Nelson Aliu

225 posts

Nelson Aliu

Nelson Aliu

@NetZeroAdvocate

Environmental Consultant (AQM, ESG) | Net zero advocate | HSE Professional | Mental health support worker.

United Kingdom Inscrit le Mart 2023
397 Abonnements42 Abonnés
Willenhall and Short Heath Police
#Willenhall Officers have been out with the Stroud Avenue @StreetWatchWM group yesterday evening. Welcome to Sarah who has joined the Streetwatch group. If your are interested in joining Streetwatch please get in touch.
Willenhall and Short Heath Police tweet mediaWillenhall and Short Heath Police tweet mediaWillenhall and Short Heath Police tweet media
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Kunle
Kunle@Soulmedika·
3 days to buying our house, I put £4000 into my LISA for that tax year, the free £1,000 came into my LISA account 6 weeks later. I was only able to withdraw £750 because of the 25% penalty as the money was being withdrawn after the purchase has been completed. No one should be sleeping on LISA account.
🇬🇧 Tom - Investor £120K@2147mill

The LISA is one of the most underused accounts in the UK. £4,000 in. £1,000 free from the government. Every year. Until you're 50. That's a guaranteed 25% return before you've bought a single share. People ignore this.

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Nelson Aliu
Nelson Aliu@NetZeroAdvocate·
@dolawanle @Keir_Starmer Has this been reported to the authorities of St. Thomas Moore? That school is not far from where I live and I was hoping my daughter would be admitted there because they pride themselves as having Christian values.
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Dele Olawanle
Dele Olawanle@dolawanle·
I have just been informed that this incident happened last week in the United Kingdom. This is unacceptable and the Prime Minister @Keir_Starmer should get involved. The mother should also get in touch with me.
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Adedamola
Adedamola@adedamola1·
@PeterObi It’s hard to understand the basis of your criticism when there’s no comparable achievement from Anambra to reference. The move by Aso Rock to adopt alternative energy and ease the national grid should make the progress clearer, not more confusing.
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
“If I do not provide steady electricity in four years, do not vote for me for 2nd Tenure,” -BAT Thirty-two months after being incharge and instead of living by his powerful words, he now dumps National Grid that has been performing abysmally under his watch. Those were the powerful words then that inspired hope among Nigerians who longed for light in their homes, stability for their businesses, and growth for their nation. Yet, while Nigerians are still grappling with that unfulfilled, categorical electoral promise - and without clear communication on the obstacles, if any, we read of provision in 2025 budget about the ₦10 billion for solar power at Aso Rock, and in 2026 budget another humongous amount for upgrade and maintenance and now we are being scarcitically told that Presidential Villa has planned to be disconnected from the national grid to rely entirely on solar. It is a gross neglect and deeply worrisome when the seat of power abandons the national grid. One would expect government institutions to lead efforts to strengthen and expand the grid so that other establishments, and ultimately, citizens can benefit. If those in authority disconnect themselves from the system, who then will connect the ordinary Nigerian to reliable power? Promoting renewable energy, as solar systems do, is commendable and necessary for the future. However, this situation reflects a deeper concern: governance lacking compassion and commitment to the governed. You cannot tell the people to fast while feasting yourself, securing yourself while Nigerians remain unsecured. Nigerians do not expect 100% fulfilment of promises, but they do expect 100% effort, accompanied by measurable improvements and clear explanations when gaps exist. Leadership must serve the people, not isolate itself from their daily struggles. -PO
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Nelson Aliu
Nelson Aliu@NetZeroAdvocate·
@Dayveed_Ade Even in the United States. I used to use my ATM to shop, withdraw money etc. Along came APC and returned us to the stone age.
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David Ade
David Ade@Dayveed_Ade·
I paid my school fees (£10k+) at Uni of Westminster in one transaction using my GTBank card and a POS machine at the school registry. This was in 2014. I shopped everywhere in the UK with my GT card. Na when APC enter I start dey hear form A. You people won’t solve a problem you created and expect us to join you in jubilation. We are not mad people.
Woye@woye1

Test your naira card to buy something from UK or Paris or Ghana. 2: na Tinubu says so

