Efe_Paul_Azino

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Efe_Paul_Azino

Efe_Paul_Azino

@EFEPAUL

Vagabond and doer @lagospoetryfest, @creativeafricang, @marokomag |Author For Broken Men Who Cross Often (@farafinabooks)

New York. Lagos. Katılım Temmuz 2009
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Efe_Paul_Azino
Efe_Paul_Azino@EFEPAUL·
"The Nigerian state, having learned from the Abacha years that direct repression generated too much international attention, developed more sophisticated methods for neutralizing dissent. Instead of killing intellectuals, it began buying them." africasacountry.com/2025/11/how-mu…
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Abubakar Evuti
Abubakar Evuti@NgugiEvuti·
Abuja has no transport system. It’s a mystery how people without cars get around. Someone dropped me off at Berger junction yesterday and I did not know how to get to Mabushi with my dignity intact.
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Amara Nwankpa
Amara Nwankpa@Nwankpa_A·
Every society builds cohesion through encounters in a commons - a place where members can engage without encroaching into each other's boundaries. The reclaiming of Jabi Lake Park is a withdrawal and enclosure of one of such commons. It enacts damage to society.
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Ayodele Lawal Adio
Ayodele Lawal Adio@iamayolawal·
In March alone, Eti-Osa received nearly ₦2 billion from FAAC (₦1,943,613,804.20). Yet when a tree fell and blocked traffic for three straight days at Bishop Oluwole street in VI, not a single local government official was anywhere to be found. Now, I’m told a few men with cutlasses from @LASPARKLagos are doing everything they can to clear the road. Local governments in Lagos are badly misgoverned, with little to no accountability to the people. Does Eti-Osa look like a local government that has received almost ₦25 billion in one year, excluding IGR?
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Nigerian Bar Association
Nigerian Bar Association@NigBarAssoc·
NBA NEC CONDEMNS MISUSE OF CRIMINAL PROCESS IN CIVIL AND DEFAMATION MATTERS The National Executive Council (NEC) of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), at its meeting held on Thursday, 7 May 2026 in Awka, Anambra State, adopted a resolution condemning the increasing misuse of criminal law enforcement mechanisms in disputes fundamentally civil in nature, particularly matters relating to defamation and reputational injury. NEC considered recent reports involving the arrest of individuals over a viral social media publication concerning businessman Mr. Tony Elumelu and expressed concern over the growing tendency to deploy police powers in matters that ought properly to be resolved through civil legal processes. The Council emphasized that while false and defamatory publications may give rise to legal consequences, civil remedies such as defamation proceedings provide lawful and adequate avenues for redress without resort to arrest, detention, or criminal prosecution. NEC warned that the criminalisation of essentially civil disputes undermines constitutional safeguards, including the rights to personal liberty, freedom of expression, and fair hearing. The Council further noted that the abuse of police powers in civil disputes risks creating a chilling effect on lawful expression and public discourse. NEC therefore called on law enforcement agencies to exercise restraint and ensure that criminal processes are not improperly invoked in matters that do not disclose recognised criminal offences under Nigerian law. The Council also demanded the immediate release of any person arrested solely in connection with such publications where no lawful criminal offence has been disclosed.
Nigerian Bar Association tweet media
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Mr. El-Bonga
Mr. El-Bonga@el_bonga·
Nigeria is subsidising jet fuel used by less than 5% of the entire population, but turning deaf ears and blind eyes to petroleum used by more than 90% of the entire nation’s population. The former is for the elite; as for the latter, they’re on their own.
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Cross˚
Cross˚@Elkrosmediahub·
Oh boy!!!! Do you know how indicting this revelation is??? Members of a news media being allocated lands??? Interviews being paid for by the interviewees??? 🤯🤯
Imran Muhammad@Imranmuhdz

Have you seen the list of those to whom we allocated land? It's because these ones became public. Do you know how many people working at Channels TV that have land? Did you come here to interview for free? I am not going to pay for the live interview. - Wike to Channels TV reporter

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adedotun eyinade
adedotun eyinade@omotisa·
What is it about the Nigerian military that makes its members so eager to brutalize the civilian population. At the slightest provocation, the recourse is brutality. This is a gratuitous carryover from the better forgotten years of dictatorship and has no place in a democracy.
TheCable@thecableng

