Asiwaju of Akoko 🇳🇬
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Asiwaju of Akoko 🇳🇬
@TheManAcalypha
CEO/Executive Director @taccinitiative | Omo Yorùbá | Leadership| Social Impact| Politics & Public Affairs| GGMU | GreatIfe | Health Law & Policy Expert


Tinubu in Jos Confirms ‘Don't Vote for Me’ Prediction on Power Supply During the 2023 campaign, President Tinubu made a clear electoral promise: “If I don’t give you constant electricity in four years, don’t vote for me for a second term.” When he took office in 2023, Nigeria had a power supply of over 4,000 megawatts and lower tariffs. Today, the electricity power supply is less than 4,000 megawatts on the average, and Nigerians are paying higher tariffs. Nigeria currently has the lowest per capita electricity consumption in the world, with a rate below 30% of the African average. Africa’s average is 617kwh, Nigeria’s is 144 kWh. This means that Nigerians consume least electricity than other Africans. In a glaring display of disregard for promises and a lack of trust, President Tinubu, during a brief airport stopover to visit grieving families of the Jos attack on Thursday, April 2, 2026, stated that one of the reasons for his 10-minute stay was that the airport had no electricity. “You have no light here I fly out in ten minutes” At a time when Nigerians are enduring days without power, our leaders cannot even stay a few minutes without it. Now is the time to stop incompetent leaders—those lacking the capacity and compassion—who prioritise their own comfort over the well-being of the people and make empty promises. A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO








BREAKING: President Tinubu arrives in Bayelsa State to commission projects done by Governor Duoye Diri


@Tosquo Have you gone through Tinubu old tweet, did you see him offer any real plan? His real plans was ask Jonathan to resign. He didn’t even offer any real plan to Jonathan. 😂😂



CBN Tightens BVN Rules: Major Shift for Nigeria’s Digital Banking The Central Bank of Nigeria will implement new BVN regulations from May 1 to strengthen financial security and curb fraud. Key changes include a one-device limit for mobile banking, stricter verification for device switching, a 24-hour fraud watchlist, and a ₦20,000 transaction cap on new devices. BVN-linked phone numbers can now only be changed once. This signals tighter regulatory oversight and improved trust in digital banking. Fintechs and banks must adapt, while opportunities emerge in cybersecurity, digital identity, and fraud prevention solutions. #NigeriaEconomy #CBN #Fintech #DigitalBanking #Amen















