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SirOdue
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SirOdue
@Sirodue1
Advocate for good governance a descendant of Ekumeku Movement warrior in igboland delta state
worldwide Katılım Ağustos 2017
1.6K Takip Edilen6.1K Takipçiler
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Today, in continuation of our consultations and collaboration efforts, I was in Bauchi state with some notable Igbo Leaders where we had a very insightful discussion with Governor Bala Mohammed. The mission is aimed at a United, Secured, productive and progressive Nigeria that cares for all, especially the less privileged.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO




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Tinubu is a smart politician
President Tinubu is unarguably a smart politician. He knows the game of Nigerian politics. He can beg and can draw blood when he needs to.
Yes, he has not been a good president in term of governance in the last 2-3 years. But he score above 70% in political scheming.
Ok, he lured federal legislators to come over to his party. Now he leaves them stranded. He rightly chooses the Governors who have what it takes for the ground operations of winning elections in Nigeria illegitimately.
Meanwhile, the legislators have delivered on a bad electoral law that helps him.
That is political smartness. Even if it self-serving

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🇳🇬
📢📢
Yesterday at Iyana Ipaja Bus-stops Lagos.
Their boys came and we told them they deserve better, and yes majority agreed.
The unrelenting message remains.
Tinubu and co Must Go!!!
@tahir @lovechisom6
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Dear Nigerians, PAY ATTENTION!
Because the new Electoral Act contains three dangerous provisions that you’re unaware of.
This is the former INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner. His name is Mike Igini, & he has raised serious concerns about these changes:
1. The Act now allows candidates contesting for elections to print their own ballot papers.
2. It also permits INEC officials to accept ballot papers that lack INEC’s security features.
A government that failed woefully is only confident of victory because they have bought the umpire. INEC is an official arm of the APC.
They are doing everything to subvert the will of the people. But they will be resisted. Mike Igini explained everything. It all makes sense now.
NIGERIANS WE HAVE A BIG PROBLEM!😮😳
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My regular reminder that although I despise Roman Abramovic for multiple reasons, the government of the UK are responsible for the wrecking of @ChelseaFC Their theft, for nakedly political reasons, of the football club has destroyed it
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Nigeria Must Prioritise Education or Risk Falling Further Behind.
Yesterday, at Coal City University Enugu I delivered a lecture on 'Repositioning Nigeria’s education sector for national growth and global competitiveness' I also seized the opportunity to commend the Vice-Chancellor and the entire management of the University for their commitment to academic excellence and for providing a platform for meaningful national discourse.
No nation rises above the quality of its education system. Nigeria’s current low Human Development Index (HDI) score of 0.548 and persistent high unemployment are clear symptoms of chronic underinvestment in education and human capital development.
The data is equally revealing. Nigeria allocates less than 10% of its budget to education, far below the 15–20% global benchmark. Youth unemployment and underemployment exceed 30%, while life expectancy remains among the lowest 50–55 years. Literacy levels hover below average 59% and 65%, all of which point to deep structural weaknesses in our development trajectory.
In contrast, comparable countries such as Indonesia and Egypt, and South Africa have high HDI levels with HDI scores of 0.72–0.75. They all have higher life expectancy of above 65 years, higher literacy levels and higher per capita incomes of $3,500 above, while Nigeria is about $1000. This stronger progress was through sustained and deliberate investment in education, healthcare, and broader human capital development. The difference is not in talent, but in priority and policy consistency.
We must move beyond rhetoric and confront these realities with urgency. I therefore called for a total review of Nigeria’s education funding model, stronger public-private partnerships, and more inclusive policies that recognise the role of both public and private institutions in educating Nigerian students. It is difficult to justify excluding private universities from intervention frameworks like TETFund when they are actively contributing to national capacity building.
Education is not charity; it is the foundation of national growth and the gateway to global competitiveness. With sustained investment in education and a deliberate focus on human capital development, a new Nigeria is not only POssible - it is inevitable. -PO




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