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Pablo not Escobar 💀👨🔬
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Pablo not Escobar 💀👨🔬
@Pascal42K
Pharmacist | Content Writer
Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Mayıs 2021
835 Takip Edilen536 Takipçiler
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EXCLUSIVE: Tinubu’s NSA Ribadu Orders Army To Conceal Boko Haram, ISWAP Attacks Until After 2027 Elections –Military Sources | Sahara Reporters bit.ly/3R4iZN4

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@TrendingEx Tinubu na one term President sha. Make dem continue
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1.If he emerged as the nominee of the coalition Opposition party the ADC, his chances of being President would not have been zero as it is the case with NDC.
2. It’s a no brainer that even in the North where we are saying he has no foothold ,sticking with the coalition would have given him a good chance of being sold (would still be a hard sell).
3. . If he stayed with the ADC, he would have supported a United effort to unseat Mr Tinubu and perhaps get to the presidency as well and get closer instead of the history defining move he has made which ensures opposition fragmentation and Mr Tinubu upper hand .
Agent Jake@Hitee_
Was he going to be president under ADC ? At least you’ve shown us a million reasons why the North will not vote for him , so what do you feel the difference would be ?
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This is hilarious! It reminds me of the Late Dr. Emmanuel Ijewere in 2004. We were trying to buy a company selling telco airtime where he was Chairman and the numbers didn’t look good. He liked me for some reason (maybe because we always met in church at Falomo) and decided to discourage us from buying.
After some talking, he told us to forget the business and took us to the back of his house in Ikoyi. He got a bowl, dipped his hand and threw some food into the concrete ponds they created behind and fish came swarming up to eat.
He said - “This is 4 million Naira from my backyard each harvest. This is how I pay for the school fees of my kids. This is the business you should be into.”
I once again remembered what Chief Ibru told me. “Go and sell fish, everyone eats fish.” Dr. Ijewere later expanded his pond into a large and profitable farm that still exists today in the Lagos/Epe axis.
Very few people in Nigeria tell you the true source of their wealth. Even those her friends selling wine would have their own secrets they hide from her.
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As of today, there are about 22 Registered political parties in Nigeria.
You're from the south-east, why don't you buy form and negotiate 500 years.
Arc Uche Rochas@U_Rochas
Dear South East, your son Obi has negotiated a single 4-year term deal with Nigeria, while others are negotiating for a minimum of 8 years, if possible. Please, is 4 years enough for a geopolitical zone that has never truly occupied the nation’s power house in the history of Nigeria?
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Where we are, national unity is no longer optional; it is a national necessity. We must rise above ethnicity, religion, region, and political divisions to recover the soul of our nation.
With unity and effective leadership, Nigeria can become a productive and prosperous nation once again. We must deliberately support agriculture and manufacturing so they become the highest contributors to our Gross Domestic Product. Special strategic attention must be given to unlocking the enormous agricultural potential of Northern Nigeria and connecting it to industrial production across the federation. We must move decisively from a nation of consumption to a nation of production.
We can no longer afford policies that foreclose our youth.
With competent, compassionate and transformative leadership, we can defeat insecurity, reduce corruption, create jobs, tame inflation, improve education, and restore hope to millions of Nigerians. Our youths must no longer be viewed as problems to manage, but as assets to empower. Our women must no longer be neglected, but included as equal partners in nation-building.
I remain convinced that a new Nigeria is possible, a Nigeria that is united, secure, productive, inclusive, and governed by justice and fairness. Let us therefore move forward with courage, with unity, and with our collective resolve. -PO




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"Some men change their party for the sake of their principles; others change their principles for the sake of their party." Winston Churchill
Today, May 9th, I attended the 1st convention of my latest party, the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) in Abuja, Nigeria. The convention was successful and continued to show the resilience of Nigerians to change
I express my sincere appreciation and gratitude to the NDC family, led by the distinguished Senator Henry Seriake Dickson, for inviting us and for the generosity of spirit with which they have accommodated us at this critical moment in our national journey.
I also wish to express profound gratitude to the African Democratic Congress(ADC), particularly Distinguished Senator David Mark, for providing a democratic platform and showing uncommon understanding when the ongoing litigation forced us out of the Labour Party and the New Nigeria People's Party, NNPP respectively. That spirit of solidarity must remain the foundation upon which a better Nigeria will be built.
Today, the most painful aspect of our political existence is that many who once benefited from democratic governance have now become willing accessories to the destruction of democracy itself. Those who once fought for justice now openly celebrate electoral injustice. Those who once spoke against impunity now defend coercion, manipulation, intimidation, and outright political gangsterism, especially against opposition voices. What we are witnessing is not politics; it is a systematic assault on democracy and the will of the people.
Nigeria today stands at a dangerous crossroads. Our democracy is under severe threat. Our nation is drifting without direction, and our people are passing through immense suffering. Across the world, Nigeria is increasingly described as a failing and disgraced nation. This is not the destiny God ordained for our great country. It was not always so, and it must never be allowed to remain so.
Across virtually every recognised indicator of good governance - accountability, political stability, rule of law, control of corruption, government effectiveness, regulatory quality, and the separation of powers - Nigeria continues to record alarming failures. The institutions that should protect the people are weakening daily, while the burden on ordinary citizens grows heavier with each passing moment.
Today, over 140 million Nigerians live in multidimensional poverty. Tens of millions of young people remain unemployed or underemployed. Inflation continues to crush families. Businesses are shutting down. Farmers can no longer safely access their farms. Communities live in fear. In this month alone, hundreds of innocent Nigerians have lost their lives to insecurity, while many others have been kidnapped, displaced, or thrown deeper into poverty.
The most heartbreaking question confronting us is this: Who consoles the grieving mother whose child was abducted on the way to school? Who speaks for the father who can no longer feed his family despite working every day? Who defends the young Nigerian whose dreams have been destroyed by a nation that rewards connections over competence and corruption over character?
Our present tragedy is not accidental. It is the direct consequence of years of deliberate sabotage by a political class that prospers by dividing the people and weakening the nation. Nigeria is not a poor country; rather, we are being looted into poverty. We have abundant human and natural resources, yet we remain trapped in deprivation because leadership has failed to place the common good above personal interest.
Our choice as a people is therefore clear: whether to surrender to despair and national decline, or to summon the courage to rescue our country and rebuild it on the foundations of unity, equity, justice, competence, and productivity.




