Anjola
4.7K posts

Anjola
@Manlikeangy
Mobile efootball stan 3 ||RN,RPHN,RM,BNSc❤️|| Spurs Fan ❤️||political analyst
somewhere in the world Katılım Haziran 2021
207 Takip Edilen111 Takipçiler
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I put together 1000 Reasons Why You should not Vote for Tinubu in the next election.
1000-reasons.vercel.app
Good morning Nigerians.

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BREAKING
ADC is taking its fight for democracy global.
As part of our efforts to strengthen international engagement, we are establishing a Special Representatives Network across key global capitals to engage foreign governments, amplify credible information about Nigeria’s political environment, and counter one-sided government narratives.
This comes amid growing attacks on our members, attempts to undermine our leadership, and efforts to restrict political participation ahead of the 2027 General Elections.
Our representatives will engage foreign governments, international media, democracy institutions, and the Nigerian diaspora, providing regular briefings on political developments, human rights concerns, and electoral integrity.
We are also launching a National Documentation Initiative to systematically track and report incidents affecting political participation across Nigeria.
From Washington DC to London, Brussels to Addis Ababa, ADC is building a global platform for accountability.
Nigeria’s democracy must be seen, heard, and defended everywhere.


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Tinubu in Jos Confirms ‘Don't Vote for Me’ Prediction on Power Supply
During the 2023 campaign, President Tinubu made a clear electoral promise: “If I don’t give you constant electricity in four years, don’t vote for me for a second term.”
When he took office in 2023, Nigeria had a power supply of over 4,000 megawatts and lower tariffs. Today, the electricity power supply is less than 4,000 megawatts on the average, and Nigerians are paying higher tariffs. Nigeria currently has the lowest per capita electricity consumption in the world, with a rate below 30% of the African average. Africa’s average is 617kwh, Nigeria’s is 144 kWh. This means that Nigerians consume least electricity than other Africans.
In a glaring display of disregard for promises and a lack of trust, President Tinubu, during a brief airport stopover to visit grieving families of the Jos attack on Thursday, April 2, 2026, stated that one of the reasons for his 10-minute stay was that the airport had no electricity. “You have no light here I fly out in ten minutes” At a time when Nigerians are enduring days without power, our leaders cannot even stay a few minutes without it.
Now is the time to stop incompetent leaders—those lacking the capacity and compassion—who prioritise their own comfort over the well-being of the people and make empty promises.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Leadership Without Compassion is Not Leadership
During his visit to Benue State in June 2025, Bola Ahmed Tinubu stopped at the Government House but did not go to the actual scene where innocent Nigerians lost their lives. Similarly, yesterday in Jos, his engagement ended at the airport instead of at the affected communities.
What happened in Plateau yesterday highlights a complete absence of leadership. True leadership requires presence, empathy, compassion, and a willingness to meet people where their pain truly lies. For citizens who have just lost loved ones, homes, and their sense of safety, being addressed from an airport tarmac is profoundly inadequate.
This approach exacerbates the sense of abandonment already felt by innocent Nigerians who have endured repeated cycles of violence without meaningful protection or justice. Plateau deserves more than distant words; it requires urgent action and a clear commitment to ending the insecurity that continues to claim innocent lives.
In such moments, leadership must not only be visible but also tangible—standing with victims, listening to survivors, and acknowledging the depth of their grief.
If we truly desire a better Nigeria, we must demand leadership that is present, responsive, and responsible at all times.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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"tell me 5 reasons why I should vote Peter Obi"
Lmao, una think say we dey still 2022😂😂
YabaLeftOnline@yabaleftonline
“You have no light at the airport, and I have to fly back within the next 10 minutes. To the victims, there's nothing I can give you, whether it's money in millions, but console you and promise you that this experience will not repeat itself." — Tinubu tells bereaved families in Jos.
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Yesterday defenders of democracy, today's destroyers, What a shame.
What an irony of history, that the acclaimed defenders of democracy and human rights who claimed to have fought for democracy during the era of General Sani Abacha now find themselves worse than the man they opposed.
Today, General Sani Abacha, once presumed face of oppression, will be remembered as seemingly more democratic and more respectful of human rights than the so-called champions of activism from the NADECO days. Power indeed reveals character.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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The actions and utterances coming from INEC, particularly this dangerous misinterpretation of the law regarding the ADC, are not only misleading, they are calculated. They are designed. Designed to confuse the public, to weaken the opposition, and to manipulate the democratic space in favor of those who fear accountability.
Let’s be clear, laws are not toys in the hands of desperate power brokers. The law is not meant to be twisted to suit political convenience. When an institution like INEC, meant to be an impartial referee, begins to sound like an interested party, then we are no longer practicing democracy. We are staging it.
This administration has shown, time and time again, a consistent pattern: suppress dissent, frustrate opposition, and weaponize institutions. What is happening to the ADC today is not isolated, it is part of a broader, more dangerous agenda to dismantle every credible alternative voice in this country.
And when you systematically silence opposition, when you close every legitimate democratic door, what you are doing, whether you admit it or not, is pushing a nation toward anarchy.
Democracy thrives on competition. It survives on fairness. It depends on trust in institutions. Once those institutions become compromised, once citizens begin to lose faith in the process, the consequences are not theoretical, they are real, they are dangerous, and they are irreversible if not checked.
We will not accept a democracy where the referee rewrites the rules mid-game.
We will not accept a system where the law is interpreted based on who is in power.
We will not accept intimidation dressed up as regulation.
This is bigger than the ADC. This is about the soul of our democracy. And to those who believe they can intimidate, suppress, or outmaneuver the will of the people, let this be a warning: history is never kind to those who undermine justice. Power is transient. But the consequences of injustice endure.
Nigeria must not, and will not, be pushed into chaos because a few individuals are afraid of a fair contest.
We demand accountability, integrity, and a democracy that works, not one that is manipulated. Anything less is unacceptable.
-DrMo


