Sam Danaldi 🥞

5.3K posts

Sam Danaldi 🥞

Sam Danaldi 🥞

@DanladiSam

Me. Growing...

Abuja, Nigeria Katılım Mart 2013
2.2K Takip Edilen2.1K Takipçiler
Sam Danaldi 🥞
Sam Danaldi 🥞@DanladiSam·
@mrwtffacts That was when Europe had a semblance of a working system. Today aliens rape their daughters and walk away,free.
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WTF
WTF@mrwtffacts·
In 1998, a 13-year-old girl was abducted and raped at knifepoint in Alicante, Spain. The rapist, 63-year old Antonio Cosme, was sentenced to 9 years in jail. 7 years later, in 2005, the victim's mother, María del Carmen García, was waiting at a bus stop when she saw a man approaching. "How's your daughter doing?" the man asked with a smirk on his face. It was her daughter's rapist. Antonio was out on day release. Enraged by what had just happened, Maria ran to the nearest store, purchased 1.5 litres of gasoline, and walked into the bar that Antonio had just entered. She doused him head-to-toe with gasoline, lit him up, and stood back and calmly watched as her daughter's rapist burned alive in front of her eyes. Maria was sentenced to 9.5 years in jail for her act of revenge, but was released in 2018 after serving 5.5 years. Today, she lives freely in Spain after being reunited with her daughter.
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Trending Explained
Trending Explained@TrendingEx·
Police Academy is trending because Pres. Tinubu has approved establishment of a new ₦15bn campus in Ogun State, some Northerners are lamenting. Since 1988 there have been only one Police Academy in Nigeria, located in Wudil, Kano. However, there are Police College and Police Training Schools; all offering different certifications about 30+ training institutes, 6 colleges and 1 academy. The Police Training School is for basic police entry level training to become a constable recruit. Police College is for mid level training for police constables to learn leadership and are promoted to Inspector of Police; entry requirements: ND/NCE. Police Academy (University) is for high level training, where they are taught Law, Criminology, Forensic Science, Sociology, Psychology, Computer, Accounting etc, and awarded a Bachelor’s Degree and a rank of ASP - Assistant Superintendent of Police; it requires WAEC/UTME for entry. Officer with lower ranking may further with short programmes in the academy, but due to its only location being in Kano, it has been challenging for Southerners. Hence the need for one down South, as FG believes it will increase student capacity and academic quality translating to more quality recruitment. In 2025, Tinubu also signed a bill to establish a College of Aviation in all six geopolitical zones, to reduce the pressure on the Aviation college in Zaria which has served alone since 1964. Follow @TrendingEx for daily explanations! Get ₦10k prepaid credit when you move to @VendrNg
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Mindset🗝️
Mindset🗝️@Mindset_Post·
If INEC has nothing to hide, why are they not willing to disclose the identity of the foresnic cybersecurity experts they hired?
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Sam Danaldi 🥞 retweetledi
Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
Yesterday's Advocates of democracy, Today's Oppressor of the Press Nigeria is drifting dangerously. At a time when our nation should be strengthening its vital democratic institutions, we are witnessing a pattern that shows the opposite. The recent notice by the National Broadcasting Commission, especially at this critical time of the general elections, is very troubling. A free and responsible media should not be an enemy to any administration, especially one that claims to have fought for democracy. The media is the conscience of the nation. Attempting to stifle voices, moderate opinions, or intimidate journalists under the guise of regulation only weakens our already fragile democracy. Institutions are not built to serve governments; they are built to serve the people. At a time when insecurity is on the rise, young Nigerians are losing faith in the country, and the economy continues to fail the average citizen. Our focus should not be on controlling media narratives, but on delivering results. Nigeria does not need stronger control. Nigeria needs stronger institutions. I stand in solidarity with Nigeria’s media houses and broadcasters who are standing against this attempt to silence independent voices and restrict free expression. We must return to the path of transparency, accountability, and true independence of all arms and agencies of government. We cannot continue to endanger our democracy. A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Mayor Of Calabar
Mayor Of Calabar@Uno_009·
What can N50 buy for you right now where you live?
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Sam Danaldi 🥞
Sam Danaldi 🥞@DanladiSam·
All this is happening in Waziri's home turf. Tells you all you need to know about how adept he is at territory management. x.com/IU_Wakilii/sta…
Mal. Imran U. Wakili (PULLO) 👑 #iSTANDWITHELRUFAI@IU_Wakilii

The story making the rounds that Binani wanted the ADC to hand her the ticket is not only untrue, it is a misleading narrative being pushed by the same camp responsible for the crisis that brought the party to where it is today. Binani is not someone who runs away from a fight. Anyone familiar with the APC 2022 primaries knows that. Considering the calibre of people she defeated back then, it is hard to argue that the current ADC lineup matches that level, so the claim that she is asking to be handed the ticket doesn’t even make sense, they really need to cook up a better narrative. From the beginning, her position has been very clear and consistent to those who were following, the woman only asked for a fair and level playing ground for everyone involved. Nothing more, nothing less, and many of you are aware of this. In a truly free and fair contest, Binani does not need anyone’s backing to defeat any member of the ADC. She has the structure, the recognition, and the grassroots support to stand her ground. That includes anyone who may choose to contest, even Babachir David Lawal himself, and that's what they are afraid of because they know she won’t worship them. The main issue is denying a major stakeholder like Binani, someone with arguably more followers and political weight than most within the party, even a single EXCO slot out of over 100, that is outright disrespect and exclusion, that's what she is fighting against, which is a very very very VALID to be upset. At the very least, fairness should not be too much to ask.

