Over half of CEOs claim the rapid pace of tech innovation is causing alarm among their leadership team
London, date - 62 percent of business leaders said moving too slowly poses a greater risk than moving swiftly when it comes to tech innovation, claiming they were willing to sidestep security and ethical concerns to keep up, according to a major study from AND Digital.
Native: “An extremely offensive word for someone who lived in a country, especially in Africa, before Europeans went there."
- dictionary.cambridge.org
Photo: Bing
Masah, another job done, hia, hia… he, he he! Any adah wan… bring come. Sobidi, done! Naira down, down…economy haemorrhaged. Boy, je ko won ke... what’s my own... who kias (cares)? Base soon. Ani ko ma worry, Baba Toneh! Say Toneh! Boda Toneh, please keep doing your good work, don’t let (anybody) your people release the dossiers on me-o, Baba. These ya people, you sure pe dem go protect me so? Baba, se won ma protect me until 2027, eh? Se omo jo ijo awon kobokobo… awon yibo ton ma je okuta ma mu omi… ke di ko di, odin ma… eh, eh… ke di ko di, ani odin ma-a-a-a! Toneh, di de… di de. Ijo ti be re. Ke di ko di, odin ma…O’BAT-o, Re.. oshi oda… ma je kin awon people ko orin: On your Mandate mo-o! Ani ke di ko di, odin ma-a-a-a-a!
JOHN ODEY ADUMA, PUBLISHER, VIGILANCE - THE WORLD'S LEADING SECURITY MAGAZINE
The Dome of Shame and the Headquarters of the Neo-colonial Apostles in Nigeria.
SONG OF NIGERIA:
NIGERIA WILL RULE THE WORLD
Is it indeed, a total lack of ideas or just a Leviathanic folly that some amongst us have gone to the universal colonial junkyard, at a time when this writer is working on a project of international magnitude aiming at decolonising the African mind and re-orientating their psyche, including decolonising the African educational system by binning the colonial education the colonialists left Africans with, African languages, cultures, economy, politics, social life, dietary intake/habit, etc, to pick and dust a ‘rubbish’ that had been binned since 1978 to become once again, our national anthem?
JOHN ODEY ADUMA, PUBLISHER, VIGILANCE - THE WORLD'S LEADING SECURITY MAGAZINE
Vigilance can confirm that in a significant covert operation driven by actionable intelligence and extensive surveillance, troops of Nigerian Army deployed for Counter-terrorism operations along the Nigeria-Cameroon Border in Taraba State have successfully intercepted and apprehended 8 members of a syndicate that specializes in smuggling fuel from Nigeria to the Ambazonian rebels in the Republic of Cameroon to facilitate terrorists' activities. The sting operation took place on Friday 24 May 2024 along the Abong-Kurmi Baissa Road in Taraba State, between Nigeria and Cameroon border.
The suspects, identified as Jafaru Adamu (32 years), Auwal Haruna (34 years), Umar Dahiru, Mubarak Abdullahi (20 years), Saidu Musa (26 years), Bashiru Ibrahim (18 years), Danlami Yahuaza (19 years), and Abubakar Abdullahi (19 years), were caught enroute the border with large quantity of fuel. During preliminary investigation, the culprits confessed to smuggling and selling fuel to the Cameroonian Ambazonian rebels, who are prohibited from entering Nigeria to purchase the product directly.
To expose official corruption in Nigeria, re-orientate the psyche of Nigerians and usher in the Nigerian renaissance
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About Vigilance
Vigilance is the brain child of a group of veteran journalists and international scholars who have worked in the mainstream media and distinguished themselves nationally and internationally before veering into security practice.