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C H U K W U E M E K A

C H U K W U E M E K A

@OnochieSony

writer ® Dad © Entrepreneur ™

South Africa Katılım Mayıs 2018
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C H U K W U E M E K A
C H U K W U E M E K A@OnochieSony·
Countries do not exist based on emotional attachments individuals have with families across existing tribes in a particular country. Countries exist for peace, development and citizens to attain their best during their lifetime. It's not binding that people who feel uncomfortable
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Economic Freedom Fighters
Economic Freedom Fighters@EFFSouthAfrica·
♦️Must Watch♦️ President and Commander in Chief @Julius_S_Malema listening to the recording of the EFFs’ Upcoming Local Government Elections Album. EFF iyeza! Register To Vote EFF In The 2026 Local Government Elections To Be Held On The 4th of November 2026 Link: registertovoteeff.org.za
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C H U K W U E M E K A@OnochieSony·
It's my anniversary here contributing to humanity through social media Do you remember when you joined X? I do! #MyXAnniversary
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Zwelinzima Vavi
Zwelinzima Vavi@Zwelinzima1·
Don't circulate this video if you're one of those blaming migration for the worsening crisis while letting the real architects go unchallenged
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Mike Arnold
Mike Arnold@MikeArnoldTruth·
This was my first visit to Nigeria in 2010. Owerri. I was with the man who would become my beloved mentor, the late, great Prof. John Ofoegbu. A real earth shaker, the most Christlike man I ever met. I traveled through Nigeria with him many times -- mainly the Delta/Biafra region. Most of my 16 trips over the years have been in and through that region. Aba, Port Harcourt, Umuahia, so many points in between and all around there. I have taken other Americans there too. The people, food, music, worship ... that is where I feel is my second home. I consider Owerri my Nigerian hometown. I have sat with many Biafran War veterans and survivors over the years and heard their stories. They are burned into my heart. I have been deeply honored to carry the title Eze Okechukwunenye for years before I became a public figure in Nigeria. I have many friends across Nigeria, from many tribes. Two of the men I today hold in the highest esteem are Fulani and Hausa -- Isa el Buba and Dr. Panam Percy Paul. All tribes have good people and bad people. We can love all, learn from all, and stand together with them for the bigger cause of universal freedom and human rights. For the Kingdom. Tribe should never be a cause for division, but celebration. Tribe is family, not a fight. In Christ there is but one tribe -- the Tribe of the Lion of Judah. That said -- while I'm not Igbo by blood, I am Igbo by adoption, and by choice. They are an amazing people, and I carry this identity with pride. #EarthShaker
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Mike Arnold
Mike Arnold@MikeArnoldTruth·
MEET THE CALIPHATE'S WAR CHIEF: From 1804 to today, the Sarkin Yaki's official job has been to conquer the Middle Belt --- Two hundred twenty-one years ago, in the dust of a small town called Gudu in present-day Sokoto State, a Fulani scholar named Usman dan Fodio raised a green banner. Around him gathered men with swords and horses. He declared a holy war. This is the moment most Western readers — and even most modern Nigerians outside the north — have been taught to think of as ancient history. It is not ancient history. It is the operating manual of what is happening tonight in Plateau State. Dan Fodio did not just raise an army. He raised a command structure. He gave specific lieutenants specific flags. Each flag carried the right to wage jihad in a specific direction. The western flag went to Gwandu. The eastern flag went to Gombe and Adamawa. The central flag stayed at Sokoto. And the southern flag — the one tasked with breaking and converting every non-Muslim community south of the Caliphate proper — went to a man named Mallam Yakubu. Yakubu took that flag and pushed south. He attacked the lands the Caliphate cavalry could not climb — the Plateau, Tafawa Balewa, Wase, Bogoro. He founded the Bauchi Emirate in 1805 as the southern operations headquarters of the jihad. And Dan Fodio gave him a title. Not just Emir. Something more specific. Something operational. Sarkin Yakin Sarkin Musulmi. In Hausa, that is "War Chief of the Commander of