Soldier assaults TheCable journalist in Lagos A soldier assaulted Olalekan Fakoyejo, assistant business editor with TheCable, over a remark on traffic obstruction around Ikeja in Lagos state. The incident occurred on Saturday, May 2, as Fakoyejo made his way to Ogba from Ikeja inside a tricycle popularly known as ‘Keke Napep’. thecable.ng/soldier-assaul… Cc: @DHQNigeria

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Dwin, The Stoic
Dwin, The Stoic@DwinTheStoic·
It’s no wonder we’re where we are as a people. See our young people, see how defeated they are. Congratulating the person making people’s lives hell, millions of Nigerians suffering under his watch. Months to the election. Already conceding. Tufia.
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Káyọ̀dé Ògúndámisí 🇳🇬
We spent years in the South West shouting ourselves hoarse about “Fulani hegemony.” Now, in a twist of irony, we are busy constructing a Yoruba version of the same thing. Let’s be honest: this has absolutely nothing to do with Yoruba self determination. Nothing. In fact, the very actors now parading as defenders of “Yoruba interests” systematically dismantled genuine self-determination movements, groups that could challenge them on ideological grounds. In their place, they empowered loyalists and opportunists, people more interested in pleasing the political establishment than questioning why a region’s commonwealth is being funneled to a select few. The same playbook. A different cast. Those waving the banners of “Fulani” yesterday and “Yoruba” today are not fighting for their people. They are fighting for themselves, for power, access, and wealth. That’s the real agenda. Ethnicity is just the costume. The script is class self enrichment. What we are witnessing is not liberation. It is elite capture, dressed up as tribal solidarity, packaged as destiny, and sold to the masses. And once again, ordinary people are expected to clap. Guess what? There are no subsided market for the Yoruba, the rain is falling on everyone with or without tribal marks.
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Glasgow 2026
Glasgow 2026@Glasgow_2026·
Amazing Amusan 🇳🇬
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Emeka Azuka Okoye
Emeka Azuka Okoye@EmekaOkoye·
My dad was a Registrar at UCH Ibadan before the war broke out. After the war, the first cablegram he got was from UCH asking when they should expect him to resume his duties. #Nigeria
Polyglot adedeji Odulesi@polyglotodulesi

During the Nigerian Civil War, many Igbo people fled cities like Lagos, leaving behind houses and property. Alex Ekwueme (then a young architect) left his house in Apapa. His neighbour, Otunba Subomi Balogun, a banker did not seize the property. Instead, he removed intruders from the house, renovated it and rented it out while Ekwueme was away. He carefully kept all the rent proceeds. When the war ended and Ekwueme returned, Balogun handed back the house to him and gave him a full envelope of all the rent collected Ekwueme was reportedly shocked, because many others lost their properties during that period. About a decade later, Ekwueme became Vice President under President Shehu Shagari (Second Republic, 1979–1983). Subomi Balogun wanted to establish his own bank but faced significant hurdles at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Officials resisted because it was unprecedented for a private Nigerian citizen to own a commercial bank without foreign partners; there were also political suspicions (some alleged he might use it to finance certain politicians). After failing to get traction through official channels, Balogun turned to his old friend. One Sunday after Church Service, he and his wife "cornered" Ekwueme at the Cathedral Church in Marina, Lagos. They physically grabbed Ekwueme and his wife's clothing to get past security and plead their case. Ekwueme listened, reassured him, and instructed him to come to the Federal Executive Council meeting he would preside over (as Shagari was absent). That very Thursday, the Finance Minister called Balogun to confirm that the license had been approved on Ekwueme's instruction. This paved the way for FCMB and reportedly opened doors for other indigenous banks. Balogun later opened an FCMB branch in Ekwueme's hometown of Oko (Anambra State) in continuation of their friendship. We love ourselves, it is the politicians that are dividing us.

