King Sunny

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King Sunny

King Sunny

@UTDSunny

Manchester United. 🔴⚫ Football, culture & conversations live here.

Bergabung Ocak 2012
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King Sunny
King Sunny@UTDSunny·
I don’t have personal experience with cultists. But Nigeria does. And one of the clearest, darkest examples happened at Obafemi Awolowo University on July 10, 1999. 👇 [a quick 5 min read] By the late 1980s and 1990s, cult groups were no longer fringe student societies. They had evolved into armed organized networks. On many Nigerian campuses, they were used to intimidate students, suppress protests, and enforce control. OAU was not exempt. One of the most feared groups on campus was the one known as Black Axe. Months before the massacre, tension was already boiling. On March 7, 1999, Black Axe members were intercepted after a big chase on campus. They were found with weapons and cult regalia. Students reported it. The suspects were handed to the police. For a moment, it looked like accountability might happen. It didn’t. When the case reached court, it collapsed quietly. Key witnesses were never called. The accused were discharged and acquitted. Weapons ordered to be destroyed. The acquitted cult members later returned to campus angry, humiliated, and unpunished. Warnings were ignored. Concerns were brushed aside. Administratively, nothing meaningful changed. Then came the night of July 9. Students were gathered between Angola and Mozambique Halls. This was a normal social night. Some of them drifted into Awolowo Hall cafeteria, while others returned to their rooms to sleep. There was no sense of danger. Between 3:00 and 4:30 a.m., groups of armed men entered the campus on foot. They had parked their vehicles away from sight. They knew exactly where they were going. They went straight to Awolowo Hall. This was a targeted operation. Specific student leaders were being hunted, particularly those involved in the March arrests. Within minutes, gunfire erupted. Panic followed. Students ran, hid, jumped from balconies, or just didn’t know what to do. When the attackers left, five students were dead. Eleven others were injured. One of the primary targets, student union secretary George “Afrika” Iwilade, was k*lled. Others survived by chance. The attackers exited calmly, even stopping to vandalize the Students’ Union building before leaving campus. By morning, OAU was unrecognizable. Classes had been stopped. Hostels were shut down. Students occupied administrative buildings demanding answers from the authorities. Anger was directed at both the murderers and the school authorities. How were armed men able to enter campus? Why were earlier warnings ignored? Why were exposed cultists allowed to return without safeguards? The police made a few arrests. Some suspects even were caught trying to flee Ile-Ife while Others disappeared entirely. A Judicial Commission of Inquiry later confirmed what students already knew: The massacre was real. It was organized. It was preventable. Yet justice moved really slowly. Some suspects were never found. Trials dragged for years. Families mourned while cases stalled. Even a decade later, reports still described relatives “crying out for justice.” Sad. What remained on campus was something harder to remove than cultists: Fear. That’s why older Nigerians don’t treat cultism as jokes. The students paid the ultimate price.
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
This sentence by Dostoyevsky hits so hard. “You sensed that you should be following a different path, a more ambitious one, you felt that you were destined for other things but you had no idea how to achieve them and in your misery you began to hate everything around you.”
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Alabi
Alabi@the_Lawrenz·
Please don’t kill yourself. .
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OFFICIAL PECKDANIELS
OFFICIAL PECKDANIELS@peck_daniels·
Which popular twitter influencer is this?👀👀. You can type his name and get 5M views.
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King Sunny
King Sunny@UTDSunny·
@UTDJelly I suggest that players and fans actively take part in fasting too. 🤭
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Toyyib Adewale Adelodun
If you cant recognise patterns, to succeed go hard ooo.
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Oba Emmanuel. K🌹 🦅
Oba Emmanuel. K🌹 🦅@eezywayne14·
The way the algorithm is fking with me, you will think I'm not on X. I need help please 😢
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King Sunny
King Sunny@UTDSunny·
@zikohercules You’re right to question why it had to happen at all. The war was almost won and Germany had surrendered. With enough pressure, Japan likely would have followed. But no…history took the most destructive route possible.
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Ziko Abara
Ziko Abara@zikohercules·
The most destructive weapon in human history ⚠️; the Nuclear bomb Watch what happens when it detonates over a city Mind you, some nuclear warheads that exist today are 1,000 times more powerful than the Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945 (81 years ago), killing about 80,000 people instantly, human beings at ground zero instantly turned to dust, vaporized & obliterated Sometimes I ask myself, was this creation of Armageddon necessary?! However, as sad & painful as it sounds, it literally ended world war2, and nuclear technology has given mankind one of the most stable forms of energy to power homes and businesses Anything that can be used for good, may also have a use for carnage & destruction 🤦🏻‍♂️
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Social Soldier
Social Soldier@bolajibestt·
When troops repel attacks overnight and people wake up safely, it won’t trend. But that’s the real “good morning Nigeria.
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BIGGEST LION 🦁
BIGGEST LION 🦁@xquire147·
How you wan take know Wayne Rooney when you finish secondary school after 2011/2012. Lmao 🤣
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King Sunny
King Sunny@UTDSunny·
Filthy 🔥
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Abito
Abito@UtdAbito·
This version of Rooney Is better than Neymar
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King Sunny
King Sunny@UTDSunny·
This news is not clear
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Ahmad Salkida
Ahmad Salkida@A_Salkida·
Blaming victims in the Boko Haram conflict distorts reality and weakens response. Boko Haram is not an external invading force. It emerged from within, shaped by grievances and hardened by an intolerant ideology. That distinction matters. It means communities are not just bystanders; they are trapped inside the conflict. Across the North East, in the past 16 years, civilians have supported military operations at great personal risk. The pattern is clear. Troops deploy, locals cooperate. Then the troops withdraw. Insurgents return. Communities are punished. Mass killings, beheadings, executions for alleged collaboration. You cannot ask unarmed villagers to stand up to insurgents when the state cannot sustain protection. Here is the hard truth: - Civilians are being exposed without long-term security cover - Military presence is too thin for the conflict landscape and population size - Intelligence is fragmented and underutilised in battlefield decisions. The implication is severe. You create cycles of retaliation. You discourage cooperation. You strengthen insurgent control through fear. This is not just a Nigerian military problem. It is a Nigerian systems failure. What needs to change: - Scale intelligence-driven operations, not just troop deployments - Integrate DSS deeply into field operations, not as an afterthought or as they are being involved in politics and VIP protection - Strengthen military intelligence for real-time decision making - Align force levels with the scale of territory and threat - Stop blaming communities. They are not the weak link. They are the most exposed part of this war. - Reduce the transactional culture in recruiting and promoting security personnel. Create real incentives for them to serve and fight. Improve welfare. Provide consistent psychosocial support. Recognise performance in visible ways. Ensure full and timely payment of gratuities and pensions at retirement.
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King Sunny
King Sunny@UTDSunny·
@A_Salkida “Integrate DSS deeply into field operations, not as an afterthought or as they are being involved in politics and VIP protection” I agree with this statement💯. The DSS has the ability to infiltrate those cells and completely dismantle them one at a time.
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Ethan Levins 🇺🇸
Ethan Levins 🇺🇸@EthanLevins2·
Fully Locked on, No flares, no evasive maneuvers. What the hell does Iran have to make the F-35 so vulnerable?
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