BUDHAH

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BUDHAH

BUDHAH

@BUDHAHmandala

For Nigeria to survive,APC and whatever it represents must die./Emotional blackmail,Gaslighting,dont work on me.

Katılım Temmuz 2022
514 Takip Edilen432 Takipçiler
BUDHAH
BUDHAH@BUDHAHmandala·
@Tommyleewiz You rightly admit that you and your families are monkeys,No Offence Dude,Agree with you 100%👍
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Magnificient Daddy D.Eng
Magnificient Daddy D.Eng@Tommyleewiz·
My people are celebrating and hyping up a racist for “dunking” on tunde… 🤣😭🤣🤣 maybe we are actually monkeys
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
Re: Open Letter to Otunba Segun Showunmi Otunba Segun Showunmi, You wrote 800 words and still managed to say absolutely nothing. You spent more time attacking my father’s name and my location than addressing the real issues I raised. That tells me everything I need to know. You did not deny that Gilbert Chagoury was convicted of money laundering in Switzerland. You did not deny that he paid $66 million of stolen Nigerian money to settle that case. You did not deny that he has been awarded a $13 billion no-bid contract by this government. Instead, you chose to lecture me about “jurisdiction” and “lineage.” Let me remind you: the facts do not need my father’s permission to be true. You publicly defend a man who holds British, St. Lucian, Lebanese, and Nigerian citizenship, yet you attack me for living in Sweden. The hypocrisy is truly deafening. Keep your legal threats. I am not intimidated. The truth does not fear court. If you truly believe I have defamed anyone, then by all means — sue me. Let discovery begin. I will continue to speak. Loudly. Kio Amachree
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
The Continent Is Not a Cash Machine: Gilbert Chagoury’s Long Career of Extracting from Black Nations By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International There is a particular kind of predator that does not hunt in the open. He arrives bearing gifts — contracts, development promises, diplomatic service at no cost to the host government — and by the time the nation realises what has happened, he has already moved on to the next one, decorated and untouchable. His name is Gilbert Ramez Chagoury. And his career is one of the most extraordinary case studies in the systematic exploitation of Black nations in modern history. Begin with Nigeria. A Swiss court convicted Chagoury for his involvement in what was globally recognised as epic treasury looting and money laundering — the theft of Abacha’s billions. He agreed to pay a $600,000 fine and return $66 million to the Nigerian government.  Our money. Used to buy his freedom. Then, emboldened rather than humbled, he returned. In 2024, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu awarded his company Hitech the $11 billion Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway project — a deal that came under scrutiny due to the lack of public bidding, as well as the longtime personal association between Tinubu and Chagoury.  And in January 2026, Tinubu crowned it all by conferring on Chagoury the Grand Commander of the Order of the Niger — Nigeria’s second-highest national honour.  A conviction. A return. Billions in no-bid contracts. Nigeria’s second highest honour. By any standard, that is not a redemption story. That is state capture perfected. But Nigeria was never the only chapter. Chagoury served as economic adviser to President Mathieu Kérékou of Benin Republic — a military ruler turned politician who governed his country for a total of 29 years. During the Kérékou era, the Beninese economy was dominated by Lebanese businessmen who controlled the import trade from textiles to second-hand automobiles, grains to toothpaste. For his service, Kérékou awarded Chagoury the Ordre National du Bénin with the rank of Commander. When Kérékou’s successor Yayi Boni came to power in 2006, he too asked Chagoury to continue as his economic adviser.  Two presidents. One country. The same arrangement. Then Chad. In 2005, President Idriss Déby bestowed on Chagoury the Ordre National du Tchad with the rank of Commander.  Another authoritarian. Another honour. Another country rendered more legible to outside extraction. Then Saint Lucia. A tiny, poor Black Caribbean island. Chagoury was appointed Saint Lucia’s ambassador to UNESCO — and the diplomatic passport that came with the role was, in the words of observers, his key to doors previously closed to him.  His ambassadorial status functions less as service to Saint Lucia and more as a legal shield and image-laundering mechanism, according to many.  The arrangement culminated in 2015 when the government announced, without warning or consultation, that Chagoury was one of the year’s recipients of the Saint Lucia Cross — the nation’s most prestigious award. The National Awards Committee was shocked and disgusted: they had submitted several names to the Governor General, and none of them was Gilbert Chagoury.  The pattern is not coincidental. It is a method. He identifies vulnerable Black nations — resource-rich, institutionally weak, or led by men who confuse personal loyalty with national interest. He inserts himself as adviser, ambassador, or benefactor. He uses the relationship to unlock contracts, diplomatic cover, and legal immunity. He collects the national honour. He moves on. Nigeria. Benin. Chad. Saint Lucia. Four nations. Four honours. One man. He aims high, targeting resource-rich or vulnerable third-world countries, and then finds a way of attaching a puppet string to the neck of that country’s president.  That is not philanthropy. That is not investment. That is a business model — and the product is the sovereignty of Black nations. The question is not only who gave Chagoury his honours. The question is what we intend to do about it. The revocation of his GCON national honour should be demanded immediately. The Lagos-Calabar contract should be suspended pending transparent public tender. And every African government currently playing host to this man should ask itself a simple question: who, precisely, does Gilbert Chagoury serve? Not you. Not your people. Never your people. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027 #GodfreyAmachree #ChagouryExposed #ParasiteInPower #NigeriaFirst #StateCapture #Tiglibism #AfricaFirst #AntiCorruption #TinubuAccountability #DiasporaVoice #GilbertChagoury