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-valar morghulis-
-valar morghulis-@eldivine·
My dad had a similar experience. He owned three FMCG stores in Yaba, Tejuosho to be precise. After the war he didn't even come back to Lagos immediately because he felt he might not be welcome. Instead he moved to PH then to Sapele and started doing imports of sewing machines (many Igbo people started itinerant sewing which led them to Okrika). He couldn't crack the business however so his friend who had moved to Cotonou asked him to come join him. On his way there he passed through Lagos and decided to stop by his former area (two full years after the war ended) and found out that his long term neighbor a Yoruba man had kept his 3 shops running, restocking it and keeping all the records. When he saw my dad he told him he'd been looking for a way to reach him since the war ended, even sending messages but post war craziness meant no way to find him. He totaled the money he'd managed plus the cost of buying the stores and everything added up to £9,000. That's what my dad took plus the £6,000 he made from selling off his old business and started doing shoe and textile imports in Lome from 1973 onwards. Many such cases.
Polyglot adedeji Odulesi@polyglotodulesi

During the Nigerian Civil War, many Igbo people fled cities like Lagos, leaving behind houses and property. Alex Ekwueme (then a young architect) left his house in Apapa. His neighbour, Otunba Subomi Balogun, a banker did not seize the property. Instead, he removed intruders from the house, renovated it and rented it out while Ekwueme was away. He carefully kept all the rent proceeds. When the war ended and Ekwueme returned, Balogun handed back the house to him and gave him a full envelope of all the rent collected Ekwueme was reportedly shocked, because many others lost their properties during that period. About a decade later, Ekwueme became Vice President under President Shehu Shagari (Second Republic, 1979–1983). Subomi Balogun wanted to establish his own bank but faced significant hurdles at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Officials resisted because it was unprecedented for a private Nigerian citizen to own a commercial bank without foreign partners; there were also political suspicions (some alleged he might use it to finance certain politicians). After failing to get traction through official channels, Balogun turned to his old friend. One Sunday after Church Service, he and his wife "cornered" Ekwueme at the Cathedral Church in Marina, Lagos. They physically grabbed Ekwueme and his wife's clothing to get past security and plead their case. Ekwueme listened, reassured him, and instructed him to come to the Federal Executive Council meeting he would preside over (as Shagari was absent). That very Thursday, the Finance Minister called Balogun to confirm that the license had been approved on Ekwueme's instruction. This paved the way for FCMB and reportedly opened doors for other indigenous banks. Balogun later opened an FCMB branch in Ekwueme's hometown of Oko (Anambra State) in continuation of their friendship. We love ourselves, it is the politicians that are dividing us.

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Polyglot adedeji Odulesi
Polyglot adedeji Odulesi@polyglotodulesi·
During the Nigerian Civil War, many Igbo people fled cities like Lagos, leaving behind houses and property. Alex Ekwueme (then a young architect) left his house in Apapa. His neighbour, Otunba Subomi Balogun, a banker did not seize the property. Instead, he removed intruders from the house, renovated it and rented it out while Ekwueme was away. He carefully kept all the rent proceeds. When the war ended and Ekwueme returned, Balogun handed back the house to him and gave him a full envelope of all the rent collected Ekwueme was reportedly shocked, because many others lost their properties during that period. About a decade later, Ekwueme became Vice President under President Shehu Shagari (Second Republic, 1979–1983). Subomi Balogun wanted to establish his own bank but faced significant hurdles at the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Officials resisted because it was unprecedented for a private Nigerian citizen to own a commercial bank without foreign partners; there were also political suspicions (some alleged he might use it to finance certain politicians). After failing to get traction through official channels, Balogun turned to his old friend. One Sunday after Church Service, he and his wife "cornered" Ekwueme at the Cathedral Church in Marina, Lagos. They physically grabbed Ekwueme and his wife's clothing to get past security and plead their case. Ekwueme listened, reassured him, and instructed him to come to the Federal Executive Council meeting he would preside over (as Shagari was absent). That very Thursday, the Finance Minister called Balogun to confirm that the license had been approved on Ekwueme's instruction. This paved the way for FCMB and reportedly opened doors for other indigenous banks. Balogun later opened an FCMB branch in Ekwueme's hometown of Oko (Anambra State) in continuation of their friendship. We love ourselves, it is the politicians that are dividing us.
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