“This insecurity thing will touch all of us directly or indirectly.”
— Lady reacts after the dispatch rider she sent to deliver a package to Cameroon was reportedly k!dn&pp3d in Calabar.
@gtbank_help please my account number is 0023312161 and its been compromised. Can this account be blocked pending when I resolve whatever I have going on right now.
"I am going to go play in Saudi Arabia where I'll be making $33 million (N52-billion) per year because Trophies won't put food on my table or neither will the people advising me to play in Europe feed me if I finish my career and go broke." ~ Victor Osimhen
"I was born to very poor parents in Lagos. I grew up in a place called Olusosun, an area in Lagos state. And where I grew up life was so hard that if you were able to eat breakfast, you might not even eat lunch nor dinner. We were never able to have 3 square meals per day. And things got even worst when I lost my Mum, I was about 9-years old then. And 3 months later after my Mum died, my father lost his job which was our only means of livelihood.
Then things became very hard for me and my siblings and then we started selling water in the streets of Lagos to make a living. Then I realized that selling water wasn't helping because we were just living From-Hand-To-Mouth. It was even tougher because back in Africa, nothing is promised. No one will ever sit you down where I come from and tell that you should believe in yourself and they believe in you but you have to be your own counsellor. My family never really supported me when I started football because they thought football was a hobby and not a job. When I started football, I gave it my all because I knew that football was the only hope for my family.
I play so hard because football is what changed my family's story and gave us the good life we're living now. I am playing football for money and not trophies because my family needs money and trophies won't bring them money. So I'm going to go to Saudi Arabia and earn $33 million(N52-billion) because my family needs it." ~ Victor Osimhen
Your comments on this
@jacksontrinity9@firstladyship U can praise him 4 his achievements but ended up reducing naija 2 nothing by doing everything possible handing over to Yar'Adua knowing his health condition, which led us to d Bayelsa man, then Bubu and here we are today. To me Obj laid a very baad succession foundation.
This was how Cyril Ramaphosa was welcomed.
President Xi Jinping held a private welcome ceremony for South African President at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing today.
Can any of Tinubu’s media handlers post a photo of his grand entry? He was welcomed largely by a Nigerian delegation in China.
South Africa is now the leader on the continent.
People kept selling Nigeria short, & for what?
@JenzenHuang@Shunyaa00@FadeHubb No, the moment you start thinking you are what you don't look like, its the preliminary stage of mental health issue. So know this and know peace.
@Shunyaa00@FadeHubb It’s all good to disagree with how someone dresses or expresses their genders, but disagreement should always be met with humility and grace. This older gentleman is the reason why so many LGBTQ people are facing a mental health crisis that no one seems to care about.
@MAGUOWO@ShehuSani Some are on queue waiting their share of the national cake. We only keep mentioning names of project but the ones behind the failure. Its not gonna work just like this or that o🤗
@MAGUOWO@ShehuSani The problem is not the projects but we as people, PHCN was privatized and what is the situation today.
We all know the reason but continue to live in self denial.
We know all the people that became multi from some these, some are governors, ministers, so many are in the Senate.
@iamkelechiO@ShehuSani Government projects should be a continuous thing, if Mr. As E dey pain dem had continued maybe Fubara will be the one to complete it. So blame not Amaechi.
@iamkelechiO@ShehuSani He didn't waste anything. Fashola started Lagos monorail and other governors after him continued with it. Blame the talkative who abandoned it.
I received with sadness the shocking news of the demise of a legal luminary and my counsel, Prof. Yusuf Dankofa, who died at the age of 61.
The late legal icon who has made invaluable contributions in the field of law, especially in Social Justice, international human rights, and the rights of the indigenous people will be greatly missed by all.
On behalf of my family, I join the good people of Kano State, the members of the academic community, in particular the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), and his immediate family to mourn the deceased. May Allah comfort his family, forgive his sins and grant him AlJannah Firdaus. -AA