Opinion
Tony Momoh, Idongesit Nkanga, Dennis Abuda – I am Tired of Mourning
Published
5 years agoon
By
Eric
By Mike Ozekhome
INTRODUCTION
I received three blows, nay, uppercuts, in just one week. It was one week of sorrow, tears, pains and pangs. I lost three very dear friends and soul-mates, all in one fell-swoop. Prince Tony Momoh. Air Commodore Idongesit Nkanga. Prince Dennis Abuda. Death is prowling around like a loose cannon. If we are not caught by corona virus, old age (this is acceptable), or air crash through our decrepit air craft, we are murdered in our homes or farms by armed AK-47-welding herdsmen. If we are lucky to escape drowning in our hyacinth – infested water, or the snares of vicious high way marauding kidnappers, we are shot at or daggered by blood-sucking Boko Haram insurgents, fiendish terrorists, ruthless armed bandits and savage armed robbers. So, where do we go from here? Nigeria has become a sprawling field of bloodbath, a crimson theatre of brutality, violence and viciousness. We have lost our humanity. We have sold our souls to satan and his demonic forces. So, where do I start from? I will try.
PRINCE TONY MOMOH
Utter disbelief was the piece of news. Shock was my state of mind. Grief remains my helpless reaction .Repose of his soul is my fervent prayer for him. This quintessential icon of letters, a deep thinker and philosopher, “Prince of the Niger” Tony Momoh, was simply phenomenal in life. Even more so in death. Former Chairman, CPC, (President Buhari’s party that fused with others to found the ruling APC), former Minister of Information and Culture (1986 – 1990) and former Editor and General Manager, Daily Times, the Yerima of Auchi Kingdom exuded and bubbled with the sap of life like a yam tendril in the rainy season. He was one of the greatest wordsmiths of our time. The “grape vine” column of the Daily Times was simply unputdownable. Prince Momoh’s “epic, “Each Man His Time: The Biography of An Era”, which chronicled the biography of the Momoh Dynasty from Momoh the first (1919-1944), is a must read.
Tony Momoh is of a royal muslim line-age and blue-blooded. Born on 27th April, 1939, in Auchi, Edo state, the Prince was the 165th child of King Momoh I of Auchi. The journalistic prodigy once famously said that his father had ‘just 257 children’. That was an entire village, not just children! Prince Tony was the third of the four children for his mother, a junior wife amidst 48 Queens. In an interview, he once said every six months, his father’s wives took a traditional oath not to undermine their husband, children, or one another. Tony attended the Government School, founded by his father at Auchi (1922). He later attended other schools at Okpe, Abudu, Nsukka and Lagos, majoring in Mass Communication and Law.
Tony Momoh, named Suleiman at birth, converted from Islam to Christianity in 1955. He later changed to Tony — taking after his idol, Anthony Enahoro, one of Nigeria’s foremost anti-colonial and pro-democracy activists. The Adolo of Uromi is credited with having moved Nigeria’s motion for “self-rule” (independence) in 1953.
Hear him explain his religion: “When I was being sworn in as Minister of Information and Culture, I said I wouldn’t swear by the Bible or the Quran”, and I said, ‘So help me God’. When I stepped out, journalists asked me, ‘They said you are an atheist.’ I said I was not an atheist. They asked why I did not swear by the Bible or the Quran, but only said ‘So help me God.’ I said, “I am a Christian and a Muslim when they are not quarreling, and neither when they are.” So, was Tony a Christian? No. Was he a Muslem like his larger family? No. Was he a “Chrislem”? No. He was actually a Grail Message adherent? The prince had four children- three boys and one girl.
He was a Nationalist and Pan- Nigerian to the core. His belief in a restructured federation went beyond mere rhetorics. He fought for it all his life, even when his party, APC would not touch it with a 10 foot pole. Beyond these, he wore humility like a second skin. He was simply spartan, given more to ideas than material things of life. His lucidity of thought, depth and breath of knowledge, were simply gargantuan.When he represented the Otaru of Auchi Kingdom at the elevation reception of Bar Asamah Kadiri, SAN, on 14th December, 2020, I was present. The wielder of the pen and tradition was in his usual elements. I never knew that was the last I would see of him. Prince Momoh, who would have been 82 on 27th April, 2021, has gone the way of all mortals.
