kehinde awofegha
1.5K posts

kehinde awofegha retweetledi
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

Yes. Fawaz now works with a prestigious fashion brand, Ayomide is completing his degree at Miva university, Jamiu won the United Nations games in New York and will be returning this summer for an internship with @icnnyc
This is my life’s work and promise to every child I meet.

Olamilekan@Sir_Perryy
They are all the validation you need
English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

The power of testimony. A student beneficiary of NELFUND sends appreciation the way of President Tinubu for making his graduation possible from LAUTECH Ogbomoso. Thank you. Mr. President
OLADEPO Caleb Olugbenga@YhungProf0
@NELFUND I'm honored to let you know that I am the Best Graduating Student of @lautechofficial ✨✨ Your loans made it possible • OLADEPO, CALEB OLUGBENGA • B. Tech (First Class: 4.89/5.0) #LAUConvo18th #nelfund
English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

🚨| Peter Obi on his austere lifestyle,
“I have said it to Nigerians, Peter Obi wears only black shoes, and I have two pairs of them, and I travel with them”
🚨 | Nyesom Wike exposing Peter Obi,
“I will tell you something. When PDP had no problem, we went to Anambra state for a gubernatorial campaign and when we finished that campaign, we went to somebody's (Peter Obi) house. I just sat down. Come and see the best of drinks, this and that. So, I called him, I said you are providing cristal champagne (₦515,000 – ₦560,000) here but every day, you tell people that you wear only one shoe, you carry your own bag, only you. But look at champagne here. Not just champagne, cristal.
“Why do we deceive Nigerians? Why can’t we tell ourselves the simple truth?What you preach is not what you practice. And you know, we like to hear such things but that is being deceitful.
And these are the kind of things that I tell Nigerians, look, don’t allow people to deceive you. People who are preaching that they care for you, they don’t care for you, they don’t think about you. They only try to use you to climb”.

English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

14-Year-Old Ekiti Student who won the 2026 African Spelling Bee Champion (Junior Category) as been crowned the Nigerian of the week by the National Orientation Agency of Nigeria 🤩
In a historic achievement, 14-year-old Adeolu Oluwadamilola Ooreofe from Ekiti has been crowned the champion of the 2026 African Spelling Bee junior category held in Harare, Zimbabwe.
Damilola a student of St. Lawrence Metropolitan College in Ado Ekiti, outclassed competitors from over twenty African nations to secure her place as an African Champion
The talented speller began her journey by winning first place in Ekiti State, followed by a second-place finish at the national level in Port Harcourt, ultimately leading to her crowning as the champion in the junior category of the competition.
Damilola faced tough competition from bright young spellers from countries such as South Africa, Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Malawi, among others, to eventually emerged as the champion of the prestigious event.
As a reward for her outstanding and exceptional performance, Damilola also received an educational scholarship of five thousand dollars along with an award plaque.
Before this remarkable achievement, she had already garnered several academic accolades, including second place in the 2023 MTN Spelling Bee, second place in the 2024 Ekiti State Spelling Bee, fifth place in the 2025 Africa Spelling Bee, and second place in the 2025 Nigeria Spelling Bee.
It’s worth noting that Damilola was coached by a renowned and award-winning tutor Mr. Gbenga Julius, who has also been recognized for mentoring another 14-year-old speller from Ekiti who was recently crowned the overall champion at the Nigeria MTN Mpluse Spelling Bee competition.
Prior to this laudable feat, Damilola is set to represent Africa at the World Spelling Bee in China later this year.
As news of her victory spreads, there are increasing calls for both the Ekiti State and Federal Government to formally acknowledge her exceptional achievement.
Her coach has also urged the government to recognize this accomplishment as not just a personal victory for Damilola, but as a moment of national pride that highlights the potential of Ekiti and Nigeria in international educational arenas.
Observers also believe Damilola’s success sends a strong message about the capabilities of Nigerian students when provided with adequate educational resources and support, serving as an inspiration for countless young learners across the nation.
🏜️ @ekititrends

English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

The confidence with which President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (@officialABAT ) spoke here boils down to the good job being done by the people in his cabinet.
Dr Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo (@BTOofficial) has been very thorough in his duties as the Minister of Interior and you can here people attest to it in the video.
#TBTinMOI
#TinubuInMOI
English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

Congratulations, Caleb!
A great future awaits you 👏🏽👏🏽.
#RenewedHope
OLADEPO Caleb Olugbenga@YhungProf0
@NELFUND I'm honored to let you know that I am the Best Graduating Student of @lautechofficial ✨✨ Your loans made it possible • OLADEPO, CALEB OLUGBENGA • B. Tech (First Class: 4.89/5.0) #LAUConvo18th #nelfund
English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