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Still in Bauchi State.
As part of my itinerary in Bauchi state yesterday Thursday 23rd, 2026, after visiting, Madarasatu Intisharul Islam Qismu Tahfizul, Qur'an, Yelwa, I visited Malikiya College of Nursing Sciences, Bauchi.
I had visited the institution in the past and donated 10 million naira which they used to set up their ICT computer centre, which I was impressed to see alongside their increased student intake. During my visit, I donated another 10million naira.
Health is critical for development and we must invest in the human infrastructure needed for that development.
A new Nigeria is POsssible. -PO




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Health, Education, and pulling people out of poverty remain the three most important measures of development of any nation. That is why my support for these critical areas continues to remain a priority.
Today, Friday 9th May, I visited a healthcare facility established and managed by the Church of Nigeria, the Anglican Diocese of Kubwa. After inspecting the facility, I thanked the proprietor and his team for the good work they are doing in helping to ease the burden of our struggling healthcare system, especially for maintaining such a neat and conducive environment for patients.
In support of their efforts, I made a token donation of 10 million naira. I encouraged them to remain committed to their service to humanity and also assured them of my continued support for the hospital, healthcare workers, and the healthcare system in general.
A New Nigeria is POssible.- PO



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The African Democratic Congress would like to reiterate our fears that some agents of the Federal Government are making frantic efforts to manipulate the judiciary by switching the judge in the leadership matter involving Nafiu Bala.
Having received the letter written by Bala requesting the Chief Judge of the Federal High Court to reassign the case to another judge, it has now been proven beyond all reasonable doubt that the sinister plot allegedly led by a notorious federal minister is indeed afoot. This is no longer about justice or the merit of the case, but about the desperation of political operatives confronted by the utter frivolity of their case.
With this development, it is now obvious that Nafiu Bala Gombe and his handlers are trying to turn the judiciary into a shopping mall where you pick and choose judges suitable for your political schemes.
You cannot file a case and then begin to dictate which judge should hear it simply because proceedings are not going your way. No litigant has the right to choose a judge in his own matter.
The attempt to seek an indefinite adjournment after the clear direction of the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court for a speedy trial, in fact, raises serious questions about the willingness of the lower courts to obey express orders from superior courts.
Instead of allowing the matter to proceed expeditiously, as any aggrieved plaintiff genuinely seeking justice would, Bala and his handlers are looking for ways to stall the case until they are able to find a judge willing to do their bidding and pervert the course of justice.
We regret to say that this is exactly the kind of political interference and behind-the-scenes manipulation that has brought the judiciary into disrepute.
We want to state clearly that the ADC will continue to stand by the rule of law. But the rule of law must not be replaced with judicial intimidation or forum shopping.
The courts must remain independent, and judicial officers must be allowed to do their work without political interference or orchestrated campaigns designed to influence proceedings.

