Stephen Akar; PhD, MPH (Epid.), BMLS, FELTP Fellow

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Stephen Akar; PhD, MPH (Epid.), BMLS, FELTP Fellow

Stephen Akar; PhD, MPH (Epid.), BMLS, FELTP Fellow

@StephenAkar

Infectious disease epidemiologist; NPHI experience; Ph.D. Fellow, FETP Graduate, JICA Scholar.

Nagasaki City, Japan 가입일 Mart 2014
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Stephen Akar; PhD, MPH (Epid.), BMLS, FELTP Fellow
@ruffydfire What is going on in the country is more than a horror movie. Armed kidnappers invaded Bakin-Uzah in Karshi four nights ago. They shot a neighbor in the stomach and took away his daughter. The father died at the hospital the next day. They also kidnapped an AIT staff..
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oseni rufai
oseni rufai@ruffydfire·
Recall that on Wednesday, passengers of an 18-seater Benue Links bus from Makurdi were abducted a few kilometres to Otukpo town, by assailants suspected to be armed herdsmen. Days after the incident, the father of two victims said the family is in distress over the matter and had already commenced negotiations with the kidnappers. The worried father, who requested anonymity for security reasons, said the abductors had repeatedly shifted their ransom demands, worsening the family’s anguish. He said, “I have two children that were kidnapped in the bus and they have not released any of them. The kidnappers have opened discussions with us. “They initially demanded N10 million for each of my children. Later, they reduced it to N500,000 but shortly after, they called back and insisted it would be N9 million each. Up till now, we are still begging them.” He said his family is financially incapable of meeting the demand, adding that they are now relying on prayers and government intervention. “We are pleading with the government to comb the bushes and bring back the children because we do not have any hope of getting them back. Even if you sell me, I cannot be worth that N9 million being demanded for each of them,” he said.
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Elizabeth❣️
Elizabeth❣️@WorkElizab·
What is the name of the missing daughter?
Elizabeth❣️ tweet media
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LEGENDARY J.O.E
LEGENDARY J.O.E@LegendaryJoe·
THE JULY REMATCH - THE NORTH REVENGE TO THE IGBO COUP Though Nigeria's first military coup succeeded in toppling the political establishment, the roots of corruption and regionalism - the very maladies the rebels claimed to uproot - remained deeply embedded in the soil of the nation. Ironsi, stepping forth as the nation's Supreme Commander, declared his administration a "corrective regime," swiftly arresting and detaining politicians of the ousted regime. His first decree as leader was the appointment of military governors to oversee the four regions of the land: Lt. Col. Hassan Katsina in the North, Lt. Col. Adekunle Fajuyi in the West (formerly of the Abeokuta Garrison) Lt. Col. David Ejoor in the Midwest (formerly of the 1st Battalion), Lt. Col. Chukwuemeka Ojukwu in the East (formerly Commanding Officer of the 5th Battalion). In the North, however, resentment simmered like a pot on the fire. They mourned their prominent leaders and military officers, cut down in their prime by Igbo soldiers during the January coup. To the Northerners, it was no accident that no Igbo politician had perished in the uprising, nor that Ironsi himself - a son of Igbo heritage - had ascended to power. The silence surrounding the coup's true purpose and Ironsi's role only deepened the mistrust, and many came to see the coup as an Igbo coup and his government as an Igbo regime, a throne carved from betrayal. In a bid to dispel these fears, Ironsi sought to balance his court. He elevated Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowon, the highest-ranking Northern officer, to Chief of Staff and entrusted his personal security to Northern soldiers. He posted Lt. Col. Phillip Effiong, a Southerner, out of the Supreme Headquarters in Lagos, replacing him with Major T.Y. Danjuma, a Northerner. Even his personal escort came under the command of Lt. William Walbe, another Northerner. Yet, in surrounding himself with Northern protectors, Ironsi unwittingly wove the fabric of his own doom. As the elders say, "When the hen leaves its eggs in the care of the hawk, the feast is certain." His efforts to bridge the divide only sealed his fate, for distrust, once sown, is not easily uprooted. Four of the North’s most senior officers had fallen in the January coup, their blood crying out like an unquenched fire. For the North, whose memory is as enduring as the elephant’s, this was not a wound to be ignored. They carried the burden of honor, the duty to restore the dignity of their slain brothers. As the proverb says, “A man does not swallow a fly and pretend he did not feel it.” Vengeance became a song sung in every heart. In Ibadan, the 4th Battalion reflected the deepening cracks. Their commander, Lagerma, had been cut down, and in his place stood an Igbo officer, Mac Nzefili. But his authority was met with stone-faced defiance by the Northern soldiers, forcing Ironsi to replace him with Major Joe Akahan, a Northerner. Yet, these replacements were but a patch on a festering wound. Then came the storm that would shake the land - May 24, 1966. Ironsi issued the Unification Decree, a law that sought to merge the civil services of the regions into one. For the North, this was not unification but usurpation, compelling them to compete with the more educated Southerners, especially the Igbos, who stood poised to replace them. The decree landed like a thunderclap, sparking outrage that quickly turned violent. Protests in Kano began with students but soon erupted into chaos. Within hours, the streets ran red as armed men swept through Igbo neighborhoods, burning homes, looting shops, and spilling innocent blood. The violence spread like harmattan fire to other parts of the North. By the time the dust settled, hundreds of Igbos lay dead, and thousands more fled back to the East, leaving behind charred ruins and broken dreams. Nigeria teetered once more on the brink of disintegration. SHALL I BEGIN? GOOD MORNING SEVERALLY
LEGENDARY J.O.E tweet media
LEGENDARY J.O.E@LegendaryJoe