Dear Fake RONU – Late-Comers Have No Place Among Us
By A True RONU Voice
Dear fake RONU,
Let us speak plainly, without the pretence and the sudden “solidarity” that appears only when it suits you. We are writing this article on the late-comers RONU – those who have just discovered the name, wrapped themselves in it like borrowed agbada, and now claim to speak for the movement while openly hating the President and positioning themselves as opposition.
How can you be RONU and still be in the opposition camp, pouring venom on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu? How can you wear the RONU cap and at the same time denigrate the very government that is carrying the Yoruba heritage forward? True RONU does not do “buts.” We do not negotiate our loyalty with conditions. You cannot be RONU and still be a “Yoruba but.”
You cannot be RONU and still be an APC hater while pretending the party has no RONU blood in it. APC is not RONU, true. But RONU members are in APC, just as RONU members have always been wherever Yoruba interest is being defended. RONU is not a party. RONU is a spirit. It has migrated honourably from the Action Group through the Agbekoya rising and every genuine Yoruba struggle since. It does not begin and end with any single platform. It is bigger than any logo.
RONU is not a money-spinning entity.
We are not in this for contracts, appointments, or the next “empowerment” handout. Those who joined yesterday because they saw opportunity are already exposing themselves. Real RONU has never been for sale.
RONU is not a feminist coven.
This is not a gender war or a social media cult. It is a heritage movement rooted in Yoruba dignity, history, and collective progress. We do not twist it into any foreign ideology or personal grievance.
We in RONU are in full support of President Tinubu. Full stop.
That support is not blind; it is principled. We will never support those who denigrate our heritage, who mock our fathers’ struggles, who turn Yoruba unity into a bargaining chip for relevance. We will never stand with those who speak from both sides of the mouth – praising Yoruba when it is convenient and stabbing Yoruba leadership in the back when it is not.
RONU buts…
Yoruba buts… There is no room for you here.
This movement belongs to those who have been consistent from the beginning. Those who understood RONU before it became fashionable. Those who know that being Yoruba is not a part-time identity and that supporting a Yoruba President is not optional when he is delivering for the race.
Late-comers, take your “buts” elsewhere.
The real RONU house has no vacancy for double agents, opposition mouthpieces, or heritage denigrators.
We stand with Tinubu.
We stand with Yoruba progress.
We stand unapologetically as RONU. No buts. No exceptions. No late-comers allowed.
Àṣẹ.
RONU till the end.

English

@NELFUND
I'm honored to let you know that I am the Best Graduating Student of @lautechofficial ✨✨
Your loans made it possible
• OLADEPO, CALEB OLUGBENGA
• B. Tech (First Class: 4.89/5.0)
#LAUConvo18th #nelfund




English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

Peter Obi built nothing in Anambra when he was Governor.
No schools built by him, no factories, no companies, no malls, no major projects, nothing.
He didn’t even build his own people, never invested in anybody.
No Anambra man can tell you he’s successful today because of Peter Obi.
You can’t build your state, you can’t build your people, so what are you going to do as President?
English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

Nigeria’s primary healthcare system is recording steady and measurable progress, as highlighted in the National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA) Q1 2026 briefing, with renewed investments driving improved access, stronger capacity, and better service delivery across the country.
Key Highlights include:
- Large-scale facility upgrades: Over 4,000 Primary Health Care centres have been revitalised nationwide, improving infrastructure and service environments.
- Improved sanitation standards: Upgrades now include essential water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) facilities in PHCs.
- Massive workforce training: 78,554 frontline health workers have been trained across all 774 LGAs, strengthening service delivery at community level.
- Expanded skilled workforce: Over 19,000 skilled birth attendants and nearly 4,000 community health workers have been recruited.
- Better maternal care support: Maternal and newborn health commodities have been distributed across all LGAs to improve safe delivery outcomes.
- Strengthened immunisation coverage:
HPV vaccination rollout expanded to multiple states.
Malaria vaccines administered to over 1.2 million children across participating states.
- Health system strengthening: Emphasis on local production of essential health commodities to reduce import dependence.
- Improved access in underserved areas: Focus on hard-to-reach communities is expanding equitable healthcare delivery.
- Restoring public confidence: Ongoing reforms aim to rebuild trust and encourage greater use of primary healthcare facilities.
English

@jpattueyi Any money Peter Obi spends is the Anambra state money he kept in his bank. Even though he has not spent any yet!
English

kehinde awofegha retweetledi
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