Taiwo Obe, a great Journalist, once demystified the mystery surrounding the number 13, which in astrology, is synomymous with bad luck. Have you not noticed that even in advanced America, you never have a 13th floor? Obe noted in his twitter handle that for Momoh, 13 was his lucky number. He lived at 13, Bush St, Maryland; had law office at 13, Sylvia Crescent, Anthony village, Lagos; became 13th Editor of Daily Times; made 13th Information Minister and Culture; and 13th Chairman, Governing Council, UNIJOS.
The famous author of ‘Letters to my Countrymen’ was a man of many parts-a Journalist, lawyer, teacher, writer, politician, thinker, philosopher and author of many books.
He was winner of the Selkyo Culture Award in Japan for his “great contribution to society”. A rugged fighter for press freedom, “national unity and integration”, Momoh believed in the Law of Karma- “everything happening to you at any time is a harvest of what you did before, which bore fruits that you are reaping”. He said he was “fully fulfilled” in life. Prince, good night sir.
AIR COMMODORE IDONGESIT NKANGA

Air Commodore (retired) Otuekong Idongesit Nkanga (27th January, 1952- 24 December, 2020), and native of Ikot Nya in Nsit Ibom, was a Nigerian retired Air Commodore. He was Governor of Akwa Ibom State (September 1990 – January, 1992), during the military regime of General Ibrahim Babangida and handed over to an elected civilian Governor, Obong Victor Atah, at the start of Nigerian Third Republic. Nkanga died on 24th December, 2020, following complications from COVID-19, on the eve of Christmas Celebration. Covid-19, shame on you.
When appointed in 1990, his Deputy Governor was Obong Ufot Ekaette, who later became Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF). He, it was, who established the Akwa Ibom Broadcasting Corporation by Edict in April, 1988. Nkanga was later appointed Chairman, Akwa Ibom Airport Implementation Committee, which midwifed the airport opened on November 26, 2009.
Although the primary focus was on cargo traffic and airplane maintenance repair and overhaul, the airport has since been serving commercial local passenger flights.
In December, 2009, he fiercely supported Godswill Akpabio to become Akwa-Ibom State Governor.
In January, 2010, Nkanga became a member of the South-South Elders and Leaders’ Forum.
Married with Children, he was variously educated in many institutions, both locally and abroad. These included Command and Staff College, Jaji, Air University, Montgomery, University of Ibadan, An officer and gentlemen, Nkanga was a renowned Pilot of Special Gulfstream Jet, and Boeing 727, Presidential Fleet. He received the honours of Passed Staff College (PSC) ; PSC Dagger (+); and Forces Service Star (FSS). A devout Christian, Nkanga’s hobbies and Interests were Football, tennis and swimming.
My most memorable remembrance of Nkanga was at the 2014 National Conference. We worked very closely together as leaders of South South, and also as leaders of a special Think-Tank made up of leading influential members amongst the 492 delegates from across the country. Some other members of this heart-beat of the Conference (which were led by Chief E.K Clark, in no order of importance), were Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Chief Emeka Ezeife, Prof. Auwalu Yadudu, High Chief Raymond Aleogho Dokpesi, General Ike Nwachukwu, Prof Ibrahim Gambari (now Chief of Staff), Chief (Mrs) Kofoworola Bucknor-Akerele, Chief Olu Falae, Chief Jim Nwobodo, Prof. Jerry Gana, Alhaji Tanko Yakassai, General Alani Akinrinade, Chief Femi Okorounmu, Chief (Mrs) Josephine Anenih, Dr Peter Odili, King Diette-Spiff, Sen Daisy Danjuma, Prof Jubril Aminu, General Zamani Lekwot, General D.O. Idada-Ikponmwen, Lamido of Adamawa, HRH, Dr Muhammadu Barkindo Mustapha, Oba Arc. Aderemi Adedapo, Dr (Mrs) Patricia Ogbonnaya, Senator Khairat Abdulrazak-Gwadabe, Prof Anya Anya, Chief Dan Nwanyanwa, Senator Ken Nnamani, Prof. Akin Oyebode, Gen. J.T Useni, Prof. Iyorchia Ayu, Mr John Dara, Hon. Justices G.A Oguntade and F.F. Tabai, Chief Olusegun Osoba, Senator Florence Ita-Giwa, Senator Adolphus Wabara, Prof A.B.C. Nwosu, late Prof. Dora Akunyili and late Chief D.S.P Alamieyiesiegha, etc, etc.