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Sam Danaldi 🥞
Sam Danaldi 🥞@DanladiSam·
@Eze_Wilberforce For more context: Obasanjo/Atiku – Yoruba/Hausa Fulani Yar'Adua/Goodluck – Hausa Fulani/Ijaw Buhari/Osinbajo – Hausa Fulani/Yoruba Tinubu/Shettima – Yoruba/Kanuri Why is the 3rd major tribe is conspicuously missing???
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Wilberforce Theophilus
Wilberforce Theophilus@Eze_Wilberforce·
Olusegun Obasanjo – Yoruba Umaru Musa Yar'Adua – Hausa/Fulani Muhammadu Buhari – Hausa/Fulani Bola Ahmed Tinubu – Yoruba And you say there are three major tribes in Nigeria.
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Sam Danaldi 🥞 retweetledi
Trumps Nephew
Trumps Nephew@ForgiatoBlow47·
In Nigeria, over 40 Catholic Priests has been massacred by Islamic terrorists in the last 5 years. Where was Pope? Where was Vatican?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
None. The Bible never mentions a "Pope," the office of the papacy, or any singular bishop in Rome holding supreme spiritual authority over the universal church. Verses about Peter (like Matt 16:18-19 or John 21:15-17) describe his personal role as an apostle among equals, with no mention of successors, keys being passed to Rome, or one man ruling all believers. Church leadership in Scripture is always plural (elders/overseers) under Christ as the sole head (Eph 1:22, Col 1:18).
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Sam Danaldi 🥞
Sam Danaldi 🥞@DanladiSam·
@Ivory1957 'A Lebanese-born fixer with a terrorism file, a criminal record' sits atop the resources and lords it over the most poulous black nation on earth. If this doesn't get you angry as a Nigerian, then what will?
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
THE MAN WHO SAYS HE OWNS NIGERIA A Lebanese-born fixer with a terrorism file, a criminal record, and an $11 billion contract runs West Africa’s largest country like a private estate — and Washington knows it By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International In the corridors of Lagos power, in the gilded lounges of Paris, and in the marble-floored drawing rooms of Beverly Hills, one man has for decades whispered the same thing to anyone willing to listen: I own Nigeria. His name is Gilbert Ramez Chagoury. He doesn’t say it crudely. Men like Chagoury never do. He says it through the deals he cuts, the politicians he installs, the contracts he extracts, and the governments he outlasts. He said it through Sani Abacha. He said it through Olusegun Obasanjo. He said it through Goodluck Jonathan. And he is screaming it now — louder than ever — through his most valuable political acquisition to date: President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. Let us be absolutely clear about who this man is, because the Nigerian state has decided to treat him as if he were a legitimate businessman deserving of national treasure. He is not. The Criminal Record Gilbert Chagoury is a convicted election law felon. He is not alleged. He is not suspected. He admitted it. Between 2012 and 2016, this foreign national — legally prohibited from touching U.S. elections — funneled approximately $180,000 through straw donors into the campaigns of four American federal candidates, including a presidential race. He did it through cash transfers, fraudulent wire payments marked “wedding gifts,” and layers of cutouts designed to obscure his fingerprints. He paid $1.8 million to the U.S. Department of Justice to make it go away. Before that, a chunk of Sani Abacha’s stolen billions — looted from the Nigerian people — was traced directly to accounts and businesses under Chagoury’s control. He returned approximately $65 million and paid fines. He called it a misunderstanding. Nigeria called it laundering. The Swiss convicted him of it in 2001. This is the man to whom Bola Tinubu has handed an $11 billion coastal highway contract — without public tender, without competitive bidding, without a single moment of democratic accountability. The Terrorism File In 2015, the United States government denied Chagoury a visa on the grounds of suspected terrorism links. Not corruption. Not fraud. Terrorism. The FBI held an intelligence report concluding that Chagoury had financed Michel Aoun, a Lebanese political figure, and that those funds were passed to Hezbollah. The U.S. placed him in the National Counterterrorism Center’s screening database. He was, for a period, on the no-fly list. He sued. He denied everything. The U.S. government eventually reversed his travel status. But the file never went away. The FBI, CIA, DHS, NCTC, State Department, and CBP were all named in his lawsuit — meaning every major American intelligence and law enforcement body had a record on this man. And yet — this is the part that should make every Nigerian’s blood boil — the U.S. government simultaneously entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with Chagoury that cited his “unique assistance to the U.S. government” as a mitigating factor. Read that again. A man on a terrorism watchlist. A man with a Swiss money-laundering conviction. A man who illegally funded American elections. And the Department of Justice rewarded him with a sweetheart deal because of what he was telling them. Telling them what, exactly? About whom? That question has never been answered publicly. But the architecture of what Chagoury is — a Lebanese-Nigerian billionaire with deep roots in West African governance, Abacha-era intelligence networks, Lebanese political financing, and decades of proximity to U.S. diplomatic posts in Nigeria — makes the answer self-evident to anyone paying attention. To put it plainly: the Americans have used Gilbert Chagoury as an