
Antiok Karyi
39.7K posts

Antiok Karyi
@Abriyin_
2025 Year Of The Warthog 🐗 Year of The Pride Men.
Abuja, Nigeria Katılım Aralık 2011
3.8K Takip Edilen4.9K Takipçiler


Blue Band is a spread how?
Spread what?
Series ‘Baj@Engr_Series
So everyone now suddenly claims they always knew Blue Band is a “spread” and not “butter”? Oya nau 👍🏾
English

Antiok Karyi retweetledi
Antiok Karyi retweetledi

I went with my friends to 2 diff inec offices, but we were told they weren’t carrying out registration. we heard registration was ongoing in Karu, so we drove all the way there. the process took less than 5 minutes. pls do your registration cvr.inecnigeria.org


English
Antiok Karyi retweetledi

Why do you always set yourself up?
FC Barcelona@FCBarcelona
IT'S HAPPENING!!!!! IT'S HAPPENING!!!!!
English

GOD 🥹 I Need a big winnnnnnnnn!!!! Amen
Ameh Daniel Anebi M.Sc.@DannySweetch
GOD🥺 I need a big winnnnnnnnnnn!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
English

Pick a lucky number from 1 – 40.
10 numbers hide a surprise of laptop
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
Hey @grok, Please pick 10 random people from comments in 48 hours
Make sure you are following me so I can DM you
English
Antiok Karyi retweetledi
Antiok Karyi retweetledi


Saying his email and phone number were hacked is a very lame excuse. Why would someone hack his account years ago to create an account that will be used against him in the future?
NEFERTITI@firstladyship
Professor Joash Amupitan must step aside. And I used the word MUST. INEC saying that his official email & phone number were hacked & used to open his official Twitter account is stupid. Do you think you are talking to children?
English
Antiok Karyi retweetledi

₦250K ONLY!!! 🔥🔥
ElshaFoodz just unlocked a MEGA FOOD DEAL you don’t want to miss 😍👇🏽
🥩 1 FULL GOAT( offals added)
🐟 20 pieces of Catfish Cutlets
🐠 1KG Stockfish
🐟 50 pieces of dried Panla
🐌 50 pieces of Medium Snails
🛢️ 5 Litres of Fresh Unadulterated Palm Oil
💥 ALL delivered straight to your doorstep!
No stress. No market wahala. Just premium foodstuff at your convenience 💯
🇬🇧 UK Customers: Get this same bundle for ₦380K (delivery included)
📲 Send a DM now ‼️
08109790578
Bayelsa




English
Antiok Karyi retweetledi

There're a lot of things you didn't see.
Since he lost the election in 2023, have you seen petrol sell for ₦198 per litre at any filling station in Nigeria?
Daddy D.O🇳🇬@DOlusegun
I have never seen Alhaji @atiku applaud our troops for any successful operation since he lost the election in 2023. Have you?
English
Antiok Karyi retweetledi

Antiok Karyi retweetledi

From Pharisee to Tax Collector: Rethinking Tinubu’s Kenyan Comparison
In a recent remark in Yenagoa, Bola Ahmed Tinubu suggested that Nigerians should find solace in being “better off than Kenya and other African countries.” While this may have been intended to soften the impact of economic hardship and rising fuel prices, the comment risks downplaying the severity of the current crisis. It echoes the biblical parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector in the Gospel of Luke (18:9–14). A similar warning is found in the Qur’an (53:32), which cautions against self-righteousness.
Like the Pharisee who boasted of his superiority over others to mask his own spiritual void, such downward comparisons serve more as a refuge than a remedy. This validated an earlier dismissive remark by President Ahmed Bola Tinubu during electioneering: “Na statistics we go shop?” Yet statistics remain indispensable - they are the language through which nations understand their condition and chart progress. No country can develop in isolation from measurable realities or without comparing itself with peers. Comparisons, when properly grounded, are not instruments of escapism but tools of accountability. What is objectionable is not comparison itself, but comparison stripped of credible, verifiable data—mere tax collector comparisons that soothe rather than solve.
On key development indicators such as security, the Human Development Index, life expectancy, GDP per capita, literacy levels, and electricity access, Kenya consistently outperforms Nigeria. Nigeria is the fourth most terrorised nation in the world, while Kenya is not among the ten worst. Kenya’s HDI ranking is 143 out of 180 countries, with a coefficient of about 0.630, compared to Nigeria’s ranking of 164 out of 180, with a coefficient of about 0.530. Its GDP per capita is roughly $2,200–$2,300, compared to Nigeria’s $807–$835. Kenya’s poverty rate is about 43% of the population (approximately 23 million people), while Nigeria’s is about 63% (around 150 million people), over six times that of Kenya. Kenya’s life expectancy is about 67 years, while Nigeria’s is about 54 years. The literacy rate in Kenya is approximately 81–85%, compared to Nigeria’s 62–65%.
Kenya’s electricity access is higher, while Nigeria has one of the lowest levels of electricity access in the world. Kenya has about 3.5 million out-of-school children, while Nigeria has about 20 million. Kenya’s inflation rate has been about 4.5% or lower over the past three years, while Nigeria’s has remained above 15% within the same period. Kenya’s exchange rate has been around USD 1 to KES 130 over the past three years, whereas Nigeria’s exchange rate rose from below ₦500/$1 to above ₦1,250/$1 within the same period. Even with developments in the Middle East and rising oil prices, Kenyans have not experienced the sharp increases in petroleum product prices seen in Nigeria.
Across other key indicators, Kenya also performs better. In the end, these indices clearly show that Kenya ranks higher than Nigeria on several development metrics. The standard of living of Kenyans is better than that of Nigerians. If the President considers Kenyans to be suffering despite these stronger figures, then Nigerians are in a far more difficult situation. He should therefore refrain from self-consolation and, in honest reflection, take responsibility for the situation and make a determined effort to drive improvement. This requires a posture of humility, accountability, and commitment to addressing the factors that have slowed Nigeria’s development.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
English