As chairman of the Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF), his voice was resonating across all nooks and crannies of Nigeria, fighting for South South peoples’ rights. He built the Akwa Ibom State permanent State Secretariat complex. Air Commodore, goodbye sir.
PRINCE ELONIYO DENNIS ABUDA

My bossom friend, Prince Eloniyo Dennis Abuda, was kidnapped by unknown gunmen of the underworld, on his way to Lagos from Fugar, in Edo state. He was gruesomely killed by kidnappers who had ambushed him on Saturday 30th January, 2021, along Benin-Ahor-Lagos by pass, Benin city.
Abuda was expected to catch his flight back to the USA, after spending his Christmas holidays with his kinsmen and kindred family. His body was discovered four days later. Not even the payment of huge ransom money to the vampirous and satanic forces of darkness could draw any milk of human kindness from them, to save him. Why not release him with his 3 co-kidnapped victims? Why waste this sexagenarian who believed so much in his country? Fellow Nigerians, that is the sorry state we have found ourselves in, under the very presidency of a retired Army General, Muhammadu Buhari, whose strongest selling point during electioneering campaigns aside the economy and fight corruption to a standstill was to fight insecurity. All three have collapsed like a pack of cards.
For a man who rose through the rungs of the ladder to attain a height where he could be feeding about 1,000 people and training about 200 others in various schools, this was a cruel dastardly end to Abuda. Abuda served humanity; but, humanity rubbished him. Abuda, with a riotous moustache, was ever sunny, gregarious, jocular and possessed whittism. Very hospitable and accommodating, he threw open his Atlanta, (USA), home doors to all comers. As President of American-Fugar Foundation and member and ex official of Afemai World-wide, Abuda was an affable community leader.
Whether he was killed directly by the kidnappers, or died of hypertension, (since according to Edo State Commissioner of Police, Mr Phillip Ogbadu, “there was no injury on the body”), the immediate cause of death was nothing but his savage kidnap. It is the ironic story of whether it was the fish that swallowed Jonah, or Jonah swallowed the fish. The important thing is that there was “swallow”.
Mr President sir, you may not be able to arrest COVID-19 that plucked away Nkanga; nor old age that took away Tony Momoh. But, sir, you surely can insist on the immediate arrest and prosecution of these dastardly criminals. See sections 214, 215 and 216 of the 1999 Constitution.
For now, I am sad, sad and very sad. Farewell, Prince of the Ikelebe Dynasty. Goodbye Air General, Nkanga. Sleep well, hilarious and handsome Dennis. Rest in the Lord, all of you. Amen.
THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK
“We live in a culture where we’re bombarded with so much noise and so much insecurity”. (Lisa Ling).
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Opinion
The State of Leadership Today: A Look at Global, African and Nigerian Realities
Published
4 days agoon
January 31, 2026By
Eric
By Tolulope A. Adegoke PhD
“Leadership for our age is measured not by the height of the throne, but by the depth of its roots in integrity, the breadth of its embrace of collective talent, and the courage to cultivate systems that bear fruit for generations yet unseen” – Tolulope A. Adegoke, PhD.
Leadership today is at a crossroad. Around the world, in our communities, and within our organizations, old ways of leading are straining under new pressures. This isn’t just a theoretical discussion; it’s about the quality of our daily lives, the success of our businesses, and the future of our nations. Let’s walk through the current trends, understand their very real impacts, and then explore practical, hands-on solutions that can unlock a better future for everyone.
Part 1: The Leadership Landscape – Where We Stand
The Global Picture: Beyond the Solo Leader
The image of the all-powerful, decisive leader at the top of a pyramid is fading. Today, effective leadership looks different. It’s more about empathy and service than authority. People expect their leaders—in companies and governments—to be authentic, to listen, and to foster teams where everyone feels safe to contribute. Furthermore, leadership is now tightly linked to purpose and responsibility. It’s no longer just about profits or power; stakeholders demand action on climate, fair treatment of workers, and ethical governance. Leaders must also be tech-savvy guides, helping their people navigate constant digital change while dealing with unpredictable global events that disrupt even the best-laid plans.
