Maina_De_Gentle💥💯
5.3K posts

Maina_De_Gentle💥💯
@Gentle_Maina
📊🏷YOU'VE THE POWER TO MAKE BEAUTIFUL THINGS. 📊Financial Analysts💱MBM📊Data Analysts📶 GiranRepublic 🪖🪖DIE HARD FAN OF ARMED FORCES OF NIGERIA🇳🇬🪖💪


SPECIAL FORCES EDUCATION OFFICER 🪖📚 Meet MG Abubakar, popularly known as “Dee Gentle” and “Machine Gun” a brilliant, energetic, and highly respected senior officer of the Nigerian Army Education Corps whose passion for both military excellence and academics continues to inspire many. Lt Col MG Abubakar began his military journey at the prestigious Nigerian Military School in 1995 as a boy soldier and later rose to become the Boys Staff Sergeant of Alpha Company before graduating in 2001. In 2009, he was commissioned into the Nigerian Army through DSSC 17 and distinguished himself by winning the Sword of Honour as the Overall Best Cadet alongside the Gold Medal Award. Since then, he has continued to rise through the ranks, earning promotion to Lieutenant Colonel in 2022. Despite belonging to a non-combatant corps, his passion for military professionalism pushed him to complete several elite Special Forces courses including: 🪂 Basic Airborne Course 🪂 Rigger Course 🪂 Pathfinder Course 🪂 Jump Masters Course Academically, he is equally exceptional, holding a PhD in Physics and emerging as the Best Graduating Student in both the Basic and Advanced Education Officers’ Courses. In 2017, he returned to his alma mater, NMS Zaria, as the Boys Battalion Commander where he left a lasting legacy through discipline, regimentation, and mentorship of young boy soldiers preparing for future military careers. Today, Lt Col MG Abubakar serves as the Commandant of Command Science Secondary School, Numan a true definition of brains, discipline, leadership, and Military excellence. 🇳🇬 GSK




@Gentle_Maina Him and his coursemate LtCol Imam

For God and Humanity and country ♥️ 🙏. Thank you Col. Manga God bless you Sir 🫡





INNALILLAHI WA’INA ILAIHIRRAJIUN 🥺💔 He called his friend & said, ‘My friend, once I finish serving this country, I will get married, fill my shop with goods, & continue my business.’ But not long after, he became sick & was takn to the hospital. Jst one day later, Allah took his soul 😭💔 He left this world with dreams of marriage & growing his business. But it was never destined for him.😭 The scary thing about life is that none of us knows when death will come, how it will come, or what we will be doing at that moment. Any day could be our last day in this dunya.😭💔 May Allah shower His mercy upon his soul

Have you ever been flogged by a masquerade?



Lt Col Buka Suka Dimka really sounds like a name of a person that is destined to plot a coup d'etat. The name is too hard to be conservative.

@ConciergeofEvil One of the paragraphs here caught my attention, when the COAS was addressing the issue of social media effects and spreading of misinformations, he said soldiers have no business on social media. Does it mean both the positive and negative impacts or just the negative impacts???






The Nigerian Armed Forces, Army, Navy, Air Force, and supporting units, have been engaged in one of the most intense, multi-front security operations anywhere in Africa for well over a decade. They confront Boko Haram and ISWAP in the North-East, heavily armed bandit groups across the North-West and North-Central zones, separatist militants and unknown gunmen in the South-East, and piracy along with illegal oil bunkering in the Niger Delta creeks. These are not occasional clashes. They involve daily ambushes, the destruction of IED production sites, hostage rescues under direct fire, and night operations against bandit camps concealed in thick forests and remote valleys. In recent months alone, official statements and independent reports document hundreds of terrorists and bandits neutralised, thousands of weapons recovered (including large numbers of AK-47s), IED factories destroyed, and kidnapped civilians freed. Fresh air platforms have been approved, intelligence-led technological approaches introduced, and even the United States has committed substantial funding to support counter-insurgency efforts across the region. Soldiers operate in mud, heavy rain, and extreme heat, surviving on basic combat rations, losing comrades to base attacks, yet they continue to advance. That level of commitment reflects genuine sacrifice, far removed from any public relations exercise. Public recognition, however, remains almost nonexistent beyond occasional Defence Headquarters communiqués and sparse Ministry of Defence updates. There are no widespread viral TikTok videos, no massive Instagram campaigns, and no sustained nationwide expressions of gratitude comparable to what some countries show their military. The fallen rarely receive weeks of front-page coverage or public parades. Instead, the dominant conversation is either complete silence or active hostility. Whenever the Army releases evidence of recovered explosives or a cleared terrorist hideout, certain segments of social media erupt with coordinated criticism: 🚨accusations of staged photographs, manipulated images, claims that the military is “useless,” suggestions that soldiers target civilians, or assertions that political figures have deliberately weakened the forces. 📍Some accounts, frequently tied to IPOB sympathisers as the military has repeatedly noted, run sustained efforts to discredit operations in the South-East, framing every success as part of an ethnic conspiracy. In the North, others simply label every development a “failure” even as bandits are eliminated in firefights and hostages are recovered. The Chief of Army Staff has publicly stated that relentless negative social media commentary severely damages troop morale. When personnel are risking their lives in forward positions and the citizens they protect respond by questioning their loyalty, celebrating their supposed defeat, or branding them as tools of any administration, the psychological toll is heavy. These detractors rarely limit themselves to legitimate policy critique or calls for better equipment and welfare. Far too often they appear to actively desire the military’s collapse, as though national security forces failing would somehow resolve underlying problems. That mindset conveniently overlooks the daily cost: soldiers lost in a single week to ISWAP ambushes, forward operating bases overrun, yet the same units regroup, adapt, and prevent the country from descending into complete lawlessness. The Armed Forces are not flawless. No military operating under resource constraints and facing asymmetric threats ever is. Still, they remain the primary barrier between order and widespread anarchy while most citizens go about their lives undisturbed. The contrast is stark and damaging. The same individuals who relentlessly criticise would not endure a single day in Sambisa Forest or a village under bandit control.


