Nkwocha Jude Uchenna

1.8K posts

Nkwocha Jude Uchenna

Nkwocha Jude Uchenna

@iamsimpleuche

انضم Nisan 2015
204 يتبع34 المتابعون
Chidi Anselm Odinkalu, CGoF
Chidi Anselm Odinkalu, CGoF@ChidiOdinkalu·
I am getting multiple & credible reports that a senior cabinet adviser with responsibility for security matters in Anambra State, who supervised the enforcement action against Chukwudozie Nwangwu - better known as Akwa Okuko Tiwara Aki - has been intensely canoodling with Akwa Okuko's young spouse while the ex-Native Doctor serves time in prison. If this is true, it gives new meaning to #DoubleJeopardy & is the kind of impunity & #SelfDealing that brings government into disrepute. #AkwaOkuko may justly be serving time for violations of criminal law but interference with his domestic & marital arrangements is not part of the stipulated punishment, & surely not for the benefit or at the instigation of the person in government who oversaw proceedings against him. I am confident that Gov. @CCSoludo will investigate this & ensure that the responsible officer of his government is called to order fortwith.
Chidi Anselm Odinkalu, CGoF tweet media
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Nkwocha Jude Uchenna
Nkwocha Jude Uchenna@iamsimpleuche·
@userU610 @ChidiOdinkalu So you count yourself sensible and you leave the substance of Prof's post to offer 'education' on a subject you know little or nothing about? Get lost, my friend.
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iam_
iam_@userU610·
@iamsimpleuche @ChidiOdinkalu Lmaoo apart from throwing insults what other sensible thing do you know what to do ? Get educated una say " mba"
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Pau Paschal
Pau Paschal@PauPaschal·
@ChidiOdinkalu @COLLINSMACHO The real issue here is that after her blatant infidelity, she will hv the audacity to blackmail Akwa Okuku, claiming her 'evil act' was actually a sacrifice to get him out of prison. The weight of the blame belongs to the wife, not the irresponsible adviser.
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iam_
iam_@userU610·
@ChidiOdinkalu Lmao you go just find big grammar throw out to make you look reasonable wetin double jeopardy dey find inside your write up ? Do you know what it means ?
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Gimba Kakanda
Gimba Kakanda@gimbakakanda·
I met Bashir Ahmad for the first time in 2013 or thereabouts. At the time, I was working as a programme officer at a non-profit organisation on the top floor of the same building where Premium Times was already operating, just a floor below my office. Years later, Premium Times expanded into the office space we had occupied. Bashir, for his part, was then working at a Hausa-language media company owned by a former FCT Minister, with his office on the first floor, which meant that we ran into each other quite often. As for the narrative about him being a recharge card seller, that is actually a familiar story associated with another of Buhari’s aides.
OGA ADE@tyslimmie

@gimbakakanda Your number 4 is not correct, he wasn't a media practitioner, he was a recharge card seller that was loud about Buhari and got noticed.

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M. M. A
M. M. A@Mr_mustaphaaa·
@gimbakakanda Tunde Sabiu was the recharge card seller, not Bashir. That said, why should any man’s past or humble beginnings matter in our individual lives? People grow, situations change, and yesterday’s struggles don’t define today’s reality.
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AUI
AUI@amajidkw·
@inegbenois29008 @gimbakakanda How can someone steal government funds without being accounting officer? Majority of you are lousy illiterate
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bigD
bigD@Ajisafe40384733·
@InibeheEffiong He knows what you don't know, be that as it may, everyone following the trajectory of election in Nigeria most especially when the North is not in power that insecurity usually pick at this time so Akpabio is talking form a well informed position.
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Hezekiah Olawale
Hezekiah Olawale@hezekiaholly·
@Omojuwa Werey. With the money you have, can you pay 5m for up and down not to talk or 90m This your own level broke shaming no go at all. On this case you and the boy are on same level
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JJ. Omojuwa
JJ. Omojuwa@Omojuwa·
Two weeks ago, I was with Vodi. 2 cheques paid for cloths, both totalling N90m plus. I saw it with my own eyes. Those are not his biggest cheques, only the cheques I saw. Don’t let poverty kill you. People are using your lifetime dream money for one clothing transaction. I understand why this is tough for you to accept. But you either break the hold in your head or let poverty carry you through life!
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Ibukunoluwa💯❤️
Ibukunoluwa💯❤️@Hybeekay4ril·
@BwalaDaniel @PeterObi How can you expect someone with good character wearing black ups and downs. I swear by now he should ashamed of jumping from one party to another. His Trojan are just following him based on emotions and sentiments. Ire o
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D. H Bwala
D. H Bwala@BwalaDaniel·
Yesterday on Arise TV, Gregory @PeterObi was asked a question about his nomadic politics, since his Trojans love questioning Peoples character on that; his answer buried their heads in shame. APGA, PDP, Labour, ADC and soon to be another political party. His answers showed how awful his character and philosophy is. He said anytime there is problem, he jumps away because the problem was created for him. Imagine the character that said he wants to govern Nigeria? Today is a day devoted to swallowing shame by the Obidient globally: WORLD SHAME DAY
D. H Bwala tweet media
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Babanlawon
Babanlawon@ProudlyRonu·
@abikedabiri It's people like you that we need in this country. Zero tolerance for nonsense and rubbish. If past leaders have been doing this, Nigeria would have progressed farther than this.
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abikedabiri
abikedabiri@abikedabiri·
Won gbadun . Twitter rats .Hackers! Obingos !
Seyi Ademiku@funbiseyi1

