afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh
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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

"Some men change their party for the sake of their principles; others change their principles for the sake of their party." Winston Churchill
Today, May 9th, I attended the 1st convention of my latest party, the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) in Abuja, Nigeria. The convention was successful and continued to show the resilience of Nigerians to change
I express my sincere appreciation and gratitude to the NDC family, led by the distinguished Senator Henry Seriake Dickson, for inviting us and for the generosity of spirit with which they have accommodated us at this critical moment in our national journey.
I also wish to express profound gratitude to the African Democratic Congress(ADC), particularly Distinguished Senator David Mark, for providing a democratic platform and showing uncommon understanding when the ongoing litigation forced us out of the Labour Party and the New Nigeria People's Party, NNPP respectively. That spirit of solidarity must remain the foundation upon which a better Nigeria will be built.
Today, the most painful aspect of our political existence is that many who once benefited from democratic governance have now become willing accessories to the destruction of democracy itself. Those who once fought for justice now openly celebrate electoral injustice. Those who once spoke against impunity now defend coercion, manipulation, intimidation, and outright political gangsterism, especially against opposition voices. What we are witnessing is not politics; it is a systematic assault on democracy and the will of the people.
Nigeria today stands at a dangerous crossroads. Our democracy is under severe threat. Our nation is drifting without direction, and our people are passing through immense suffering. Across the world, Nigeria is increasingly described as a failing and disgraced nation. This is not the destiny God ordained for our great country. It was not always so, and it must never be allowed to remain so.
Across virtually every recognised indicator of good governance - accountability, political stability, rule of law, control of corruption, government effectiveness, regulatory quality, and the separation of powers - Nigeria continues to record alarming failures. The institutions that should protect the people are weakening daily, while the burden on ordinary citizens grows heavier with each passing moment.
Today, over 140 million Nigerians live in multidimensional poverty. Tens of millions of young people remain unemployed or underemployed. Inflation continues to crush families. Businesses are shutting down. Farmers can no longer safely access their farms. Communities live in fear. In this month alone, hundreds of innocent Nigerians have lost their lives to insecurity, while many others have been kidnapped, displaced, or thrown deeper into poverty.
The most heartbreaking question confronting us is this: Who consoles the grieving mother whose child was abducted on the way to school? Who speaks for the father who can no longer feed his family despite working every day? Who defends the young Nigerian whose dreams have been destroyed by a nation that rewards connections over competence and corruption over character?
Our present tragedy is not accidental. It is the direct consequence of years of deliberate sabotage by a political class that prospers by dividing the people and weakening the nation. Nigeria is not a poor country; rather, we are being looted into poverty. We have abundant human and natural resources, yet we remain trapped in deprivation because leadership has failed to place the common good above personal interest.
Our choice as a people is therefore clear: whether to surrender to despair and national decline, or to summon the courage to rescue our country and rebuild it on the foundations of unity, equity, justice, competence, and productivity.




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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

When you think you’ve seen it all, this Now Disgraced Country throws up a new absurdity..🇳🇬🤮
News Central TV@NewsCentralTV
"We started the Obidient Movement before we adopted Peter Obi, and before Peter Obi hijacked the Movement..." - @DrAvotu1st.
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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

With profound sadness, I received the shocking news of the passing of my dear elder brother Mike Okaka in USA. On behalf of my family and the Obidient family, I extend my deepest condolences and sincerely mourn his loss.
Mike was a devoted supporter of the Obidient movement and a passionate believer in the vision of a new Nigeria. His dedication, energy, and unwavering commitment to the ideals of good governance were truly remarkable. He stood firm in the collective struggle for a better nation and made meaningful contributions toward the cause we all cherish.
May God Almighty, who has called him home, grant him eternal rest, and may He comfort his family, loved ones, and all of us with the strength and fortitude to bear this painful and irreplaceable loss. -PO

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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

The father had sold his own car years earlier to pay for his son’s college tuition fees, a sacrifice he reportedly made without announcement or complaint, simply choosing his son’s education over his own convenience without ever mentioning it again.
The son went on to complete his degree, secured a good job and upon receiving his first significant salary made the best decision. Instead of spending on himself he bought his father a new car, parking it in the same spot where the old one used to be before it was sold to fund his education.
GRATITUDE
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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