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
The Chagoury Dynasty: How Corruption Runs in the Family By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International The story of the Chagoury family is not one of redemption. It is a genealogy of systematic extraction, state capture perfected across generations, and the dangerous normalization of impunity in Nigeria’s corridors of power. Begin with the patriarch: Gilbert Ramez Chagoury, a Lebanese-born businessman convicted in Switzerland in 2000 of laundering billions stolen by General Sani Abacha — Nigeria’s most brutal military dictator. He was Abacha’s personal economic adviser. When Abacha died in 1998, Western investigators described Chagoury as the lynchpin in the corruption that defined the regime. He facilitated the theft of Central Bank funds transported out in trucks. He enabled the looting that impoverished a nation. He paid $600,000 and returned $66 million of Nigeria’s own stolen money to secure his freedom. Then came back bolder than ever. By 2024, Tinubu awarded Chagoury’s construction company Hitech a $13 billion no-bid contract for the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway. In January 2026, he received Nigeria’s second highest national honour — the GCON. This is not a man rehabilitated. This is a thief laundering his reputation through power. But Gilbert did not act alone. His younger brother Ronald Chagoury — co-founder of the Chagoury Group, CEO of the enterprise, the man physically embedded in Lagos running the machinery of extraction — has spent five decades deepening the family’s grip on Nigeria’s resources. Ronald’s name appeared in the Panama Papers. He holds shares in offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands — jurisdictions designed for anonymity and capital flight. While marketing himself as a visionary infrastructure developer, he has presided over one of the largest environmental destruction projects on the African continent: Eko Atlantic City, a 10 million square meter “mega-city” built on reclaimed ocean. That project has triggered dredging lawsuits alleging negligent damage to the marine environment and property. Residents of nearby communities report coastal erosion, ocean surges that flood homes and topple electricity poles, forced relocations. The Chagoury Group denies responsibility. The damage spreads anyway. In June 2025, ITB Nigeria — a Chagoury Group subsidiary — fired more than 150 Nigerian workers after they protested poor wages and exploitative working conditions. These are Nigerians building infrastructure for billionaires who treat them as disposable. The message was clear: dissent is punishment. But the corruption does not stop at Ronald. It passes to the next generation. Leaked corporate documents revealed that Ronald Chagoury Jr. — Ronald’s son — co-owns an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands with Seyi Tinubu, the son of the sitting President of Nigeria. The company was incorporated eight years ago. Months after the relationship became public, the Nigerian government awarded the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway contract to Hitech Construction — a deal worth billions, approved without competitive bidding. Seyi Tinubu also sits on the board of CDK Integrated Industries, another Chagoury-linked entity. The offshore arrangement, structured in one of the world’s most opaque financial jurisdictions, raises questions about transparency, conflict of interest, and the movement of wealth outside Nigerian sight. This is not coincidence. This is inheritance. The Chagoury family has perfected the art of embedding itself in power — seating itself at the table where contracts are awarded, national honours are dispensed, and billions move without public scrutiny. Gilbert established the playbook. Ronald runs the operation. Ronald Jr. cements the next dynasty. Four Black nations have awarded the Chagourys national honours or diplomatic posts: Nigeria, Benin, Chad, and Saint Lucia. In Nigeria alone, his construction subsidiaries hold billions in contracts. His family’s offshore holdings in the British Virgin Islands shield wealth from Nigerian sight. His workers are fired for demanding fair wages. His environmental projects damage coastlines and displace communities. And his sons now sit alongside the children of presidents, making decisions that shape Nigeria’s future. This is not business. This is institutional capture. It is the wholesale privatization of the Nigerian state by a single family — a family whose wealth originates in the theft of billions during military dictatorship, and which now perpetuates itself through the next generation’s marriages to power. For Nigeria to have a future, the Chagourys must be dismantled. The revocation of Gilbert Chagoury’s GCON must be demanded. The Lagos-Calabar contract must be suspended immediately pending transparent public tender. Ronald Chagoury’s offshore holdings must be seized and audited. ITB Nigeria must be investigated for labour abuses. And every contract awarded to the Chagoury Group under the Tinubu administration must be reviewed for evidence of corruption. More critically: Seyi Tinubu’s offshore arrangement with Ronald Chagoury Jr. must trigger a formal inquiry into whether the President’s son has breached fiduciary duty to the Nigerian state. Nigeria did not survive military dictatorship, fuel subsidies, and forty years of institutional collapse only to become the private estate of one Lebanese family and its Nigerian clients. The question is not whether Nigerians will act. The question is when. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027 #GodfreyAmachree #ChagouryExposed #ParasiteInPower #NigeriaFirst #StateCapture #Tiglibism #OffshoreWealth #CorruptionWatch #TinubuAccountability #FamilyCorruption #CivilSociety #JusticeForNigeria
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