Africa’s Dynamic Challenge: Youth and Promise
Africa’s story is one of incredible potential meeting stubborn challenges. The continent is young, energetic, and full of innovative spirit. Yet, this tremendous asset often feels untapped. Too frequently, a gap exists between this rising generation and established leadership structures, leading to frustration. While the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) presents a historic chance for economic unity, it requires leaders who think beyond their own borders. At the same time, democratic progress sometimes stalls, with leaders clinging to power. The most pragmatic leaders are those who engage with the vibrant informal economy—the hustlers, market traders, and artisans—who form the backbone of daily life and hold the key to inclusive growth.
Nigeria’s Pressing Reality: Crisis and Resilience
In Nigeria, the leadership experience often feels like moving from one emergency to the next. Attention is consumed by immediate crises—security threats, economic swings, infrastructure breakdowns—making long-term planning difficult. This has triggered a profound loss of confidence, visibly seen in the “Japa” phenomenon, where skilled professionals leave seeking stability and opportunity abroad. This brain drain is a direct critique of the system. Politics remains deeply influenced by ethnic and regional loyalties, which can overshadow competence and national vision. Yet, in the face of these trials, a remarkable spirit of entrepreneurial resilience shines through. Nigeria’s business people and tech innovators are daily solving problems and creating value, often compensating for wider systemic failures.
Part 2: The Real-World Impact – How This Affects Us All
These trends are not abstract; they touch lives, businesses, and countries in tangible ways.
· On Everyday People: When leadership is perceived as self-serving or ineffective, trust evaporates. People feel anxious about the future and disconnected from their leaders. This can manifest as cynicism, social unrest, or the difficult decision to emigrate. The struggle to find good jobs, feel secure, and build a future becomes harder, deepening inequalities.
· On Companies and Organizations: Businesses operate in a tough space. They face a war for talent, competing to retain skilled employees who have global options. They must also navigate unpredictable policies, provide their own power and security, and balance profitability with rising demands for social responsibility. The burden of operating in a challenging environment increases costs and risk.
· On Nations: Countries plagued by poor governance face a competitiveness crisis. They struggle to attract the kind of long-term investment that builds economies. Policy becomes unstable, changing with political winds, which scares off investors and stalls development. Ultimately, this can destabilize not just one nation but entire regions, as problems like insecurity and migration spill across borders.
Part 3: A Practical Pathway Forward – Building Leadership That Delivers
The situation is complex, but it is not hopeless. Turning things around requires deliberate, concrete actions focused on systems, not just individuals.
1. Fortify Institutions with Transparency and Merit.
We must build systems so strong that they work regardless of who is in charge.
· Action: Legally protect key institutions—the electoral body, the civil service, the courts—from political interference. Appointments must be based on proven competence and integrity, not connections.
· Action: Implement technology-driven transparency. Let citizens track government budgets and projects in real time through public online portals. Sunshine is the best disinfectant.
2. Bridge the Gap Between Leaders and the Led.
Leadership must become a conversation, not a monologue.
· Action: Create mandatory Youth Advisory Councils at all levels of government and in large corporations. Give young people a formal platform to contribute ideas and hold leaders accountable on issues like education, digital innovation, and job creation.
· Action: Leaders must adopt regular, unscripted “town hall” meetings and use simple digital platforms to explain decisions and gather feedback directly from citizens and employees.
3. Channel Entrepreneurship into National Solutions.
Harness the proven problem-solving power of the private sector.
· Action: Establish Public-Private Impact Partnerships. For example, the government can partner with tech companies to roll out digital identity systems or with agribusinesses to build modern farm-to-market logistics. Clear rules and shared goals are key.
· Action: Launch National Challenge Funds that invite entrepreneurs and researchers to compete to solve specific national problems, like local clean energy solutions or affordable healthcare diagnostics, with funding and market access as the prize.
4. Redeploy Nigeria’s Greatest Export: Its Diaspora.
Turn the brain drain into a brain gain.
· Action: Create a Diaspora Knowledge & Investment Bureau. This agency would actively connect Nigerians abroad with opportunities to mentor, invest in startups, or take up short-term expert roles in Nigerian institutions, transferring vital skills and capital.
· Action: Offer tangible incentives, like tax breaks or matching funds, for diaspora-led investments in critical sectors like healthcare, renewable energy, and vocational training.
5. Cultivate a New Mindset in Every Citizen.
Ultimately, the culture of leadership starts with us.
· Action: Integrate ethics, civic responsibility, and critical thinking into the core curriculum of every school. Leadership development begins in the classroom.
