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Guardian Lagos week

  • Lekki-Ikoyi Link Bridge

    'Beyond the chaos, there's a real human bond': Lagos residents share their stories

  • Yellow buses pick up and drop off passengers in Ojuelegba, Lagos.

    Lagos on Instagram: from selling bubblegum to cycling in the sun

  • Proposal for 'floating urbanism' in Lagos by Kunlé Adeyemi

    'Lagos shows how a city can recover from a deep, deep pit': Rem Koolhaas talks to Kunlé Adeyemi

  • Bridal party ‘squad goals’

    'Go big or go home': planning the perfect Lagos wedding

  • Plug sockets.

    Lagos's blackout nightmare: the suburb that's been in darkness for five years

  • Traffic in Lagos.

    Beatings and bribes: the corruption behind Lagos's traffic jams

  • Set up in 2013, the Mirabel offers women support, medical care and legal counsel.

    Welcome to Mirabel: the first centre supporting rape survivors in Nigeria

  • Nigerian rapper Burna Boy

    Uncool to use English: the rise of 'dialectical' rap

  • President Muhammadu Buhari delivers his budget for the year ahead at the National Assembly in December.

    What is Nigeria doing with taxpayers' money? – Q&A on the #budgetofcorruption

    Three specialists at BudgIT agreed to answer your questions about the complex and often murky world of public spending
  • A huge congregation attends a mass in Nigeria.

    The mega churches of Lagos: huge hangars hold hundreds of thousands – in pictures

    With congregations sometimes reaching 200,000, Nigeria’s Pentecostal churches use vast hangar-like structures to cram in worshippers. Photographer Andrew Esiebo documented the gatherings in his project God is Alive
  • 'Bullying can break you down': young Lagos women fight the generation gap

    Thirty-eight years since Fela Kuti shook up Lagosian society by marrying 27 of his dancers in a single ceremony, the city remains patriarchal and ageist
  • Online campaigners have kept fighting for the Chibok girls, but what other issues have set Twitter alight?

    From politics to Hogwarts: a snapshot of Lagos in six hashtags

    How did the president upset Twitter? Are Kenyans more adept at social media? A look at what’s been trending and why
  • Lagos

    What can an abstract idea like 'playability' do for a city like Lagos?

    An inclusive and whimsical event such as a free late-night picnic in a car park is a radical act in Lagos. But in many ways this hectic city is already ‘playable’ – and full of creative urban thinkers who just don’t think of themselves that way yet
    • I was beaten and left for dead after investigating Nigerian corruption – Q&A

    • Waterworld 101: inside the floating school of Makoko – video

    • Inside Makoko: danger and ingenuity in the world's biggest floating slum

  • Makoko, Lagos. Pupils at one of the overstretched primary schools in Makoko.Education is a big problem in makoko as there are only two primary school and they are being overstretched. Makoko is an informal settlement of an estimated population of 85, 840 located along the “3rd mainland bridge” Lagoon in Lagos. It was established in the 18th century by immigrants from Benin republic and Badagry, a border town of Lagos. Fishing as the predominate occupation of the inhabitants.

    Welcome to Guardian Lagos Week – live

  • Lagos Power Cuts

    The ingenious ways Lagos copes with blackouts – video

  • Mo Abudu, who abandoned a high-flying career in the corporate world to run a television studio.

    The Lagos power list: 21 people in 21 million

  • Balogun market in central Lagos

    Lagos is set to double in size in 15 years. Will it 'spoil'?

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