Jatto Emmanuel Adavize
778 posts

Jatto Emmanuel Adavize
@AdaviJatto
I am an oracle, a peace and conflict scholar, diplomat, historian, minister, and an educator- I love knowledge and am willing to learn, u have facts?, gist me!
Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Mart 2018
723 Takip Edilen242 Takipçiler

@sammyrigaud May God comfort you and everyone around you.
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@HaYoMiDe_ Tell him the consequences of his actions and how much he is hurting you. If he is who you described him to be, he will be sorry and would change. Then both of you will plan for your friend, confront her together and make her know that she is an enemy and will never be permitted.
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@HaYoMiDe_ Take a deep breath and calculate your life. You seem a little materialistic and define success by wealth, please have a rethink in this direction so that you won't become greedy.
Now to the main issue, you need to first confront your husband with the truth
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@PeterObi Mr. Obi, this comparison you have just made is not right and does not speak to what you just call justice. A man of your standing should draw conclusion on issues only when proper and thorough investigation is concluded.
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The unfortunate and dishonourable drama witnessed in Ibom Air has again brought to the fore the double standards in our lives and the inadequacies of our various security operatives in acting decently and in a civilised manner.
I want to start by sincerely apologising to the Ibom Air crew who were assaulted by Miss Comfort Emmanson. We must, as a society, learn and uphold good conduct, as it is a true measure of success and decent living.
However, I must equally strongly condemn the dehumanising treatment meted out to this young woman. Stripping her publicly was not only unnecessary but also represents the height of rascality and abuse by our agencies. It is unacceptable that she was hurriedly taken to court and remanded, while someone who visibly held a plane from taking off and put hundreds of lives at risk is still at large, with government agencies and some state officials speaking up for him to be forgiven.
This case is not just about one young woman, it is about the double standards that poison our justice system. Justice in Nigeria must never be about who is poor or powerless versus who has influence or access to government officials.
While Ms. Comfort Emmanson is in jail, the other offender who committed a more severe offence has not been held to the same standard. He has neither been arrested nor arraigned in any court.
We must build a country where justice is fair, equal, and not selective, especially against women who are seen to be weaker. This young lady’s offence does not compare to the crimes committed daily by those parading themselves as “excellencies” while looting public funds without consequence, and yet they have not been stripped or dehumanised in the name of justice.
We must end this selective treatment of the poor or less privileged. If justice must be served, it should be served to all, and it must be served fairly. The Minister of Aviation and other relevant authorities owe the public an explanation for these double standards in their adjudication.
Justice must be just, or it is nothing at all.
The rule of law based on justice for all must remain the guidepost of our democracy.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO

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@MarvellousIsra3 @NigeriaStories Oh! The most beautiful comment I have seen online in recent time. The shame is theirs not hers
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Dear Raye, hold your head high. Because of you, corpers now pocket ₦70k while pensioners queue for peanuts. You’ve achieved in your youth what entire battalions of ronu apologists with grey beards and sagging ethics couldn’t muster in three decades — a pay raise by sheer audacity.
Those who sold their conscience for committee appointments will still call you “reckless” while secretly praying for your boldness in their next life.
History is watching. And so are we. ✊🏽
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@ifedayo_johnson @NigeriaStories The question you need to ask is, were the Corp members consulted before the law was made, so literally corp members are forced to sign, adapt and live by a law they never were carried along to promulgate, what kind of system is that, if not a tyrannical one
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I was initially avoiding this. But let me say one thing.
The punishment is well served. It is the right punishment.
Hold on. Before you jump in with your emotions.
It is well stated in the NYSC handbook that rioting or protesting as a Corps member is prohibited.
This is well spelt out in Schedule 1, Section 3 of the NYSC bye laws. The NYSC handbook that contains the law is shared and given to ALL corps members. You can’t claim ignorance of it.
Where we should channel the energy is calling for the abolition of that law as it contradicts Section 39 and 40 of the Nigeria’s constitution.
As long as the bye law is in place and you swear to that oath during your swearing in as a corp member, the law is binding on you and the punishment served is not out of place.
As you were.
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@RolandNGabriel @Morris_Monye This is the most sensible piece I have seen online in recent times. Thank you
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I have been politically active since 2006, hoping each new administration would bring progress.
Then it struck me: no matter who wins the presidency nothing really improves.
Prices never decrease, the cost of living only rises.
Every promise, whether from PDP, APC, or others, goes unfulfilled.
Yet, the politicians thrive, amassing wealth, living lavishly, while the masses struggle.
Worse still, I realized Nigerians don't truly care about progress; they just want their side to win.
It’s not about solutions but about defeating the other camp, PDP vs. APC, North vs. South, Christian vs. Muslim.
To many, seeing an opponent humiliated is victory enough, a fleeting bragging right.
For every one Nigerian who sees through this charade, that these tribal, religious, and political divides are by design, thousands more are consumed by it.
Unfortunately, Nigerians will remain trapped in this cycle, blind to the truth, unless something drastic happens.
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