· Action: Celebrate and reward “Local Champions”—the honest councilor, the community organizer, the business owner who trains apprentices. We must honor integrity and service in our everyday circles to reshape our collective expectations.
Conclusion: The Work of Building Together
The challenge before us is not to find a single heroic leader. It is to participate in building a better system of leadership. This means championing institutions that work, demanding transparency in our spaces, mentoring someone younger, and holding ourselves to high ethical standards in our own roles.
For Nigeria and Africa, the possibility of a brighter future is not a dream; it is a choice. It is the choice to move from complaining about leaders to building leadership. It is the choice to value competence over connection, to seek common ground over division, and to invest in the long-term health of our community. This work is hard and requires patience, but by taking these practical steps—starting today and in our own spheres—we lay the foundation for a tomorrow defined by promise, stability, and shared success. The power to deliver that possibility lies not in one person’s hands, but in our collective will to act.
Dr. Tolulope A. Adegoke, AMBP-UN is a globally recognized scholar-practitioner and thought leader at the nexus of security, governance, and strategic leadership. His mission is dedicated to advancing ethical governance, strategic human capital development, and resilient nation-building, and global peace. He can be reached via: tolulopeadegoke01@gmail.com, globalstageimpacts@gmail.com
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Opinion
Globacom Redefines Standard for Telecoms in 2026
Published
6 days agoon
January 29, 2026By
Eric
By Michael Abimboye
As always, Globacom is at the heart of telecoms transformation in Nigeria. The acquisition of additional spectrum, is a decisive move that has expanded network capacity and fundamentally improved customer experience.
With the ability to carry significantly higher data volumes at greater speeds, users are seeing faster downloads, stronger uploads, seamless video streaming, and clearer voice calls even at peak periods. Crucially, this expansion has driven down latency. Independent performance testing has ranked Glo as the network with the lowest latency in Nigeria, meaning faster response times whenever data commands are initiated.
This spectrum advantage is being matched on the ground by the rollout of thousands of new LTE sites nationwide. Network capacity has increased pan-Nigeria, with noticeably higher download speeds across regions. At the same time, the installation of thousands of additional towers is easing congestion and closing coverage gaps, particularly in high-density locations such as markets and tertiary institutions, where demand for fast, reliable internet is highest.
Power reliability, often the silent determinant of network quality, is also being reengineered. Globacom has deployed hybrid battery power systems across numerous sites, reducing dependence on diesel while improving sustainability. Beyond cost efficiency, this greener model delivers stronger uptime ensuring uninterrupted power supply and optimal performance for base stations and switching centres.
Behind the scenes, Glo has upgraded its switching systems and data centres to accommodate rising traffic volumes nationwide. These upgrades are designed not only for today’s demand but to ensure the network consistently meets performance KPIs well into the future, even as data consumption continues to grow.
Equally significant is the massive reconstruction and expansion of Globacom’s optic fibre cable (OFC) network. Along highways and metro routes affected by road construction, fibre routes are being reconstructed and relocated to safeguard service continuity. Thousands of kilometres of new fibre have also been rolled out nationwide, fortifying the OFC backbone, improving redundancy, reducing network glitches, and enabling the network to handle increasingly heavy data loads with resilience.
These investments collectively address long-standing coverage gaps while driving densification and capacity enhancement in already active areas, ensuring a more balanced and reliable national footprint.
At the core layer, Globacom is modernising its network elements through new platforms and applications, upgraded enterprise and interconnect billing systems, and an expanding roster of roaming partners for both in-roaming and out-roaming services strengthening its integration into the global telecoms ecosystem.
Taken together, these are not incremental upgrades. They represent a deliberate, system-wide repositioning.
In 2026, Globacom is not just improving its network; it is asserting itself as the technical leader in Nigeria’s telecommunications industry and has gone on a spending spree to satisfy the millions of subscribers enjoying seamless connectivity across Nigeria.
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Opinion
How GLO Sustains Everyday Businesses in Kano, Nigeria’s Centre of Commerce
Published
1 week agoon
January 25, 2026By
Eric
By Dr Sani Sa’idu Baba
For more than two weeks, Kano woke up under a veil of fog. Not the poetic kind, but the stubborn Harmattan fog that dulls vision, slows movement, and disrupts daily rhythm. Dawn arrived quietly. Shops opened late. Calls failed repeatedly. Internet bars blinked on and off like uncertain promises. Across the state, one reality became impossible to ignore: communication had become a struggle. This reality carried even greater weight in the capital of Kano, the centre of commerce in Nigeria.