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Lola Okunrin
Lola Okunrin@lollypeezle·
At Mile 12 this morning, boys were robbing cars with cutlass. They even tried to force open my guy’s door. Between Mile 12 and Ketu, there are two police stations, yet we have the most notorious boys in that axis. Ijoba, e gba wa o 🙏
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Nelson Aliu
Nelson Aliu@NetZeroAdvocate·
@taadelodun Please, I need help with ISA. Gow I contact you please 🙏
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Nelson Aliu
Nelson Aliu@NetZeroAdvocate·
@MSIngawa See the number of FG schools in the North yet they refuse to go to school.
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MS Ingawa
MS Ingawa@MSIngawa·
FG Closes Secondary Schools across the nation.
MS Ingawa tweet mediaMS Ingawa tweet media
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Nelson Aliu
Nelson Aliu@NetZeroAdvocate·
@renoomokri We know you for what you are.... a Fraud!!! Q.E.D
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Reno Omokri
Reno Omokri@renoomokri·
Presidents of the United States have only visited Nigeria three times: Jimmy Carter in 1978, Bill Clinton in 2000, and George W. Bush in 2003. And each time they visited, the person leading Nigeria was Olusegun Obasanjo. No matter what you may say about him, he is one of Nigeria's most significant leaders. He defeated the rebel Republic of Biafra on Thursday, January 15, 1970 and achieved the remarkable feat of capturing their leaders and bringing them to Lagos to declare unconditional surrender. This is significant as records have now emerged showing that British Prime Minister Harold Wilson had decided that if Biafra were not militarily defeated by Nigeria in 1970, Britain would intervene with a two-state solution. In essence, Obasanjo saved Nigeria! Additionally, he was the first Nigerian leader to have a natural term. Balewa was killed, Ironsi was murdered, Gowon was overthrown, and Murtala was assassinated. He was also the first military ruler in Africa to hand over power to civilians voluntarily. And he is the most self-documented Nigerian leader, having written at least eleven books that I am aware of, and possibly others that I am not conscious of. What many Nigerians do not know, and which General Babangida confirmed in his book, A Journey in Service, is that the rank and file of the military did not want General Obasanjo to hand over power. But he did in 1979. And until he returned twenty years later in 1999, no Nigerian leader had a natural term in office. Shagari was overthrown, as was Buhari. Babangida was forced to step aside. Shonekan was shoved aside, and Abacha died under still unclear circumstances. And Abdulsalami only spent less than a year before handing over. Why do I give this account? As a country, we often wait for our heroes to die before honouring them. This man ended the Liberian Civil War, restored a democratically elected Fradique de Menezes to power after he was overthrown in 2003, funded the South African liberation movement, ensured that the MPLA became the democratically elected government of Angola as opposed to the Western backed UNITA, aided FRELIMO in their war of independence in Mozambique, nationalised African Petroleum, implemented the Indigenisation Decree that Gowon passed but did not implement, paid off Nigeria's entire debt, made GSM phones and the Internet available to the ordinary person in Nigeris for the first time, hosted the only Commonwealth Heads of Government summit in Nigeria, tactfully diffused the Sharia crisis that could have devastated Nigeria, set up the EFCC and have Nigrria her first systematic anti corruption war. Mandela did a lot for South Africa, but I am not sure that he did as much for Africa as General and later President Obasanjo did. A man I greatly admire and whose books I have voraciously read multiple times. Even if nobody says thank you to you, my house and I appreciate you, Chief Olusegun Matthew Okikiola Ogunboye Aremu Obasanjo, a great son of Nigeria and Africa. An Omoluabi atata! May God bless you and your household. Reno Omokri Gospeller. Deep Thinker. #TableShaker. Ruffler of the Feathers of Obidents. #1 Bestselling author of Facts Versus Fiction: The True Story of the Jonathan Years. Hodophile. Hollywood Magazine Humanitarian of the Year, 2019. Business Insider Influencer of the Year 2022. 21st Most Talked About Person in Africa, 2024.
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Skyned Consults Corporation
MSc. in Canada🇨🇦 for CAD 3,850/yr? Master of Arts - Rural Development 📍Tuition: $3,850 CAD/yr 📍Length: 2 years Intake: Sept. 2025 Repost & comment "Done" and we will let you know if you qualify.
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Skyned Consults Corporation
Admission Offer plus $2,000 CAD Scholarship from Fanshawe College🇨🇦 Program: Personal Support Worker ✅Intake: Jan. 2026 intake ✅Requirement: 50% O'level Send a DM or an email to info@skynedconsults.com for free Admission processing 📍Comment "PSW" if you're interested.
