qwin

75.2K posts

qwin

qwin

@QwinOui

Katılım Ağustos 2022
24 Takip Edilen274 Takipçiler
qwin
qwin@QwinOui·
@ChrisOdogwu @Beawa_Ugochi @ChuksEricE You sound brain dead, your comments ooze blantant stupidity, continuing to interact with you I fear will drop my IQ considering you have none. So, here’s good bye you stupid moronic piece of shit, I hope you choke on the next thing you eat and spare us your miserable existence
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CHUKS 🍥
CHUKS 🍥@ChuksEricE·
Moment a female member of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) publicly accvsed a pastor of r@p!ng her in front of the congregation.
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Onwa_Nnewi
Onwa_Nnewi@Kene_Nnewi·
FUTO Students abducted by Fulani Herdsmen inside the school premises since Sunday are still in the kidnappers den till now. They charged ransom 7.5m per student... From Unknown gunmen to Fulani herdesmen.
Onwa_Nnewi tweet media
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Thibos🍯
Thibos🍯@_Msindazwe_·
A person selling on the streets is also taking our jobs? South Africans are tiring. As for police I won't say much they just watch the thuggery unfold
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honest30bgfan
honest30bgfan@honest30bgfan_·
Nigeria army tried to stop some students from protesting and this happened next 😳. Everybody don tire for this country 🤦‍♂️
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Olusegun Bakare𓃵
Olusegun Bakare𓃵@theboyisgreat·
If INEC declares Tinubu winner, you are the one that will suffer the most and not Peter Obi. Be wise and wake up..
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qwin
qwin@QwinOui·
@MarinatedTurks It’s the male patriarchal system, the fault is always the woman’s to shift the blame from the useless men
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Ugegbe ✨
Ugegbe ✨@MarinatedTurks·
A girl would be killed, they will reduce her to "hookup" so they can justify her murder. No body deserves to be murdered gruesomely. I don't understand why they always say that part bloody irritants. Is that not what that boy that murdered that Akwaibom job girl wanted to do?
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Bishop
Bishop@BishopPOEvang·
⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️⚠️ The act of torturing Congolese women in this manner, specifically by burning their private parts, is utterly unacceptable.
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Donald
Donald@RealDonaldDoo·
Africa. That’s a woman hanging and fire burning under. What language are they speaking ?
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qwin
qwin@QwinOui·
@DHQNigeria See rubbish you sit down type, aren’t you ashamed of yourself? When it comes to killing innocent Nigerians, you’ll always take the lead, but how come even one terrorist hasn’t been killed? How come terrorist can be rehabilitated whilst Nigerians speaking up are murdered?
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DEFENCE HQ NIGERIA
DEFENCE HQ NIGERIA@DHQNigeria·
SOCIAL MEDIA IS NOT A BATTLEFIELD COMMAND – WHY THE NIGERIAN ARMY’S ACTION AGAINST JUSTICE CRACK IS A NATIONAL SECURITY IMPERATIVE By Tijjani Tanko INTRODUCTION: NATION AT WAR CANNOT AFFORD A SECOND FRONT Nigeria is not at peace. Across the North East, North West, and North Central, our armed forces are locked in daily combat against terrorists and bandits. Thousands of soldiers are deployed forward, often without rotation, facing an enemy that watches every word on social media. In this environment, the difference between “free speech” and “subversive act” is not academic – it is life and death. The Nigerian Army recently arrested a social media influencer, Justice Mark Chidiebere (known as “Justice Crack”), and handed him to civil authorities. His crime: systematically spreading content designed to turn soldiers against their commanders over welfare issues – beyond legitimate criticism into active incitement of insubordination. Public outcry has followed, with many calling the Army a silencer of whistleblowers. This statement argues the opposite: the Army acted lawfully, proportionately, and in the highest interest of national security. WHAT JUSTICE CRACK ACTUALLY DID On 2 May 2026, the Army announced the arrest of Justice Crack alongside several soldiers. Investigations showed he had built direct communication lines with frontline troops. He did not merely amplify complaints about rations or equipment – he actively urged soldiers to question their commanders’ legitimacy, refuse orders, and post videos attacking military hierarchy. Some soldiers admitted receiving small payments to share internal grievances that should have gone through proper channels. Crucially, the Army did not court‑martial the influencer. He was handed over to civilian police for normal criminal prosecution. That is not military dictatorship; that is constitutional democracy where no one – influencer or general – is above the law. WHY THE CRITICISM IS MISPLACED AND DANGEROUS First, critics confuse “whistleblowing” with “subversion.” A real whistleblower reports specific, verifiable wrongdoing to lawful authorities – Defence Headquarters, Human Rights Commission, or the media with evidence. Justice Crack did none of that. He broadcast unverified, one‑sided narratives meant to make soldiers feel abandoned. In a war zone, that is not transparency; it is psychological warfare. Second, timing is everything. Isolated welfare lapses exist in every army – including the US, UK, and Russia. But during war, amplifying those lapses in real time to combat units hands the enemy a propaganda tool. Terrorist groups already use such posts to claim “the Nigerian Army is starving” or “commanders don’t care,” lowering troop morale and encouraging desertion. Third, the Army acted with restraint. No soldier was shot. No journalist was jailed. The influencer was detained, investigated, and transferred to civilian police – exactly the same process for any civilian who incites factory workers to sabotage production during wartime. Why should the military be held to a lower standard? Fourth, the slippery slope argument cuts both ways. Critics fear any arrest will clamp down on dissent. But the greater risk is inaction: if the military does nothing while influencers systematically undermine command authority, the result will be crumbling discipline, friendly fire, and avoidable deaths. Which is more humane – arresting one influencer for investigation, or allowing a thousand soldiers to die because they lost faith in their leaders? THE HARSH REALITY OF WARTIME MORALE Military psychology is clear: a soldier who believes his nation has abandoned him hesitates. In counter‑insurgency, hesitation kills. The difference between a successful ambush and a fatal one is often split seconds. When a frontline soldier spends his rest time watching a viral video accusing his commander of stealing his meal allowance, trust in the chain of command erodes.
DEFENCE HQ NIGERIA tweet media
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FS YUSUF
FS YUSUF@FSYusuff·
If you say Justice Crack criticism was "MISPLACED AND DANGEROUS", what happened to the rampage of these terrorists.
FS YUSUF tweet media
DEFENCE HQ NIGERIA@DHQNigeria