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A CALL TO SAVE NIGERIA: NATIONWIDE PROTEST TO DEFEND NIGERIA’S DEMOCRACY
#OccupyINEC #SaveNigeria
2nd April, 2026
Issued by: Obidient Movement
There are moments in the life of a nation when silence becomes dangerous and inaction becomes complicity. Nigeria has arrived at such a moment.
Across the country, there is a growing sense that the foundations of our democracy are being tested.
The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which should stand as an impartial guardian of the people’s will, is increasingly perceived as compromised under the present administration.
At the same time, opposition voices appear to be under pressure in ways that raise serious concerns about the future of Nigeria’s multi-party democracy.
When institutions lose credibility, the will of the people is endangered. And when that happens, citizens have a duty to act.
The Obidient Movement remains committed to a Nigeria where institutions are strong, elections are credible, and leadership reflects the true choice of the people. It is from this position of responsibility that we state clearly that urgent corrective action is required to restore confidence in the electoral system and protect the integrity of our democracy.
Our Demands
The resignation of the INEC Chairman for gross abuse of office, loss of public trust, and failure to uphold the neutrality required of that office.
An immediate end to political persecution, including all forms of intimidation, harassment, and targeting of opposition voices.
The protection of Nigeria’s multi-party democracy, with a halt to all actions that undermine opposition parties.
Full respect for party autonomy, ensuring that the internal leadership and integrity of political parties, including ADC, are not interfered with.
In defence of these principles, we are commencing a nationwide peaceful protest, #OccupyINEC, starting immediately across all states and the Federal Capital Territory.
This is a call to action grounded not in anger, but in duty — a collective effort to safeguard the democratic future of our country.
In Abuja, participants will converge at the ADC National Headquarters. The date and time will be announced accordingly, from where a peaceful march will proceed to the INEC Headquarters.
Across the nation, Obidients and all well-meaning Nigerians are encouraged to organise, mobilise, and participate in a coordinated and disciplined manner.
This moment goes beyond party lines. It is about the survival of democratic values and the protection of the Nigerian state itself.
We will remain peaceful, we will remain lawful, but we will not stand by while our democracy is weakened.
Nigeria must not become a one-party state. We will stand, firmly and collectively, until what is right is done.
A New Nigeria is Possible — but only if we defend it.
Signed
Obidient Movement

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