Auntie @abikedabiri I don't really know where the hate is coming from But I love the way you are giving those obidiots a taste of their own medicine... Thank you ma for standing up against online bullying by some unfortunate products of baby factory...

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Nkwocha Jude Uchenna
Nkwocha Jude Uchenna@iamsimpleuche·
@idowuham @PeterObi Who was your father before his miserable death? You have the guts to tell someone he will never be a president when your father lived and died as nobody.
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Latok💫
Latok💫@idowuham·
@PeterObi Are you not ashamed of yourself Peter. Follow due process and stop shouting up and down on social media seeking validation. You will never be Nigeria president. So shut the fuck off
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
We, members and leaders of the ADC, and other well-meaning Nigerians, lovers of democracy, are saying that our democracy must not be killed. We say NO to a one-party system and for that today we’re calling out Nigerians who believe in unity, peace, and security of our country to join us as we defend democracy in our land. A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Bolaji Fesomade
Bolaji Fesomade@MasterBolaji·
When Gov. Amunike creates skits, he often uses Yoruba names for fictional states, you hear lines like “the people of Olaniyi.” Are only Yoruba people in politics? Are only Yoruba states worth attention? Why not include Igbo names too? It feels deliberate. That guy is a bigot.
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Nkwocha Jude Uchenna
Nkwocha Jude Uchenna@iamsimpleuche·
@farukumar2226 @atiku El Rufai will perish in detention. His past evil acts are hunting him. You can go to hell if you feel sad about his detention.
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Faruk B. Umar
Faruk B. Umar@farukumar2226·
@atiku El-Rufai is NOT being "politicslly detained", the relity is that he is politically persecuted by The Tinubu Administration. Even Nigeria's Arch Terrorist, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu, who was extradited to the country due to his mutinous acts against Nigerian nation, was not so humiliated.
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Atiku Abubakar
Atiku Abubakar@atiku·
With total submission to the will of Allah, I join the family of Mallam Nasir El-Rufai along with the extended El-Rufai family and friends in mourning the loss of Hajiya Safiya Ali Rufai, a prominent member of the family who passed away on Sallah day. Hajiya Ali Rufai was the wife of the late Air Vice Marshal Ali Rufai, elder brother of Nasir El-Rufai. Aunty Safiya, as she was better known, will be remembered as a compassionate matriarch of the family. It is unfortunate that this loss coincides with the period during which the former Governor of Kaduna State and a key figure of the ADC is being politically detained by the Tinubu-led APC administration. I pray that Almighty Allah grants comfort to the family and friends, forgives the matriarch her sins, and grants her Jannah Firdaus. Amin. -AA
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Yemtech
Yemtech@Opeyemtech·
@SegunShowunmi @mehdirhasan It’s called Head-to-Head for a reason. The stage is meant to test the authenticity and integrity of the guest. If Bwala’s reputation wasn’t already soiled, he might have fared better under the scrutiny. Every lie has an expiration date.
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Segun(🦁)Showunmi (PhD)
Segun(🦁)Showunmi (PhD)@SegunShowunmi·
Hostility Is Not Journalism. Mehdi Hassan Take Note. There is a clear difference between tough journalism and outright hostility. One serves the public interest. The other serves the ego of the interviewer. Unfortunately, the recent exchange between @mehdirhasan and presidential spokesperson @BwalaDaniel fell squarely into the latter category. What viewers witnessed was not a serious interview. It was an attempted public ambush. From the outset, the tone was aggressively confrontational. Questions were framed less as inquiries into governance and more as prosecutorial traps. Responses were repeatedly interrupted before they could develop. Clarifications were brushed aside. The atmosphere was unmistakable: this was not a conversation designed to inform viewers but a spectacle designed to embarrass the guest. Serious journalism does not operate this way. The craft of interviewing demands discipline. It requires the ability to ask difficult questions while still allowing the guest to articulate answers. It requires intellectual confidence strong enough to permit disagreement without descending into open hostility. Above all, it requires a commitment to substance over theatrics. That commitment was glaringly absent. Nigeria is currently grappling with a range of serious national challenges economic restructuring, security threats, governance reforms, and the complex work of stabilizing a large and dynamic democracy. A responsible interviewer would have used the opportunity to interrogate the administration’s policies on these matters: What strategies are being deployed? What reforms are underway? What outcomes should citizens expect? Instead, viewers were treated to an exercise in selective outrage and repetitive interruption. Even more troubling was the insinuation that political realignment is somehow illegitimate. Democratic politics is built on shifting alliances. Individuals and movements evolve. Former opponents become partners when national circumstances demand cooperation. This is neither shocking nor dishonorable; it is one of the defining characteristics of democratic political