THE INHERITOR’S HAND Ronald Chagoury Jr. and the Architecture of a Nigerian State Capture By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International There is a particular kind of audacity that only inherited wealth and political proximity can produce. It is not the brazen theft of the street-level kleptocrat. It is quieter, more elegant, conducted through corporate structures registered in distant islands and sealed behind the polished doors of boardrooms in Lagos and Geneva. It is the audacity of men who believe, with some justification, that they will never be asked to explain themselves. Ronald Chagoury Jr. has never been asked to explain himself. He should be. Investigators at OCCRP have established that the president’s son, Oluwaseyi Tinubu, was a majority shareholder in an offshore company incorporated eight years ago in the British Virgin Islands — alongside Ronald Chagoury Jr., son of billionaire Ronald Chagoury.  The BVI, that sun-drenched laboratory of financial opacity, was purpose-built for arrangements that cannot survive daylight. Neither man responded to requests for comment. Neither has ever explained what the company was for, what it did, or where its money went. They do not believe they owe you an explanation. That is the first thing you need to understand about Ronald Chagoury Jr. The second thing you need to understand is what happened next. The Chagoury brothers’ company, Hitech Construction Company Ltd., received a contract to build a 700-kilometer coastal highway in Nigeria without a public bidding process — a project the Nigerian government valued at $13 billion.  Not a competitive tender. Not a transparent procurement. A direct award, handed to a company whose principals have maintained one of the most lucrative and least scrutinized political relationships in Nigerian history. While inaugurating the controversial coastal highway in May 2024, President Tinubu publicly applauded the Chagoury brothers “for being worthy stakeholders and for believing in the future of Nigeria.”  With friends like him, one can sleep with a still mind. Those were, in fact, the president’s own words — offered as a birthday tribute to Gilbert Chagoury in 2024, when Tinubu called him “a valued and treasured person who was generous with his heart and resources.”  One searches the public record in vain for similar tributes to the Nigerian nurse, the Delta fisherman, the Kano market trader — the thirty million ordinary Nigerians whom the president assures us this coastal highway will connect to prosperity. Their names do not appear in presidential birthday statements. Their families do not co-own offshore companies with the president’s son. Ronald Chagoury Jr. is not merely a beneficiary of this system. He is its living embodiment. He serves as vice-chairman of South Energyx Nigeria Limited, the Chagoury Group subsidiary that holds title to the land on which Eko Atlantic City is being constructed — a 10-million square meter grant on the Lagos shoreline awarded by then-Governor Bola Tinubu in 2007.  The highway begins at Eko Atlantic. The contract went to Hitech Construction. The offshore company connected the sons. The father now holds the GCON — Nigeria’s second-highest national honour, conferred without public ceremony, without a presidential statement, and without official explanation, on the occasion of Gilbert Chagoury’s 80th birthday in January 2026.  Follow the geometry. Every line leads back to the same center. Seyi Tinubu also sits on the board of CDK Integrated Industries, a Chagoury Group subsidiary manufacturing tiles in Sagamu, Ogun State.  His father’s administration simultaneously awards that same group contracts worth billions of dollars in public funds — including a reported $700 million port renovation contract for Tinubu’s Tin Can and Apapa ports, awarded to the Chagoury subsidiary ITB Nigeria, a firm critics noted had no prior experience in the port sector.  A risk consultancy analyst at SBM Intelligence put it with unusual directness: the business and personal relationships between the Tinubu and Chagoury families fuel suspicion among Nigerians precisely because of “systemic corruption and pervasive lack of accountability within the country’s governance.”  That is the polished language of professional caution. Let us be less polite. What has been documented here is not the appearance of a conflict of interest. It is a conflict of interest, fully constituted and apparently institutionalized — a family compact between Nigeria’s first family and its most favored foreign-origin billionaire clan, conducted across generations, laundered through offshore secrecy jurisdictions, and now dressed in the robes of national honour. Opposition figures have noted that the coastal highway’s environmental impact assessment was incomplete at the time of award, the right of way for the 700-kilometer stretch had not been secured, and over one trillion naira was released by the Tinubu administration without National Assembly approval — a sum dwarfing the N500 million the legislature had actually approved.  None of this has produced criminal charges. None of it has produced a credible government investigation. None of it has produced so much as a press conference. Ronald Chagoury Jr. continues to develop Eko Atlantic. Seyi Tinubu continues to sit on Chagoury boards. The highway continues to be built. And the president continues to sleep with a still mind. Nigeria cannot afford that stillness. The 2027 election is coming, and the voters who will decide it — in the markets of Onitsha, the oil fields of Bayelsa, the back streets of Kano — are paying fuel prices that have tripled, electricity bills that have doubled, and food costs that have placed basic nutrition out of reach for millions. They are not sleeping still. They are lying awake calculating how to survive a week. Ronald Chagoury Jr. is not on trial. Not yet. But the architecture of what has been documented in leaked corporate files, investigative reports, and the public record of no-bid contracts demands a reckoning that neither the BVI’s secrecy laws nor the Aso Rock speechwriter’s arsenal of deflection can indefinitely postpone. Silence is not innocence. Silence, in this context, is a strategy. And strategies, eventually, run out of time. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027 #RonaldChagouryJr #SeyiTinubu #LagosCalabарHighway #StateCapture #Chagoury #NoMoreSilence #NigeriaAccountability #GodfreyAmachree
