I grew up in northern Nigeria.

I founded this school for the masses.

Nigeria will start exporting cars soon

I'd always been interested in Nigeria's past.

I will rather kill myself than commit suicide.

In Nigeria they convict by law, not by the truth

My heart's desire is to be recognised in Nigeria.

To keep Nigeria ONE, is a task that must be DONE.

It was a difficult decision picking Nigeria over England.

I feel very honoured and proud to be playing for Nigeria.

I divide my time between Columbia, Maryland, and Lagos, Nigeria.

My nickname is 'Chief' because my father was a chief in Nigeria.

I work predominantly with tailors from Nigeria, Ghana, and Senegal.

I was born in Wisconsin, but I quickly moved to Nigeria as a toddler.

I'm first generation American, and my parents were both from Nigeria.

The trouble with Nigeria is simply and squarely a failure of leadership.

In Nigeria, my grandma sold everything - everything - for my mum's education.

You are only as rich as where you come from, and Nigeria has a lot of poverty.

Nigeria has always been my choice if called up, and when they did, I was happy.

Our dream is to build a hospital in Nigeria and four other countries in Africa.

Stephen Keshi is a good coach and he has changed Nigeria into a respectable team.

Educating our young girls is the foundation for Nigeria's growth and development.

No economy can tolerate the level of corruption seen in Nigeria without consequences.

Imagine what Nigeria could do for Africa if it was also free of Boko Haram's violence.

Boko Haram, by itself, has destroyed large areas in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad, and Niger.

My family is from Nigeria, and my full name is Uzoamaka, which means 'The road is good.'

There has always been a strange dissonance between the public and the private in Nigeria.

My parents being from Nigeria deeply informs all my social justice and human rights work.

Here in Nigeria, what makes the news is conflict between the executive and the legislature.

The U.S. government understands the importance of Nigeria in Africa and the world at large.

I've got Africa stamped on my chest, and I've outlined Nigeria because that's my bloodline.

I have always wanted to play for Nigeria and I enjoy each minute we gather and when we play.

Let's say there are prospects for a new Nigeria, but I don't think we have a new Nigeria yet.

What I can confirm is that I will always give a 100 per cent for Nigeria like I do at my club.

When your economy is subject to the whims of Libya and Nigeria and Venezuela, you have a problem.

I lived in Nigeria, Chad, and Cameroon when I was very young, until my mother divorced my father.

I have found that I work best when I am at home in Nigeria. But one learns to work in other places.

It's true that people will take advantage of you in Nigeria, but this happens everywhere in the world.

There is no country in the world with the diversity, confidence and talent and black pride like Nigeria.

Nigeria has had a complicated colonial history. My work has examined that part of our story extensively.

The fundamental for the sustainable growth of Nigeria is not in the hydro-carbon industry but in agriculture.

Well-trained medical doctors and engineers leave Nigeria to the developed countries. We want to reverse that.

My target is to get as many call-ups as I can, get as many games as I can and win many trophies with Nigeria.

I know now that what countries do at summits has the power to help girls in Pakistan, Nigeria or Afghanistan.

The work of Nigeria is not complete for as long as there is any one Nigerian who goes to bed on empty stomach.

There isn't a class structure in Nigeria; there's a tribal structure and prestige as far as money is concerned.

I haven't been to Nigeria, but my dad and I have talked about going. I have a grandma over there who's been here.

I think they've got 250 languages in Nigeria, and so English is a sort of lingua franca between the 250 languages.

In Nigeria, if you say you're a singer, people say, 'So what? Everyone sings.' In Germany, my voice stood out more.

I like to say, 'I spend one-third of my time in Nigeria, one-third in Europe or America, and one-third on a plane.'

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