life. History provides countless examples. Leaders across the world have entered alliances with former adversaries when the demands of governance required it. To pretend otherwise is either intellectual dishonesty or a deliberate attempt to create sensationalism where none exists. But the deeper problem in the interview was tone. A journalist who openly ridicules or repeatedly attempts to humiliate a guest crosses an important professional boundary. The role of the interviewer is to hold power accountable not to behave like a courtroom prosecutor seeking a viral “gotcha” moment. When the pursuit of humiliation replaces the pursuit of insight, journalism loses its credibility. Audiences deserve better than that. They deserve interviews that illuminate policy, probe governance, and help citizens understand how leaders intend to confront the pressing challenges of the day. What they do not need is a theatrical performance in which hostility is mistaken for intellectual rigor. Respectful engagement does not weaken journalism; it strengthens it. Firm questioning does not require contempt. Professionalism does not require aggression. If global media wishes to retain its claim to moral authority as a watchdog of democracy, it must remember a basic principle: the goal of journalism is to inform the public, not to stage spectacles at the expense of civility and substance. The interview in question did neither. It was not a demonstration of fearless journalism. It was a demonstration of how easily the craft can slide into something far less admirable when provocation becomes the objective and professionalism is abandoned. Otunba Segun Showunmi The Alternative
Segun(🦁)Showunmi (PhD) tweet media
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Mimi
Mimi@Mimi_yakigar·
Rufai vs Mehdi: The Difference Between Confrontation and Conversation. Rufai is trying to pull both the emotional card and the racial card, claiming that Nigerians praised Mehdi only because he is a white man from the U.S. But that comparison simply does not hold. First, there was an exchange between Mehdi and Bwala. It was not a one-sided shouting match. Second, most of Mehdi’s questions were short; between five to ten seconds, which gave Bwala enough room to respond fully. Third, there was no harsh tone and no shutting anyone down during the conversation. Fourth, there were moments where both Mehdi and Bwala even shared laughter, which shows the discussion maintained a civil atmosphere. In Rufai’s case, however, he held the floor for almost two minutes, more focused on displaying how intelligent he was rather than engaging the ambassador. He was confronting someone about an alleged act involving national security yet he claimed to have facts without even stating his sources. More telling was his body language. Instead of keeping focus on the guest, he kept looking around the studio, seemingly concerned about who was watching him. By contrast, Mehdi, despite having a live audience, kept his gaze fixed on Bwala throughout the interview. Now imagine if Mehdi had actually shouted Bwala down. Many of the same people defending Rufai would have immediately screamed racism. Yet we rarely acknowledge how prejudiced we can be ourselves in how we judge others. Unfortunately, among many of us, loudness is often mistaken for intelligence, and shouting is mistaken for boldness. Let’s be honest: if Rufai had interviewed Bwala the way he handled that ambassador, the conversation would likely have ended in an argument or outright confrontation. But in Mehdi’s case, it remained a dialogue. Bwala had the opportunity to answer every question. In fact, the only time questions went unanswered was when Bwala himself chose to dodge them or repeat the same line. So this is not about race. It is about the difference between a confrontation and a conversation.
Mimi tweet mediaMimi tweet media
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Nkwocha Jude Uchenna
Nkwocha Jude Uchenna@iamsimpleuche·
@AbeebFajobi @jeffphilips1 Do you know how many successful transactions he has made from that period till date? For every unsuccessful transaction, there are more than a thousand successful ones. If this govt thinks there's poor network penetration, there are so many things that can be done b4 election.
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Souljah
Souljah@jeffphilips1·
Have you seen bank transfer that hung for 3 days or more before or you just can't suspend your tribal biases to think critically? There are several days bank networks go down totally that you can't do anything on their platforms. Somebody I know missed a very critical interview because he was in the village and couldn't upload his CV online due to no network. He's from the SE. I work most times in Bonny Island and there are some times all networks disappear for days due to some unforeseen circumstances. There's nobody who has experienced technology in any form who doesn't know that you can't rely on them totally to make a law as rigid as y'all wanted all because an incompetent and very divisive candidate lost an election he couldn't have won even if they conduct it 20 times.
Arinze Odira@CaptainArinze

Bank transfers in Nigeria are instant. It is one of the fastest I’ve seen compared to the US and Canada. I can walk into a Nigerian bank, initiate a 100 Million Naira transfer, and before I finish arguing with the bank manager about Arsenal not winning the league, the money is already sitting in the recipient’s account ready to be withdrawn. But when it comes to electronic transfer of votes in real time, we suddenly act technologically backward. Taa, gbafuo!

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