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
THEY SHOULD BLAME TINUBU By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International My head is spinning. Not from confusion — from disbelief. That one Lebanese family, carrying three passports each, deploying those passports like instruments of commerce across Black Africa, cosying up to corrupt leaders, extracting billions through proximity rather than merit — that this family has been permitted to operate this way for this long in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, says everything about how little Nigerians have been taught to think of themselves. There is no national pride left when settlers become the predominant power brokers in a country of 250 million Black people. None. Let me be direct: none of this would be under scrutiny if Tinubu had simply done his job. If he had provided electricity. If he had distributed the proceeds from the fuel subsidy cancellation to the Nigerian people rather than to a circle of cronies and contractors. If he had strengthened the naira. If he had governed. A president who governed would not need a Lebanese family to govern for him. Because Tinubu failed on every metric that matters to ordinary Nigerians — power, food, currency, dignity — the question of who is actually running Nigeria must be asked loudly and answered honestly. And the answer points, repeatedly, to the Chagourys. I have seen them at social gatherings in Lagos. I paid them little attention then. That was a mistake I will not repeat. They have my full attention now. Then Otunba Segun Showunmi — PDP chieftain, convener of The Alternative, 2027 Ogun governorship aspirant, a man who travels Nigeria telling young people that democracy is broken and that the wrong people must not be allowed to sneak into power — this same man stepped forward to threaten me with legal action on the Chagourys’ behalf. I begged him. Please. File. Let there be discovery. Let us see the contracts, the correspondence, the commission arrangements, the board minutes with Seyi Tinubu’s name on them. I welcome every courtroom on earth. He went further. He invoked my late father — a man he never met — apparently believing that the name Godfrey Amachree was meant to intimidate me into silence. He called my father a political hack. A man he never met. A man who was Nigeria’s first Solicitor-General, first African UN Under-Secretary-General, and one of the most distinguished legal minds this country ever produced. Let me be clear about something, for Showunmi and for anyone else operating under that misapprehension. I am not my father. My father was a gentleman — brilliant, principled, with a right hook when required. I am a ruffian. Left hook, right hook, and I will kick you where it counts. I have been fighting since before most of these people were born. I fought white South Africans during apartheid. I fought skinheads. I fought Hell’s Angels. I fought Southern rednecks. Any man — any system — that tried to put Black people down, I went at it. Fifty years of this. Still going. I take no prisoners, I fear no man, and I go straight for the jugular. And which version of Segun Showunmi should Nigeria believe — the one on the podium in Abeokuta preaching civic virtue and issue-based politics, or the one in the shadows carrying water for a man convicted of laundering Abacha’s stolen billions? You cannot build The Alternative on one hand and protect the establishment’s dirtiest arrangements with the other. Nigeria is watching. I am three of my father in one body. Better connected. My friends run Wall Street. My friends run intelligence services. You name the room — we are in it, and we are in charge. I have been in contact with Netanyahu’s office — old family connections going back to Golda Meir. I have raised this matter with the Trump administration. I have filed with the SFO, the FBI, the DEA, OFAC, FinCEN, INTERPOL, and SAPO. My articles are reviewed by security services before publication. That is the level at which this fight is being conducted. So Nigeria, hear this clearly: This is why you have no running water. This is why your generator runs three hours a day if you are lucky. This is why your children cannot afford three meals. This is where your money is going — funnelled through a web of contracts, concessions, and coastal highways awarded without competitive tender to one family and their subsidiaries, with the President’s own son sitting on their boards. The Chagourys have nowhere else to go. Lebanon? The Israelis have dismantled what they built there. The only place they can live like kings — the only country left where their particular brand of brazen, state-protected extraction still works — is Nigeria. That is why they fight so hard to keep their man in Aso Rock. That is why they send Segun Showunmi out to threaten diaspora activists instead of answering a single factual question. God knows how many Hezbollah operatives have been moved into Nigeria under cover of this family’s business operations since the Lebanon war began. Someone needs to be counting. This ends at the 2027 election. It ends with a president who answers to 250 million Nigerians — not to one Lebanese family with three passports and a stranglehold on the Nigerian state. Nigeria, you have been warned. And the Chagourys — and those who speak for them — have been noticed. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027 #GodfreyAmachree #ExposeTheChagoury #SegunShowunmi #TheAlternative
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Paul Ibe
Paul Ibe@omonlakiki·
My dear aburo @SegunShowunmi, I am shaking and trembling at your empty threat. I have my receipts on charlatans like you. Stripped of all embellishments, you are only powered by an Alternative Stomach Infrastructure. Your almajiri bowl is getting bigger by the day and is visible even to the blind! #elebiofebi
Segun(🦁)Showunmi (PhD)@SegunShowunmi