the Faithful." It means: when the Sultan of Sokoto wants war waged, the holder of this title carries the flag and gives the orders. It is not honorary. It is not ceremonial. It is the designated military command position of the Sokoto Caliphate's southern campaign. Every Emir of Bauchi has held that title since 1805. All eleven of them. The current holder, sitting on the throne in Bauchi tonight, is Dr. Rilwanu Suleiman Adamu Jumba, enthroned July 30, 2010. Leadership Newspaper, a major Nigerian daily, put it plainly in 2022: he was "crowned as the chief warrior of the Sokoto caliphate." Read that again. The chief warrior of the Sokoto caliphate. Not in the 1800s. Today. In 2026. The mission that never ended When Yakubu rode south with his flag, his targets were specific. The non-Muslim peoples of the Middle Belt. The Yergum. The Angas. The Tarok. The Sayawa. The Berom on the Plateau he could never quite climb. The Mwaghavul. The Bachama. Every indigenous people who would not bend to the new caliphate. Some of these names you may not recognize. They are among the most ancient peoples of West Africa. Their ancestors farmed the Plateau and the Middle Belt valleys long before Mohammed ever lived. They had their own languages, their own kings, their own gods. They never asked to be part of any caliphate. Yakubu came for them anyway. By order of Dan Fodio. Under the southern flag. And here is what most people do not know — when Yakubu went back to Sokoto in 1807 to ask Dan Fodio where to plant his capital, his first proposal was not Bauchi. It was Wase. Yes — the same Wase whose Emir today is the JNI chairman of Plateau State. Dan Fodio told Yakubu to settle further north — but make sure the southern push reaches all the way to Wase and beyond. Twelve years later, in 1817, Wase was founded as a sub-emirate under the Bauchi flag, exactly as Dan Fodio had ordered. That structure exists today. The Tribune Online — a major Nigerian newspaper — published the official record straight from Bauchi's Chief Historian, Alhaji Ado Dan Rimi: "Yakubun Bauchi was able to cover and protect most of the southern parts of the caliphate during the Jihad and had wide land coverage unlike most Emirs who concentrated only in their emirates." Translation: Yakubu was not running just one emirate. He was running the southern war machine of the entire Caliphate. His successors have inherited that mandate. Twenty-one decades later, the southern campaign has not stopped. The targets have not changed. The structure has not changed. The flag has not been lowered. What has changed is the technology. The cavalry has been replaced by AK-47s. The slave raids have been replaced by mass killings. The expansion is now denied in Washington lobby firms instead of celebrated in court chronicles. But the geography of the violence — Plateau, Tafawa Balewa, Bogoro, Wase, Bokkos, Bassa, Mangu, Riyom — is identical to the geography Yakubu was assigned in 1805. The flag is still flying. The Sarkin Yakin Sarkin Musulmi is still holding it. How the power flows Here is what every Western diplomat, every State Department analyst, every wide-eyed reporter in Abuja needs to understand. The Sokoto-Bauchi-Wase axis is not three random emirates having coincidentally similar problems. It is a single command chain, designed by Dan Fodio himself, still functioning exactly as drawn up. Sokoto holds spiritual and political authority. The Sultan is "Commander of the Faithful." He sets policy. He blesses or withholds the war. Bauchi holds military authority over the southern campaign. The Emir is the Sultan's designated war chief — Sarkin Yakin Sarkin Musulmi — with operational control over the Middle Belt expansion. Wase holds forward-deployed operational authority inside Plateau itself. The Emir is JNI chairman of Plateau State, supervising every JNI chapter in all 17 LGAs where the killing is happening. He reports up the chain to Bauchi, and through Bauchi to Sokoto. When the Sultan condemns "Allahu Akbar killers" to hell from a podium in Abuja, but the killings continue in Plateau, his own war chief in Bauchi has not lowered the flag. That is the structural fact. The Sultan can call it off in one phone call to the Emir of Bauchi. He has not. In March 2026 — six weeks before the May 6 attack on Christian mourners at Nding — the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General Waidi Shaibu, paid a formal courtesy visit to the Emir of Bauchi. He commended the Emir's "support" to the Nigerian Army. The Sarkin Yakin Sarkin Musulmi, the man whose 220-year-old title carries operational responsibility for the southern war on Christians, hosted Nigeria's top general in his palace. Six weeks later, mourners burying their dead were attacked in Plateau by Fulani militia, and according to one eyewitness on the ground, by Nigerian soldiers as well. The flag and the rifle. The throne and the trigger. Same chain. 