commentary on burning national issues.

    A fearless and incisive commentator, Terver is Master of Technology(M.Tech) student of Industrial Chemistry(Akure) and holds a Degree in Chemical Engineering(Minna,1995). He is an Environmental Consultant, a Chattered Member of the Waste Management Society of Nigeria(WAMASON) and Member of the Nigerian Society Of Chemical Engineers(NSChe). His hobbies include Badminton, Chess and wildlife tourism.


  • The InkPot   ( 41 items )
     
  • The Oyiza File   ( 1 items )
  • Timi Hyacinth   ( 9 items )
    I define myself as a wife, mother, student and professional. I have knack for writing and think the time has come to speak to the heart and perhaps the mind.
  • Tochukwu Ezukanma   ( 7 items )
  • Tosan Okotie   ( 19 items )
  • Tunde Fagbenle   ( 9 items )
  • Uche Nworah   ( 253 items )
    Profile of Uche Nworah
     
    Uche Nworah is the author of The Long Harmattan Season, a short story and essay collection about Nigerians and Nigeria. He publishes an online branding journal – www.nigerianbrands.com and was the 2006 Chicken Bones Journalist of the Year and 2007 Jack Petchey Leadership award winner.
     
    Nworah blogs about life and stuffs like that at - http://thelongharmattanseason .blogspot.com. He can be contacted through info@uchenworah.com  

  • Uche Ohia   ( 29 items )
  • Uche Okeke   ( 10 items )
  • Uchenna Osigwe   ( 13 items )
  • Ugochukwu Ejinkeonye   ( 79 items )
  • Vera Ezimora   ( 30 items )
  • Verdict\'07   ( 54 items )
  • Victor Dike   ( 85 items )
  • Wale Adebanwi   ( 22 items )

    Adebanwi is a Bill Gates Scholar at Cambridge University, UK.

  • Wale Akin   ( 49 items )
    ale Akin    
  • Wale Odusote   ( 4 items )

     

  • Walemi Ogunleye   ( 6 items )

     

  • Wayo Guy   ( 62 items )
  • Yakub Abdalla   ( 21 items )
     
  • Yinka Leo Ogundiran   ( 8 items )
  • Yushau Shuaib   ( 43 items )
  • Yusuf Danesi   ( 14 items )
  • Zayyad Muhammad   ( 71 items )

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