|
BUSINESS EXCHANGE: NIGERIA; WHITE PEOPLE'S LAST COLONY?
|
Columbus Times
12-05-1995
BUSINESS EXCHANGE: NIGERIA; WHITE PEOPLE'S LAST COLONY?.
In your opinion-forming about the various positions one can take regarding the issue of Nigeria, always bear in mind that Nigeria is the colonists' choice as the country they'll most likely succeed in Africa. Translation: Nigeria is the African country with the most abundant mineral and soil resources that the colonists intend to use to increase their wealth and material lifestyl...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Nigeria: White People's Last Colony?
New York Beacon, The
; William Reed New York Beacon, The 12-13-1995 Nigeria: White People's Last Colony?. In your opinion-forming about the various positions one can take regarding the issue of Nigeria, always bear in mind that Nigeria is the colonists' choice as the country they'll most likely succeed in Africa.
|
|
Nigeria does it again. (Nigeria's political instability threatens its role as a peacekeeper in its region)(Editorial)
The Economist (US)
; ... has yet to say what he intends to do. Leverage on Nigeria's military rulers is limited. Foreign journalists are kept out, so news about abuses of power is scarce. There is no united, democratic movement inside Nigeria for outsiders to support. Meanwhile ...
|
|
The general in his not-so-solitude: Nigeria. (Sani Abacha's military government)
The Economist (US)
; LAGOS IT TAKES more than cosmetic sanctions in the West to isolate Africa's largest nation and second-largest economy. Still, their new pariah status hits the pride of Nigeria's military rulers. What is not being much hit is their pocket. The United States and the European Union tightened existing
|
|
After 35 Years, Nigeria Still Stumbling on Road to Democracy
The Washington Post
; The radiant, round face of businesswoman Shade Edun forms a bitter scowl as she describes how decades of military rule in Nigeria have crushed the economic and political dreams of her people. The civil servants and junior executives who once flocked to Edun's car dealership have stopped coming.
|
|
Nigeria's Metamorphosis.
World and I
; With its fabulous oil wealth, powerful army, and entrepreneurially skilled population, Nigeria should be a shoo-in for winning the continent's most-likely-to-succeed award. Instead, Africa's largest country, with 120 million people, has become a pariah state and an economic basket case as
|