2010: the year the flag was raised again When the 11th Emir of Bauchi took his throne on July 30, 2010, something else was new in Nigeria. For the first time in modern history, a Christian Southerner was sitting in Aso Rock as President of Nigeria — Goodluck Jonathan, sworn in on May 5 of that same year after President Yar'Adua's death. The northern Muslim political establishment did not accept that result. The unwritten zoning agreement — that the presidency rotates between North and South every two terms — had been broken by circumstance. They wanted their turn back. Within six weeks of Rilwanu's enthronement, Boko Haram launched its modern violent phase. On September 7, 2010, the group broke more than 700 inmates out of Bauchi Prison — the most spectacular jailbreak in Nigerian history. Bauchi. The seat of the Sarkin Yakin Sarkin Musulmi. The chief warrior city. Three months later, on Christmas Eve 2010, Boko Haram bombings in Jos killed more than 80 Christians. The Plateau campaign moved from skirmishes to industrial-scale slaughter. The next year, when Jonathan defeated Buhari at the polls, the Caliphate answered with mass killings. Post-election Christian massacres swept Kaduna, Kano, Bauchi, Gombe. More than 800 dead in three days. Hundreds of churches burned. By 2014, Boko Haram had displaced two million people and abducted the Chibok girls. By 2015, the northern political establishment had taken the presidency back through Buhari. By 2025, more than 125,000 Christians and 60,000 peaceful Muslims had been slaughtered in northern Nigeria and the Middle Belt. Most of it under the southern flag. I am not telling you the chief warrior personally pulled triggers. I am telling you the chronology. The flag was raised in mid-2010. The killing accelerated immediately. The southern campaign has not stopped since. This is what the 220-year-old job description looks like in modern times. The question every reporter in Abuja should ask Next time the Sultan of Sokoto walks to a podium and condemns "Allahu Akbar killers" to hell — somebody, please, ask him this: Your Eminence, when will you order your Sarkin Yakin Sarkin Musulmi — the Emir of Bauchi — to lower the flag of the southern jihad? Watch him struggle with that question. Watch him pretend he does not know what you mean. Watch him pretend the title is just historical decoration. It is not. The Tribune Online printed the title from the Bauchi Emirate's own Chief Historian. Leadership Newspaper printed it from the palace's own anniversary statement. The line is unbroken. The flag is still flying. The chief warrior is still on his throne. Two centuries. Eleven men. One mission. The Middle Belt. The Plateau. The Christian villages of southern Bauchi. Conquer them. That has been the official job description, on the record, for two hundred twenty-one years. Anybody who tells you the killings on the Plateau are random, or about cattle, or about climate, or about anything other than what they are — is selling you a lie that the Caliphate's own record contradicts. The flag is still flying. Somebody needs to lower it. #EarthShaker
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C H U K W U E M E K A@OnochieSony·
@kingbuzzlol @Newzroom405 Do you know how many soccer players that were selling tomatoes and veggies on the streets that you destroyed their livelihood? You think every soccer player is Messi?
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🐝Buzz🇿🇦LOL🐝
🐝Buzz🇿🇦LOL🐝@kingbuzzlol·
@OnochieSony @Newzroom405 We've got Africans who comply and respect South African Laws, they are welcome in the country, e.g soccer players, we love them. Who would need criminals who disrespect our law and citizens of the country?
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Newzroom Afrika
Newzroom Afrika@Newzroom405·
[WATCH] "There is no war in SADC that could justify people flocking into South Africa." Ntshavheni says the first country-of-safety principle must be applied. She says SA could not be a centre where everyone flocks to. #Newzroom405
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Eyal Yakoby
Eyal Yakoby@EYakoby·
BREAKING: Islamists are torturing civilians in Sudan before murdering them. Where is the outrage?