Paul O Ibe @omonlakiki, Your latest round of insinuations is not only false it is a textbook case of reckless misinformation that continues to erode whatever credibility remains of the platform you represent. It is remarkable how consistently you speak with authority on matters you neither understand nor have access to. Presence in a media operation is not performance, and your record increasingly underscores that distinction. I have, until now, exercised restraint deliberately out of consideration for broader relationships tied to your principal (Titi Atiku Abubakar and her children). Do not misread that restraint as incapacity or hesitation. It was a choice. Be advised: if you persist in circulating fabrications or inserting my name into narratives you cannot defend, I will respond in full. Not with rhetoric, but with verifiable facts, timelines, and context that will invite a level of scrutiny you are unlikely to withstand. Certainly unmask @atiku, let your head be correct. This is not a back-and-forth. It is a notice. Stay within the bounds of fact and responsibility or be prepared for a public accounting. Otunba Segun Showunmi The Alternative Former Spokesperson Atiku Abubakar 2018-2025 (when I got tired of the lack of brain around the table)

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BUDHAH
BUDHAH@BUDHAHmandala·
Opportunistic charlatan @SegunShowunmi over to you please,Mr @omonlakiki is simply saying here,that you and your empty threat belongs to pit toilet. Thanks
Paul Ibe@omonlakiki

