Inside the ADC Crisis: Power Struggles, Legal Battles, and the Fight for Nigeria’s Opposition Future

The African Democratic Congress (ADC) has recently found itself at the centre of Nigeria’s fast-evolving opposition politics, a party originally founded in 2005 but now repositioned as a potential coalition platform ahead of the 2027 general elections in Nigeria. What was once a relatively quiet political structure has become a battlefield of competing interests, leadership…

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TINUBU IN LONDON: STATE VISIT OR MISSED OPPORTUNITY?

The state visit of Bola Ahmed Tinubu to the United Kingdom, hosted by King Charles III at Windsor Castle, carries all the weight of history, symbolism, and diplomatic prestige. It is the first of its kind in nearly four decades, a moment carefully choreographed to project influence, partnership, and renewed engagement between two nations bound…

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War That Serves One Man

In every war, there are competing narratives—national security, strategic deterrence, defence of sovereignty. Yet sometimes the fog of conflict conceals a far simpler reality: a war that ultimately serves the political survival of one leader more than the interests of the nation he governs. In the current crisis engulfing the Middle East, it is increasingly…

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Certificate of Sponsorship: Broken Promises and the Human Cost of UK Immigration Policy

The Certificate of Sponsorship (CoS) system was pitched to skilled international workers as a golden gateway to Britain: a pathway to contribute, to build a life, to eventually gain indefinite leave to remain (ILR). The British government framed it as a promise—a structured, transparent route for talented professionals to enter the UK, fill labour gaps,…

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