SOCIAL MEDIA IS NOT A BATTLEFIELD COMMAND – WHY THE NIGERIAN ARMY’S ACTION AGAINST JUSTICE CRACK IS A NATIONAL SECURITY IMPERATIVE By Tijjani Tanko INTRODUCTION: NATION AT WAR CANNOT AFFORD A SECOND FRONT Nigeria is not at peace. Across the North East, North West, and North Central, our armed forces are locked in daily combat against terrorists and bandits. Thousands of soldiers are deployed forward, often without rotation, facing an enemy that watches every word on social media. In this environment, the difference between “free speech” and “subversive act” is not academic – it is life and death. The Nigerian Army recently arrested a social media influencer, Justice Mark Chidiebere (known as “Justice Crack”), and handed him to civil authorities. His crime: systematically spreading content designed to turn soldiers against their commanders over welfare issues – beyond legitimate criticism into active incitement of insubordination. Public outcry has followed, with many calling the Army a silencer of whistleblowers. This statement argues the opposite: the Army acted lawfully, proportionately, and in the highest interest of national security. WHAT JUSTICE CRACK ACTUALLY DID On 2 May 2026, the Army announced the arrest of Justice Crack alongside several soldiers. Investigations showed he had built direct communication lines with frontline troops. He did not merely amplify complaints about rations or equipment – he actively urged soldiers to question their commanders’ legitimacy, refuse orders, and post videos attacking military hierarchy. Some soldiers admitted receiving small payments to share internal grievances that should have gone through proper channels. Crucially, the Army did not court‑martial the influencer. He was handed over to civilian police for normal criminal prosecution. That is not military dictatorship; that is constitutional democracy where no one – influencer or general – is above the law. WHY THE CRITICISM IS MISPLACED AND DANGEROUS First, critics confuse “whistleblowing” with “subversion.” A real whistleblower reports specific, verifiable wrongdoing to lawful authorities – Defence Headquarters, Human Rights Commission, or the media with evidence. Justice Crack did none of that. He broadcast unverified, one‑sided narratives meant to make soldiers feel abandoned. In a war zone, that is not transparency; it is psychological warfare. Second, timing is everything. Isolated welfare lapses exist in every army – including the US, UK, and Russia. But during war, amplifying those lapses in real time to combat units hands the enemy a propaganda tool. Terrorist groups already use such posts to claim “the Nigerian Army is starving” or “commanders don’t care,” lowering troop morale and encouraging desertion. Third, the Army acted with restraint. No soldier was shot. No journalist was jailed. The influencer was detained, investigated, and transferred to civilian police – exactly the same process for any civilian who incites factory workers to sabotage production during wartime. Why should the military be held to a lower standard? Fourth, the slippery slope argument cuts both ways. Critics fear any arrest will clamp down on dissent. But the greater risk is inaction: if the military does nothing while influencers systematically undermine command authority, the result will be crumbling discipline, friendly fire, and avoidable deaths. Which is more humane – arresting one influencer for investigation, or allowing a thousand soldiers to die because they lost faith in their leaders? THE HARSH REALITY OF WARTIME MORALE Military psychology is clear: a soldier who believes his nation has abandoned him hesitates. In counter‑insurgency, hesitation kills. The difference between a successful ambush and a fatal one is often split seconds. When a frontline soldier spends his rest time watching a viral video accusing his commander of stealing his meal allowance, trust in the chain of command erodes.

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NDC✌️North Star
NDC✌️North Star@ConstantPolaris·
Many Nigerians don't know that the 176 women and children who were kidnapped in Kwara State since February 3rd have not been rescued till today. Today is May 5th, 2026. 3 months have passed. Just imagine that for a minute and understand the implications for those children and women. It is possible that some of them have already died. So I ask.. What type of wicked and evil people do we have in this APC government? What type of evil have we brought upon ourselves in the form of the APC? Imagine if those people were you or your family? Go and register and get your PVC. Tell someone to tell someone, 2027 is not just an election, you are fighting for your life against evil. Take it seriously.
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PRECIOUS ORUCHE 📌
PRECIOUS ORUCHE 📌@MamaPee__·
Naaah this is too much justice crack does not deserve this no Nigeria deserves this pls Nigeria mns help Justice Chidiebere 🥺🙏 I’m so broken
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NFT Marketplace
NFT Marketplace@NFTGlobalMarket·
@General_Somto How has this suddenly become normal stuff, when Nigeria is not a zoo.
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Somto Okonkwo
Somto Okonkwo@General_Somto·
“My Mom, Who Was Kidnapped Along The Benin Road, Is Finally Out After Days In Captivity. We Paid ₦3 Million Ransom. Thank God For Her Life.” ~ Lady Jubilates
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