intelligence asset. He has reported to them. He has fed them. He has been, in the language of the intelligence world, a source. That is the only rational explanation for why a man of his documented record walks free, pays a fine, and continues operating with impunity across three continents. The Bragging Those who have sat across a table from Chagoury in Lagos, in Paris, in London, know something that rarely makes it into print: this man boasts. He makes no great secret of his access to Nigerian presidents. He does not hide his belief that Nigerian governance passes through him. He has cultivated that image deliberately — because it is useful. It brings him more contracts. It brings him more politicians. It brings him more cover. He built Eko Atlantic — a private city, on reclaimed land, in Lagos — and sold the American government land there to build its new consulate. Think about that. A man flagged by the FBI for terrorism links sold the United States government its diplomatic footprint in Nigeria’s commercial capital. A State Department intelligence analyst who reviewed the deal said it plainly: either the U.S. government was incompetent and didn’t do its due diligence, or it did — and simply didn’t care. I submit it was the latter. Because Gilbert Chagoury is too useful to too many powerful people for anyone to shut him down. The Tinubu Connection Now comes the present obscenity. In 2024, President Tinubu awarded Chagoury’s company Hitech a contract for the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway worth $11 billion — with no public tender, no competitive process, and no explanation. We subsequently learned that Tinubu’s own son, Seyi Tinubu, sits on the board of one of Chagoury’s companies. We learned that Seyi Tinubu and Gilbert Chagoury’s son, Ronald Chagoury Jr., are joint shareholders in a British Virgin Islands corporate vehicle. The President of Nigeria and the man who believes he owns Nigeria are now joined at the hip — financially, commercially, and familially. The contract is not a business transaction. It is a tribute payment. It is what a president gives a kingmaker to confirm who really holds power. And in the background, in Paris, this elderly Lebanese-Nigerian billionaire leans back, lights a cigar, and tells his guests what he has been telling them for forty years. I own Nigeria. The Answer Nigeria is not for sale. It never was. It belongs to 220 million people who have never been consulted about Gilbert Chagoury’s ownership claims, who have never received a single kilometer of road without corruption attached, who watch their oil revenues vanish while private cities are built on their coastline by men who answer to foreign intelligence services and offshore shareholders. The U.S. government should be required to fully disclose what “unique assistance” Gilbert Chagoury provided. The Nigerian government should cancel the Hitech coastal highway contract immediately and subject it to public tender. The EFCC should investigate the corporate links between the Tinubu family and the Chagoury Group. And the Nigerian people should demand — loudly, and in the streets if necessary — that their country stop being managed as a private estate by a foreign billionaire with a terrorism file and a conviction record. No one elected Gilbert Chagoury. No one made him Nigeria’s proprietor. The fact that he behaves like one is the most complete indictment of everyone who enabled him that history will ever record. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027 #GilbertChagoury #TinubuMustGo #NigeriaIsNotForSale #Chagoury #EndCorruption
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
The news of the abduction of innocent UTME candidates in Benue State is not just heartbreaking but a damning indictment of the failure of leadership and the collapse of security in our nation. Young Nigerians striving for an education are being met with terror. In a country where the share of tertiary graduates is already painfully low (about 1%) which is far below peers like Indonesia (about 13%) and South Africa (around 10%). This is unacceptable. We cannot afford to lose even one more student to violence. Those entrusted with protecting these young students appear increasingly preoccupied with the next election, projecting strength and power to rig elections, rather than deploying that same power and agencies to secure our roads, prevent these crimes, and rescue the abducted children who should not be in the hands of criminals but in examination halls. This is no longer an isolated tragedy. It is a pattern. It is a national crisis. And it demands urgent, decisive, and responsible action, not excuses, not silence, but leadership that matches the scale of the emergency this deserves. A nation that abandons its youth abandons its future. This cannot continue. A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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NOTRAL 🔶 BNB
NOTRAL 🔶 BNB@notralbnb·
$CREPE was never just a moment. It’s becoming an ecosystem. Everything we build going forward is designed to support that vision.
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Fatai Ibrahim, RN,MSN 🇳🇬🇺🇸
He is threatened by Kwan ! He couldn’t hide his disdain. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Man belongs to a Nursing Home, when you lack self awareness, it’s a cardinal sign of dementia.
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
Today in Abuja, I had a breakfast meeting with some diplomats that included, the British High Commissioner to Nigeria and his Colleagues from European Union, Germany, Canada, and France. It was an enriching discussion on relationships. -PO
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