As Ramadan approaches and gradually leads to the celebration of Eid-el-Fitr, everyone understands what this season represents. It is a period when online businesses, both big and small, become a major source of livelihood for millions. Traders prepare for peak demand, online vendors scale up advertising, and buyers from across the country look to Kano for goods. Visitors stream in from other states, transactions multiply, and the success of this entire commercial ecosystem depends heavily on one thing: seamless network connectivity between buyers and sellers.
In Kano, where business breathes through phone calls, alerts, and instant messages, poor network is not just inconvenient, it is costly. Calling became difficult. Browsing the internet felt like a battle. For many, it meant frustration. For others, it meant loss.
As these challenges persisted day after day, conversations across the city began to take a clear and consistent direction. In homes, offices, and markets, a new conversation began to dominate discussions. A brother of mine, deeply involved in the communication business at Farm Center Market, the largest hub for telecom activity in Kano shared his amazement. Day after day, customers walked up to data vendors with one clear, confident request: “Glo data.” Not alternatives. Not experiments. Just Glo, he said. At first, it seemed puzzling. If you were already on Glo, you might not even notice the difference. But for those struggling on other networks, the contrast was undeniable. In the middle of foggy mornings and unstable signals, Glo stood firm.
And soon, the conversation spread everywhere. At tea junctions in the early hours, as people warmed their hands around cups of shayi, discussions circled around how Glo “held up” when others disappeared. In university classrooms, students whispered comparisons before lectures began, who could download materials, who could submit assignments, and which network actually worked. More strikingly, Glo users quietly turned their phones into lifelines, sharing hotspots with classmates so others could access lecture notes, submit assignments, and stay connected. At sports viewing centres, between goals and missed chances, fans debated networks with the same passion as football rivalries. In markets, traders told customers how Glo saved their day. In every gathering of people across Kano, Glo became the reference point. The reason was simple: Glo had saved businesses.
Consider the POS operator by the roadside. Every successful transaction that attracts him/her ₦100 here, ₦200 there is survival. Failed transfers mean angry customers and lost income. During these fog-heavy days, many operators would have been stranded. But where Glo bars stayed strong, withdrawals went through, alerts dropped, and trust preserved.
Picture a roadside trader making her first sale of the day through a simple WhatsApp call, her voice steady as she confirms an order that will set the tone for her business. Nearby, an online vendor advertises products in WhatsApp groups, responds to messages, takes calls from interested buyers, and confirms deliveries, all in real time. Behind every one of these small but significant transactions is reliable connectivity. Delivery riders weaving through traffic and racing against time also depend on uninterrupted network access to reach customers, confirm payments, and complete orders. In moments when other networks struggled, Glo quietly kept these wheels of commerce turning, ensuring that daily hustle did not grind to a halt. Beyond the busy streets of the city, the impact of this reliability becomes even more profound in remote villages in Kano.
Back in Kano city, rising transportation costs have reshaped the way people work. Many professionals have had no choice but to adapt, turning their homes into offices and relying heavily on the internet to stay productive. Many now attend virtual meetings, send large files, collaborate remotely, and meet deadlines without leaving their homes. In a period marked by economic pressure and uncertainty, dependable internet is no longer a convenience, it is a necessity. In these conditions, Glo continues to provide the stability that keeps work moving forward.
At this point, Glo stops being seen merely as a telecommunications company. It emerges as the invisible backbone of the Nigerian hustle, supporting the determination and resilience of everyday people. From POS operators and online merchants to students, delivery services, market traders, and remote workers who refuse to give up, Glo remains present in the background, quietly powering their efforts. In tough terrains, harsh weather, and challenging times, when other networks fluctuate or fade, Glo stays connected.
You may not always hear it announce itself loudly, and you may not notice it when everything is working smoothly. But when a single call saves a business, when one alert prevents a financial loss, and when one stable connection keeps a dream alive, Glo proves its value, not as noise or empty promises, but as consistent reliability and lived experience. And that is how quietly, consistently, and powerfully Glo continues to power Nigeria’s everyday businesses, sustaining dreams and survival UNLIMITEDLY…
Dr. Baba writes from Kano, and can reached via drssbaba@yahoo.com
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