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Rev. Ezekiel Dachomo
Rev. Ezekiel Dachomo@ezekieldachomo0·
On May 5th, 2026, grief returned again… just 20 miles south of Jos in Plateau State. At least six more lives were taken And the pain cuts even deeper knowing this happened only hours after five others were laid to rest from a similar attack in the same land… the same soil soaked with tears How does a place bury its dead in the morning and receive more bodies by evening? How does sorrow not break a people completely? What should never be normal has become routine Bloodshed has become a daily story here And hearts are growing weary from carrying so much pain
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Namibian Presidency
Namibian Presidency@NamPresidency·
President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah has reaffirmed Government’s commitment to education, innovation, and human capital development, describing education as the foundation of Namibia’s development agenda and a key driver of economic transformation. Speaking at the Namibia University of Science and Technology (NUST) May 2026 Graduation Ceremony held at Mercure Hotel in Windhoek on Thursday, President Nandi-Ndaitwah praised NUST for its continued contribution to academic excellence, research, innovation, and national development. “NUST’s journey deserves special recognition. From its beginnings as a polytechnic institution to becoming a fully-fledged university and now a globally recognised institution of science and technology, this progress is both remarkable and inspiring,” she said. The President highlighted the university’s important role in supporting Namibia’s development through specialised programmes in areas such as Emergency Medical Care, Medical Laboratory Sciences, and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET). A total of 2,962 graduates were conferred across different disciplines, including 164 Master’s graduates and 13 Doctoral graduates. The graduating class comprised 1,187 male graduates, 1,775 female graduates, and 132 international students. While welcoming the growing number of graduates, President Nandi-Ndaitwah raised concern about the imbalance between male and female graduates, calling for renewed focus on the advancement of the boy child. “The message is clear: we must take the issue of the boy child seriously if we are to strengthen our social fabric and advance economically,” she said, while stressing the importance of equality and partnership between men and women in national development. The President further reaffirmed Government’s commitment to improving access to higher education through the Subsidised Tertiary Education Funding Model (STEFM), which supports students at public and private higher learning institutions, as well as vocational training centres. She also noted that Government has increased the family income threshold for non-tuition assistance to N$300,000, allowing more middle-income families to qualify for financial support. Speaking under the theme “Advancing Knowledge and Technological Innovations for Sustainable Development,” the President called on institutions of higher learning to align academic programmes with industry needs and practical workplace experience. She urged universities and stakeholders to fully implement the National Policy on Work Integrated Learning to better prepare graduates for the labour market. The President also encouraged the private sector to support internship and apprenticeship programmes aimed at addressing youth unemployment and bridging the gap between education and industry. On mental health, President Nandi-Ndaitwah stressed the importance of creating supportive environments for students and young professionals. “Mental health must never be treated as a matter of shame. Seeking help is not a weakness. It is an act of courage,” she said. Addressing graduates directly, the President encouraged them to embrace innovation, entrepreneurship, lifelong learning, and ethical leadership. “Do not allow anyone to tell you that a degree is merely a piece of paper. A qualification represents discipline, sacrifice, intellectual growth, and the courage to stay the course,” she said. President Nandi-Ndaitwah urged graduates to use their knowledge and skills to tackle challenges such as poverty, unemployment, inequality, climate change, and underdevelopment. “You carry the hopes and aspirations of a nation. You are the professionals, innovators, entrepreneurs, and leaders who will drive Namibia towards socio-economic stability,” she said. The President congratulated the Class of 2025, their families, and the entire NUST community, wishing graduates success as they embark on careers of service, leadership, and national development.
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Kim Heller
Kim Heller@kimheller3·
No White Lies
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Thabo Mbeki Foundation
Thabo Mbeki Foundation@TMFoundation_·
30 years ago today, at the adoption of our historic Constitution, then-Deputy President Thabo Mbeki declared that our Africanness would never be defined by race, colour, or gender. Instead, it is rooted in the truth that all Africans share a common origin and a common destiny. This document, a unique creation of African hands and minds, remains our guiding light toward a society free from fear, oppression, and inequality. South Africa belongs to all who live in it!
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Namibian Presidency
Namibian Presidency@NamPresidency·
President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah arrives at the Graduation Ceremony of Namibia University of Science and Technology (NUST), held at the Mercure Hotel, where she is delivering the keynote address. This year’s May graduation ceremony sees a total of 2,962 graduates, comprising 1,187 male and 1,775 female graduates, including 164 Master’s graduates and 13 PhD graduates. The ceremony also reflects NUST’s growing regional footprint, with 132 international students, mainly from SADC member states, graduating during the occasion.
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Economic Freedom Fighters
Economic Freedom Fighters@EFFSouthAfrica·
♦️Happening Now♦️ The President and Commander in Chief @Julius_S_Malema ending his address outside the Constitutional Court of South Africa with a revolutionary song. Register To Vote EFF In The 2026 Local Government Elections To Be Held On The 4th of November 2026 Link: registertovoteeff.org.za
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Plateau Militia Asian girl🌟
There is no such thing as simple farmers-herders clashes in our states. What we are witnessing is a silent jihad, carried out by sponsored Fulani terrorists. The Middle Belt has been battling this jihad for a very long time, and it has never truly stopped.
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Lara Logan
Lara Logan@laralogan·
Christians are being murdered & driven from the land in the ongoing genocide in northern Nigeria - carried out with the same goals shared by every Islamic terrorist group in the world.
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Lord_Black
Lord_Black@Debry84·
@HermanMashaba Wena how did you get your South African citizenship because your parents are from Mozambique, maybe we need to start with you Hermie
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Gideon Joubert - Paratus 🏴‍☠️
A very important video from Martin Hood. He explains how the government is trying to destroy firearms training, and what you can do about it.
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