My dear aburo @SegunShowunmi, I am shaking and trembling at your empty threat. I have my receipts on charlatans like you. Stripped of all embellishments, you are only powered by an Alternative Stomach Infrastructure. Your almajiri bowl is getting bigger by the day and is visible even to the blind! #elebiofebi

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👑S.A.L.A.K.O🕊
👑S.A.L.A.K.O🕊@UnkleAyo·
First Nigerian to ride Okada across the coast of Amalfi. 🇮🇹 Started out riding the Okada from Lagos to Ogun State before crossing oceans to Italy. The journey was tough but I am so proud to put Nigeria on the map. Please congratulate me guys. 🧎 🙏
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Lord Miles Official
Lord Miles Official@real_lord_miles·
@frycabsit A Yoruba tribal elder walks into a bar He looks at the menu and realizes he can’t read He walks out
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👑S.A.L.A.K.O🕊
👑S.A.L.A.K.O🕊@UnkleAyo·
First Nigerian to sit down majestically in front of the Louvre. 🇫🇷 🗼 To sit down & do throway face picture. Please congratulate me guys. 🙏
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Valentina Gomez
Valentina Gomez@ValentinaForUSA·
I’m coming to England whether the pedophiles muslims like it or NOT. Idk why muslims are obsessed with me. I’m not 6 years old OR a goat. Don’t forget, this is a goat, NOT a wife.
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Adnan Hussain MP@AdnanHussainMP

Letter to the Home Secretary urging her to review decision to allow Valentina Gomez entry into UK to spew her hatred towards Britain's Muslim community. Protection of free speech is vital, but the government must also apply equal standards for the protection of all communities.

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BUDHAH
BUDHAH@BUDHAHmandala·
@AdnanHussainMP The audacity of some of you Islamic terrorists never cease to amaze me
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Adnan Hussain MP
Adnan Hussain MP@AdnanHussainMP·
Letter to the Home Secretary urging her to review decision to allow Valentina Gomez entry into UK to spew her hatred towards Britain's Muslim community. Protection of free speech is vital, but the government must also apply equal standards for the protection of all communities.
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Dr. OkaforE
Dr. OkaforE@DrOkaforEmmanu1·
@iykimo He said his region? Lol Ndi ofe gbara oso laa Benin..
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