Of every ten stories, roughly two carried a HIGH-risk label, and about four in every hundred were flagged as CRITICAL, totalling 206 high-risk stories and 38 critical incidents in just seven days, from 28 June to 04 July 2026
This week, 853 articles passed through our pipeline, and they painted two very different pictures of Nigeria. On one side, Ekiti State celebrates. Governor Biodun Oyebanji won a second term in a landslide.
Education has always represented more than classrooms, teachers, textbooks, and examinations. It represents aspiration. It represents mobility. It represents a parent’s belief that tomorrow can be better than today. Yet in 2026, Nigeria’s education sector is carrying risk signals that suggest that belief is under growing pressure.
Our national news cycle moved from one crisis to the next without pausing long enough to connect the dots. That is exactly what this week’s data story is here to do — pause, connect, and advise. Without doubt, the data behind Nigeria’s escalating insecurity shows a nation under coordinated pressure
This is a significant figure for a period that still sits outside the formal nationwide campaign window for the 2027 general elections. The campaign season is returning early, even as governance pressures intensify
Today, it has evolved into Nigeria’s Civic Data Intelligence Platform, built to help Nigerians understand issues of public interest through evidence-based analysis and data-driven articles.
Early warnings are meaningless when they are seen, acknowledged, and then ignored
Early warning signs in security data rarely announce themselves through a single dramatic incident; they emerge quietly through patterns. Repetition of similar attacks, their geographic concentration, timing, and the consistent choice of targets form measurable signals that point to deeper security trends.
The enemy of Nigeria’s growth is not some hidden curse, neither is it our climate nor geographical location. The truth is hard, bitter, and uncomfortable: the Nigerian people themselves are the greatest enemy of Nigeria’s development
After all, Nigerian politics has never been short of strange bedfellows. But on a closer look, this move is more than politics. It is a bitter cocktail of vengeance, a loud echo of inordinate ambition, and a dangerous dance of political betrayal in the house of Oduduwa.
