Why the answer is B, and why the others tempt you.
**The reasoning**
Nigeria's capital is **Abuja**, located in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in the center of the country. This is a straightforward factual question testing your knowledge of Nigerian geography and governance. Abuja officially became Nigeria's capital on **December 12, 1991**, replacing Lagos. The government chose Abuja because of its central location (making it accessible from all regions) and its neutrality (not dominated by any major ethnic group). This is basic civics knowledge every Nigerian student should know cold.
**Why the wrong options tempt you**
**Lagos (A)** — This is the classic trap! Lagos *was* Nigeria's capital until 1991 and remains our largest city and economic hub. Many people still think of it as "the capital" because of its prominence.
**Kano (C) and Ibadan (D)** — These are major historical cities in the North and Southwest respectively, but were never national capitals. They might tempt students unfamiliar with Nigerian history.
**Quick takeaway**
Remember: **Lagos = former capital and economic powerhouse; Abuja = current capital since 1991** — this distinction appears constantly in exams!
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