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BIG KAMA
BIG KAMA@KamaSark·
Which animal still scares you, even as an adult? 😂
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Kemi Badenoch
Kemi Badenoch@KemiBadenoch·
Starmer promised not to tax working people. He’s broken it with council tax hikes, the Jobs Tax & the Family Farms Tax. Now Labour are set to inflict more tax rises on us all. But tax rises are a choice. Conservatives would choose to cut spending. We must live with our means.
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Nelson Aliu
Nelson Aliu@NetZeroAdvocate·
@PeterObi Funniest part is that some knuckleheads are here defending what cannot be defended? Did @officialABAT borrow or not?
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
On July 22, 2025, the Nigerian Senate approved an additional $21 billion, €2.2 billion, ¥15 billion of external borrowing for the 2025–2026 fiscal cycle. It also approved a N750.98 billion domestic bond issuance and a €65 65million grant. With an already existing public debt of about N149.39 trillion as at the first quarter of 2025, adding the approved loans of about N37.2 trillion) brings our current total debt to about N187 trillion with concerns that our debt might likely be over N200 trillion by the end of 2025. As our GDP before rebasing was about N269.2 trillion (about $180 billion), the government has borrowed the equivalent of nearly 70% of our previous GDP. Even after the rebasing, which pushed our GDP to about N372.8 trillion (about $243. 7billion), the government would have borrowed about 50.16 % of the new GDP (with the approved loans), the highest debt-to-GDP ratio in our history as a nation. While the year-on-year increase is about N27.72 trillion and the quarter-on-quarter increase is about N4.72 trillion, we are accumulating very exponential levels of unsustainable debt with little or nothing to show for it in critical areas such as education, healthcare, electricity generation, security of lives and property, and pulling people out of poverty. We still rank low in all major human development indicators. While education is underfunded and standard in continuous decline, healthcare remains inaccessible to millions of Nigerians particularly the poor. Security of lives and property has deteriorated with over 10,217 people killed and 672 villages sacked between May 29th 2023, and May 29th 2025, even when security spending has significantly increased from N2.98 trillion in 2023 to N4.91 trillion in 2025. Infrastructure decay persists across the country, with about 135,000km of our 195,000km of roads remaining unpaved, largely unmotorable, and unusable. It is the same depressing situation in almost all sectors of the economy, with the power sector an unquestionable example, with less than 5,000 MW supplied for over 200 million Nigerians. Today, over two years after the present government took over and with all the humongous borrowing, we are still confronted with negative reports of worsening poverty with about 133 million (63%) Nigerians classified as multi-dimensionally poor, increasing unemployment and disheartening news like 652 children dead as the malnutrition crisis worsens in Northern Nigeria. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), also known as Doctors Without Borders, has just sounded the alarm over an escalating malnutrition crisis in Northern Nigeria, with Katsina State emerging as one of the worst-hit areas. This is a country blessed with enormous resources, yet nobody should go to bed hungry. Still, a persistent deficiency in leadership has thrown the majority of our citizens into increasing multi-dimensional poverty. Borrowing is not inherently bad if it is sustainable and tied to productive investments with measurable outcomes. Unfortunately, this current pattern of borrowing without accountability, without transparency, and without transformational impact is simply mortgaging the future of our children. The government should consider the inter-generational consequences of their unsustainable borrowings and show at least a minimum consideration and interest in future of young and unborn Nigerians. We must return to a disciplined and prudent economic management culture, cutting the cost of governance, blocking leakages, investing in human capital, and building a productive economy. Nigeria cannot continue to borrow recklessly while poverty deepens and public trust erodes. It is time to stop this fiscal indiscipline. We must build a New Nigeria, where leadership is responsible, development is people-centred, and every kobo borrowed or spent delivers a measurable impact to achieve sustainable and inclusive development and growth. A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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