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“If I do not provide steady electricity in four years, do not vote for me for 2nd Tenure,” -BAT
Thirty-two months after being incharge and instead of living by his powerful words, he now dumps National Grid that has been performing abysmally under his watch.
Those were the powerful words then that inspired hope among Nigerians who longed for light in their homes, stability for their businesses, and growth for their nation. Yet, while Nigerians are still grappling with that unfulfilled, categorical electoral promise - and without clear communication on the obstacles, if any, we read of provision in 2025 budget about the ₦10 billion for solar power at Aso Rock, and in 2026 budget another humongous amount for upgrade and maintenance and now we are being scarcitically told that Presidential Villa has planned to be disconnected from the national grid to rely entirely on solar.
It is a gross neglect and deeply worrisome when the seat of power abandons the national grid. One would expect government institutions to lead efforts to strengthen and expand the grid so that other establishments, and ultimately, citizens can benefit. If those in authority disconnect themselves from the system, who then will connect the ordinary Nigerian to reliable power?
Promoting renewable energy, as solar systems do, is commendable and necessary for the future. However, this situation reflects a deeper concern: governance lacking compassion and commitment to the governed. You cannot tell the people to fast while feasting yourself, securing yourself while Nigerians remain unsecured.
Nigerians do not expect 100% fulfilment of promises, but they do expect 100% effort, accompanied by measurable improvements and clear explanations when gaps exist. Leadership must serve the people, not isolate itself from their daily struggles. -PO
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@Ivory1957 @EkebuisiJoan Why u no carry mic talk about Chagoury?
Abi u no be Nigerian?
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AN OPEN LETTER TO PETER OBI
Dear Mr. Obi,
I do not know you personally. But I supported you in 2023, and precisely because I did, I am writing this letter — not to flatter you, but to tell you some hard truths that your inner circle either cannot see or will not say.
Let me begin with 2023. You were robbed. Every serious observer knows it. But the moment you declined to fight that stolen mandate with the full force it deserved — the moment you allowed a known drug suspect to walk away with the presidency of Nigeria without the kind of sustained, unrelenting legal and moral war that the theft demanded — you sent a signal to millions of your supporters that your fight had limits. Nice men do not become president. Nice men finish last. Nice men get trampled. And in Nigerian politics — where your opponent is not merely a political adversary but a man with a documented narcotics history, a convicted money launderer on his payroll, and thirteen billion dollars in contracts flowing to that same launderer — niceness is not a virtue. It is a liability.
Now here you are again. You have moved from the ADC to the NDC, calling on members to avoid litigation and focus on national development.  Mr. Obi, Nigeria is burning and you are counselling civility. Your supporters are watching — and many of us are asking whether the man we believed in has the stomach for this fight.
Let me be specific about what I mean, because vagueness is the refuge of men who do not want to offend. I am talking about Gilbert Chagoury. A Lebanese-Nigerian businessman who received his Nigerian passport courtesy of the late Sani Abacha. A man with a Swiss money laundering conviction on his record. A man the United States denied a visa on terrorism-related grounds. A man who entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the United States Department of Justice. And this same man — this man — has received approximately thirteen billion dollars in Nigerian government contracts under the Tinubu administration, including the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway and associated port developments, awarded without competitive tender. Seyi Tinubu sits on the board of a Chagoury-linked entity. The conflicts of interest are not subtle. They are brazen.
Yet you say nothing. Your silence is deafening, Mr. Obi — and silence in the face of documented corruption is not neutrality. It is complicity by omission. Millions of potential voters are noticing. I am not alone in wondering what your silence means. Are you compromised? Are you afraid? Or do you simply not understand that presidential campaigns are not book clubs — they are battles, and battles require combatants?
You must make a major public address — not a tweet, not a press release from a spokesman — a real speech, on camera, before the Nigerian people, confronting the Chagoury scandal directly and by name. Lay out the facts. Demand accountability. Call for a reversal of contracts awarded without due process. Do it without hedging, without diplomatic language, and without worrying about whom it offends. If Tinubu is the gangster you know him to be, then treat him accordingly: you take no prisoners, you go after his money, you expose his launderers, you challenge his fabricated biography, and you do it loud enough that no Nigerian — north or south, Igbo or Yoruba or Hausa — can pretend they did not hear you.
I must also address something closer to your own community. There is a faction within Igbo political circles whose interests are not aligned with yours and never were. They are using you — your name, your credibility, your following — while quietly hedging their bets elsewhere. You know who they are. Your political alignments have continued to shift ahead of the next general election  and each shift costs you credibility with ordinary voters who are tired of watching opposition politicians rearrange deck chairs while Tinubu steers the ship toward the rocks. Distance yourself from those who are holding your campaign hostage to their own factional interests. Do it publicly and do it now, before they do more damage.
You said recently that subsidy is organised crime and that you would not allow any form of criminality as president.  Good. But words without action are just more noise in a country already drowning in noise. Put the same ferocity you bring to talking about fuel subsidy into confronting the man who embodies everything wrong with Nigerian governance. Stop performing presidential temperament and start demonstrating presidential courage. Those are very different things.
Your supporters are not a fan base. They are not there to stream your appearances and applaud your measured statements. They gave you their trust in 2023 at enormous personal cost — many of them young Nigerians who believed for the first time that their vote could mean something. Do not take that trust for granted. Do not mistake their patience for unlimited loyalty. If you continue to campaign like a man running for chairman of a university senate rather than the presidency of Africa’s largest nation, you will lose — and you will deserve to lose.
Nigeria does not need another careful man. Nigeria needs a fighter. Either put on your fighting gloves, go after Tinubu’s corruption with everything you have, and give this country the battle it deserves — or step aside and let another leader from the Igbo community who has the will and the fire take your place.
The choice is yours. But it must be made now. Not next month. Not after the next consultation. Now.
Yours in honest solidarity,
Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International
#TheKioSolution

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