JANUARY 15 1966 IGBO COUP - SEVEN UNANSWERED QUESTIONS By May 1966, the air was thick with unease. Lt-Colonel Katsina, returning from an SMC meeting in Lagos, cryptically told the press, “Tell the nation that an egg will be broken tomorrow.” Days later, Ironsi issued the infamous Unification Decree, perhaps the most polarizing decree in Nigeria’s history. Buried queries from January’s bloody dawn resurfaced like long-forgotten ghosts, their whispers growing louder. The Northerners asked pointed questions and maybe still do? 1.⁠ ⁠Why was it that so many prominent politicians fell during the coup, yet not one was Igbo? They pointed to President Nnamdi Azikiwe, conveniently abroad at the time, under the guise of medical leave. Yet, instead of recuperating, he was rumored to have been seen on a Caribbean cruise and paying a curious visit to Haiti’s dictator, Papa Doc Duvalier. His hasty return to Nigeria after the coup only deepened their skepticism. 2.⁠ ⁠Of the top military officers slain, why was only one Igbo? And even then, whispers suggested his death was because he refused to align with the coup’s plotters. 3.⁠ ⁠How was it that Aguiyi Ironsi, the most senior officer and natural target, emerged unscathed, not even a hair on his head harmed? 4.⁠ ⁠Why were the coup’s leaders predominantly Igbo, and why did the key beneficiary - Ironsi - also hail from the same region? 5.⁠ ⁠Why were the Northern Region’s two most prominent politicians and four highest-ranking soldiers singled out for elimination? 6.⁠ ⁠What was Ironsi’s true motive when he announced plans to rotate military governors across the country? 7.⁠ ⁠Most ominously, rumors swirled of a second Igbo-led coup in the works, aimed at eradicating all remaining Northern soldiers. As the elders say, "When the tortoise is too clever, even its shell raises suspicion." To even the most neutral observers, the chain of events seemed less like coincidence and more like the blueprint of a grand strategy for Igbo domination. The promulgation of the unification decree only added fuel to these already blazing speculations. Some posed rhetorical questions: 1.⁠ ⁠What if the situation were reversed? What if Northern soldiers had executed the two most prominent Igbo politicians, Nnamdi Azikiwe and Michael Okpara? 2.⁠ ⁠What if they had eliminated the four most senior Igbo military officers - Major-General Aguiyi Ironsi, Lt-Colonels Emeka Ojukwu, Hilary Njoku, and Ime Imo? 3.⁠ ⁠And what if, after such a coup, a Northerner rose as Head of State and issued a unification decree? These questions, though hypothetical, reverberated like the echo of a talking drum, not just in the North but across various quarters of the nation. Even some coupists themselves admitted to suspicions. Captain Nwobosi revealed: "I have, and most of us had, the firm belief that Ifeajuna tipped Zik off that these things were happening… I cannot tell you for sure that I know, but we had the suspicion all through that Ifeajuna tipped Zik." On the 28th of July 1966, barely six moons after the new government of Ironsi took its first breath, Lt. Col. Murtala Muhammad decided it was time to shake the calabash. Like a cunning fox plotting against the eagle, he masterminded one of the bloodiest coups ever witnessed, leaving history drenched in its wake. This audacious act, where the drums of war drowned the songs of unity, would come to be known as THE JULY REMATCH - proof that when the chick challenges the hawk, it must be ready to fly or fall. Only that this time, the North - unlike the Igbos - did not deny ownership of the coup. It was owned, named, and executed without pretence: a NORTHERN REVENGE COUP. Swift in conception. Brutal in execution. Bloody in consequence. Good Afternoon Severally...

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Instablog9ja
Instablog9ja@instablog9ja·
We will not suspend him like Nigerians want, we'll investigate the matter — Dep Speaker Kalu speaks on the ass@ult incident by Abia lawmaker Alex Ikwechegh on an Abuja cab driver
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Stephen Akar; PhD, MPH (Epid.), BMLS, FELTP Fellow
@thecableng He is a Dishonorable member of the House. He must tell us how many Nigerians he has made to disappear. Government cannot be using our taxpayers money to be paying such oppressive and arrogant officials. He must be sent packing from the House.
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TheCable
TheCable@thecableng·
VIDEO: 'I'm human' -- Abia rep Alex Ikwechegh addresses plenary on assault of Bolt driver
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Nigeria House of Representatives
House of Representatives, National Assembly Office of the House Spokesman Official Press Statement FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Response to Allegations of Assault Involving Rep. Alex Ikwechegh (APGA, Abia) A Thread🧵 #HouseNGR
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Nigeria Stories
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories·
Video: Verydarkman meets with the Bolt driver Abia Federal House of Rep Member Alex Ikwechegh had issues with and he explains what happened in details. He said his car is still with the police 👮
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