Read to be educated who Wale Edun is, and why I penned an ode to him.
Granite, Ledger, and Lineage: Reading Wale Edun Through Egba History
In a country often captivated by improvisation, it is easy to miss the quieter tradition of governance that does not announce itself with spectacle. Yet, in the figure of Wale Edun, there is a discernible continuity one that runs from the granite outcrops of Abeokuta into the modern architecture of Nigerian fiscal policy.
This is not merely biography; it is lineage expressed as method.
To understand Edun is to return to the institutional experiment that was the Egba United Government, and to the steady hand of Adegboyega Edun administrator, reformer, and one of the earliest practitioners of structured governance in what would become Nigeria. In that era, Abeokuta was not a passive recipient of colonial instruction; it was an active site of hybrid statecraft, blending indigenous authority with bureaucratic rationality. The Edun name became synonymous with that synthesis.
The signposts are clear.
First, the primacy of education as statecraft. The Saro-Egba tradition did not treat learning as ornament but as infrastructure. From Sierra Leone to London, from mission schools to administrative chambers, knowledge was the currency that enabled mediation between worlds. Wale Edun follows this exact arc University of London, global finance, and a return to public service. This is not coincidence; it is pattern.
Second, the preference for systems over slogans. Adegboyega Edun’s tenure was marked by the building of institutions police, courts, revenue structures, trade frameworks. It was governance by design. In Lagos, decades later, Edun would help architect fiscal reforms under Bola Tinubu that transformed a subnational economy into a revenue-generating engine. Again, the echo is unmistakable: order over noise, structure over improvisation.
Third, the comfort with operating at the hinge of power. The old Egba bureaucratic elite were neither monarchs nor mere functionaries; they were the hinge translating authority into policy, and policy into outcomes. Wale Edun occupies a similar space in contemporary governance: not the loudest voice in the room, but often the one shaping its parameters.
Fourth, the Abeokuta–Lagos axis. Historically, Egba influence did not remain bounded by the walls of Abeokuta. It flowed into Lagos commercially, intellectually, administratively. Today’s political economy of Lagos still bears the imprint of that migration of talent and capital. Edun’s career, straddling both geographies, is a modern articulation of an old pathway.
But lineage, if it is to matter, must do more than repeat itself it must adapt.
The challenge before technocrats like Wale Edun is not simply to inherit a tradition of competence, but to deploy it in a far more volatile environment: a democratic space impatient with austerity, suspicious of expertise, and often drawn to the immediacy of populist relief over the discipline of long-term reform.
Here lies the tension.
Egba political culture, at its best, privileges deliberation, restraint, and institutional continuity. Contemporary Nigerian politics often rewards the opposite speed, spectacle, and transactional appeal. The risk, therefore, is not that the Edun tradition is obsolete, but that it is under-communicated in a political marketplace that undervalues quiet competence.
And yet, history suggests that such traditions endure precisely because they are not built for applause.
The granite of Abeokuta does not shift with the weather. It holds.
So too does a certain philosophy of governance one that sees the state not as a stage, but as a system; not as a theatre of personalities, but as an architecture of rules and outcomes.

English
kehinde awofegha retweetledi

Between 1980 to 2023.... Hundreds of powerful manufacturing factories were completely shutdown in Nigeria....
Major textile hubs in Kaduna, Kano, Lagos, Aba all wiped off...
Automotive giants like Peugeot, Volkswagen, Leyland and Anamco all packed up...
Dunlop the famous tyre company, Mitchellen...
Pharmaceutical giants... Pfizer, GSK,
Multinationals present (GSK, Sanofi, Pfizer ...
These were big players employing hundreds of thousands of Nigerians...
Tinubu didn't chase them from Nigeria.... When they were living most Nigerians never cared what killed them.... They were more interested in rice and pepper soup....
Industries in any Nation collapse due to the following reasons....
Exchange rate overvaluation....
FX scarcity
Power crisis
Policy instability
Poor logistics and ports
High cost of capital (interest rates >25–30%)
Cheap imported finished goods
The biggest killer was Exchange rate overvaluation.... Naira was overvalued for the better part of 1980 to 2023...
IBB tried to correct these with SAP... Despite massive attack against him... Nigeria manufacturing share of GDP expanded to over 20% till 1994 when Abacha reversed everything...
And The Nigeria manufacturing sector completely collapse... Subsequent administration continue the overvaluation and Nigeria became a dumping ground for foreign goods.....
Overvaluation of Naira... massively favors importers that's why importers like peter Obi are richer than manufacturers...
The local industries were no longer able to compete with foreign ones , so they close shop..
Nigeria became a dumping ground for all kinds of foreign goods....
With the floating of the Naira and Naira finding it's true value under Tinubu.... There is no better time to be a manufacturer in Nigeria than now....
Export of none oil manufactured goods are at all time high...
Manufacturing companies profit are at all time high...
Manufacturing companies stocks are at all time high...
There are no major company that has shut operation in Nigeria in the last two years... We are talking of manufacturing shop not fast food joints...
Of these factors obstructiing Nigeria industrial growth
Tinubu has fixed the following...
Exchange rate overvaluation ✓
FX scarcity ✓
Power crisis ( pending in next phase)
Policy instability ✓
Poor logistics and ports(ongoing work) ✓
High cost of capital (interest rates >25–30%) X
Cheap imported finished goods ( ongoing work)
For Atiku and others who think they can reverse these gains.....
They are the reason why the Urhobos will always say...

English

@ajokeomojolade Ma da won Lohan oo! Omo to fine ni e!
Indonesia