You are a bad advertisement for the teachers charged with teaching you English language comprehension, and I fear that your Logic teacher wouldn’t fare much better..🤔
Sunday David Kokoette@KingDavidBidda
Tinubu has guaranteed his re election now, that's why Jonathan was a weakling because he couldn't guarantee his re-election according to @DeleFarotimi . Do you have any right to criticize Tinubu if you say Jonathan was a weakling?
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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

Babies do NOT need cereal at 6 months.
Babies should not eat any food until three things are present:
They can sit – we need gravity to help digestion.
They can feed themselves – their coordination is ready.
They have the right teeth – milk teeth first (taste time), then molars for grinding.
With the milk teeth (four at the top, four at the bottom), it’s taste time:
A piece of cucumber, celery, apple – their main food is still milk.
Between 14 and 22 months, the molars (grinders) come through.
That’s when they’re ready for grains, because grains are carbohydrates that need grinding.
Yet mothers today are told: “Your baby needs rice cereal for iron. Breast milk isn’t enough.”
Has God made a mistake?
Breast milk is perfectly designed for the baby at 2 weeks, 2 months, 6 months, 9 months, 12 months.
What has changed is the advice, not the design.
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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado
afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

@PeterObi This is how Nigerians will be smiling all through your leadership as NIGERIA PRESIDENT
FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA🇳🇬📌📍
Nigerians will surely be O🔥
K🔥

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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

Workers Are the Backbone of Every Nation
On this Workers’ Day, I warmly salute workers across the world, especially Nigerian workers whose daily sacrifices continue to sustain our families, communities, institutions, and national economy, even in the face of severe hardship and uncertainty.
It is deeply painful that those who wake up every day to teach, heal, build, farm, produce, transport, protect, and serve our nation are still denied the dignity and fair reward their labour deserves. In today’s Nigeria, the minimum wage can no longer guarantee even the most modest standard of living, as inflation, rising food prices, transportation costs, and economic hardship continue to erode the value of honest work.
No nation can truly develop beyond the strength, productivity, and wellbeing of its workforce. The progress of any society rests on the quality of its human capital, the skill of its people, and the commitment of its workers. When workers suffer, the nation suffers. When workers are empowered, the nation prospers.
But beyond their labour, workers also possess another powerful tool, their voice and their vote. Through democratic participation, they have the power to shape governance and determine the future direction of the nation.
I therefore urge Nigerian workers to recognise the strength they hold collectively. They owe it to themselves, their children, and future generations to support and demand leadership built on competence, character, capacity, credibility, and compassion. By refusing to reward failure, corruption, ethnic division, and bad governance, they can help build a nation where hard work is respected and rewarded with dignity.
A productive nation must be built on justice, fairness, and respect for labour. That is the Nigeria we must work together to achieve.
With the support and participation of Nigerian workers, a New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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afu nixon ngoh retuiteado

EFCC's Troubling Revelation on Our Students.
The worrisome statement by the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) that 6 out of every 10 Nigerian university students are involved in “419” is deeply troubling and must not be taken lightly.
Nigeria already has a very limited number of students in higher institutions, estimated at 2 to 2.5 million. If indeed about 60% of them, roughly 1.4 million young people, are involved in fraud, then we are not just facing a crime issue; we are confronting a serious moral and systemic failure.
The question we must ask ourselves is: what has brought us to this level? Who are the role models these students are looking up to?. What values are they learning from society?
We must understand that young people become what they consistently see. When a system appears to reward wrongdoing, when integrity is not upheld, and when those in leadership are associated with allegations of forgery and dishonesty without consequence, it sends a dangerous message.
It suggests that hard work does not matter, and that results, by any means, are acceptable. These points clearly point to a collapse of moral values.
As Socrates rightly said, “An unexamined life is not worth living.” Nigeria must now examine itself.
This is not about condemning our young people. It is about accepting that leadership sets the tone. If we do not demonstrate integrity at the top, we cannot expect it at the bottom.
We must urgently rebuild our value system, enforce accountability without bias, and create an environment where honesty, hard work, and discipline are rewarded. That is the only sustainable path to securing the future of our nation.
A new Nigeria is POssible! -PO
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