Thursday, 28th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Listless economy haunts Nigerian president at ballot box

By Reuters
16 February 2019   |   5:40 am
Timi Soleye returned home to Nigeria from the United States to set up a gas logistics business six years ago, encouraged by predictions of growth and an expanding middle class.

0 Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related

19 Mar
For the first time, France has been invited to take part in joint exercises with five allied countries: the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand.
23 Mar
Plastic food wrappers harm people and planet. A traditional technique offers a natural alternative!
22 Mar
Fuel shortages, inflation and high levels of poverty have plagued Nigeria in recent years. The 77 Percent travels to Lagos, where Edith Kimani meets young Nigerians who tell her how they view Nigeria's economy and why people in the oil-rich nation are still struggling to make ends meet.
23 Mar
Concerns have emerged over how some members of Nigeria's Community Watch Corps groups operate. The vigilante groups were introduced to complement the efforts of conventional security agencies to fight off criminals known locally as bandits who raid and loot villages, kill residents and burn houses to the ground.
3 days ago
Kidnapping in Nigeria has evolved into a security threat that feeds a vast network of criminal and Islamist groups. In northwest Nigeria gunmen recently kidnapped more than 280 students. Who carries out the abductions and what do they want?
1 day ago
Food banks in Nigeria are being forced to cut back on what they can provide to people struggling amid the country's worst cost of living crisis in decades.