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Anaemelunwa
4.7K posts

Anaemelunwa
@UcheOgidi
An evangelist || Preacher of the WORD || fearless fighter for the truth || builder of the church youth || Mystic pioneer
Katılım Ekim 2012
1.1K Takip Edilen2.3K Takipçiler

This one too sweet
Mayor Of Calabar@Uno_009
They wipe Shehu Sani Oraimo cord for neck today, at the Kaduna APC primary 🤣🤣🤣🤦
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@rzzz_d @honest30bgfan_ Joining issues with a faceless fool like you is a big mistake
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@UcheOgidi @honest30bgfan_ There is no point educating people like you.
Peace out ✌️
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@IbeRemm @honest30bgfan_ Wanted to respond until I visited ur page MUMU !
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@UcheOgidi @honest30bgfan_ You lack the ability to think critically ,seems like you also lack quality secondary education go back to your civic education and study.
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@AndreyAFC1 @honest30bgfan_ The rats are crawling out their holes
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@UcheOgidi @honest30bgfan_ I think you should avoid alcohol the next time you want to chip in your opinion on public matters
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@rzzz_d @honest30bgfan_ Can figure the head and tail of ur submission, where are you coming Mr strong logic
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@UcheOgidi @honest30bgfan_ It’s funny how you’ve managed to gain 2.2k followers despite such weak logical reasoning. Nigeria’s biggest problem isn’t just the politicians, it’s ourselves. The cycle will continue if we refuse to address the root cause, which is the lack of unity & focus among Nigerians.
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@Mrombudsmann_ @honest30bgfan_ If only you can define celebrity DULLARD
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@UcheOgidi @honest30bgfan_ You’re so myopic.
So a celebrity should be involved in partisan politics and support only those who want the Government out??
Okay, if ur choice comes into power, the celebrity should work against them too?
This is why u guys cant be objective in anything.
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Anaemelunwa retweetledi

Sad: Schoolchildren Now ‘Pawns in Ransom Economy’
There is nothing more heartbreaking for a nation than an inability to protect its children. The recent attacks and kidnappings of students from two schools—in Mussa Village, Askira/Uba LGA, Borno State (North-East) and Ahoro-Esinele community, Oriire Local Government Area, Oyo State (South-West)—mark a grave crisis that threatens the future of the nation. Beyond the immediate terror of these acts, they represent a significant infringement on the basic right to education and a safe upbringing. The fear of further abduction often leads children—especially girls—to permanently leave school.
The ongoing “out-of-school” crisis is alarming in itself, and it is likely to worsen due to these distressing incidents.
In areas frequently affected by such attacks, education systems often deteriorate. Fear becomes a substantial obstacle to school enrollment, adding to the already high number of children currently not attending school.
Ensuring the safety of schools is not just a logistical issue; it is a moral obligation. Protecting the next generation demands a blend of community-led intelligence, the physical strengthening of educational facilities, and a transparent justice system that holds wrongdoers accountable.
For the actualization of a new Nigeria that is POssible, we must make the safety, education, and wellbeing of our children a priority. -PO
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Anaemelunwa retweetledi

State visits by Leaders are not tourism, and diplomacy is not a fashion parade. Every foreign trip undertaken by a government must deliver measurable benefits to the people, including investments, technology transfer, trade agreements, factory expansion, industrial partnerships, and job creation.
During President Trump’s recent visit to China, the American delegation reportedly included a few top government officials, and many of the biggest figures in global business and technology:
Consequently, huge trade deals worth several billion dollars including about 200 Boeing orders were achieved.
The list of the entourage included
1. Donald J. Trump – President of the United States
2. Marco Rubio – Secretary of State
3. Pete Hegseth – Secretary of Defence
4. Elon Musk – CEO, Tesla & SpaceX
5. Jensen Huang – CEO, Nvidia
6. Tim Cook – CEO, Apple
7. Larry Fink – CEO, BlackRock
8. Stephen Schwarzman – CEO, Blackstone
9. Kelly Ortberg – CEO, Boeing
10. Brian Sikes – CEO, Cargill
11. Jane Fraser – CEO, Citigroup
12. Larry Culp – CEO, General Electric
13. David Solomon – CEO, Goldman Sachs
14. Sanjay Mehrotra – CEO, Micron Technology
15.Cristiano Amon – CEO, Qualcomm
16. Dina P. McCormick – President of Meta
17. Ryan McInerney – CEO, Visa
18. Michael Miebach – President, Mastercard
19. Jim Anderson – CEO, Coherent
20. Jacob Thaysen – CEO, Illumina
That is how serious nations approach diplomacy, by aligning foreign policy with economic expansion, industrial growth, innovation, and national productivity.
I hope that lessons can be learned from these recent visits comparing them with the President of Nigeria’s recent state visit to the United Kingdom.
A large entourage of politicians, aides, and government officials travelled, yet Nigerians are still asking a simple question: what exactly did Nigeria bring home?
Which factories are coming to Nigeria?
What power, technology, manufacturing, agricultural, or industrial agreements were secured?
How many direct jobs will this visit create for Nigerian youths?
What investments were attracted?
What measurable economic outcomes can the ordinary Nigerian point to?
The delegation reportedly included:
1. President Bola Tinubu
2. Senator (Mrs) Tinubu
3.12 governors
4.9 ministers
5.7 members of the National Assembly
6. Over 20 senior State House staff
7. Over 30 security personnel
8. Over 10 domestic staff
9. Several supporters and associates
It is not enough to ride horses, wear matching uniforms, attend royal banquets, and release glossy photographs. Symbolism without substance cannot feed hungry citizens.
Today, Nigeria is in decline, battling serious insecurity, food insecurity, unemployment, a weakened naira, declining industrial productivity, and worsening poverty.
At a time when millions of Nigerians struggle daily to afford food and survive economic hardship, every kobo spent on foreign trips must produce tangible national value: investments, factories, jobs, exports, infrastructure, and economic opportunities.
Nigeria needs leadership that is focused less on optics and more on productivity; less on ceremony and more on measurable economic results.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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A lawyer shares his opinion on the Justice Crack- Barr. Marshall saga, citing the rules of professional conduct.
The Benin Blogger@TheBeninBlogger
"I h@te damage control; the more you do it, the more I dig the pit for you to keep falling down. You people set him up; you planned to emb@rras Marshall. Sh'ut up your mouth, you red-scarf-sm'elling medusa." - VDM responds to Mama Pee
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Anaemelunwa retweetledi
Anaemelunwa retweetledi

What manner of LOVE is this? What manner of JOY? I see a Nelson Mandela-type figure. People genuinely love this man. They embrace & sing his name, as if he is the deliverer.
They follow him everywhere, as if they are expecting some sort of miracle. In him? They see HOPE when the people have become increasingly hopeless. They see LIGHT, when dark clouds have enveloped the nation.
He came along when elders of the land left the stage. It was time someone got back in the fight. They see in him a piety that could inspire a nation to act right. He is that son that every parent would want. When you meet him, you just know you’ve been touched by something greater than large. The belief in him is almost Messianic. The grace he carries is not ordinary.
Wherever he goes, he creates a carnival-like atmosphere. This can only happen when a people has been through the wringer. People genuinely believe his sound; there is a ring to it.
This is the story of victory, how underdogs can win. He enters the scene, & the atmosphere changes. Suddenly, people start to believe that they can actually win. He can inspire an army to battle. He creates a type of new feeling, new sound, new courage. The type of energy that “a people on their knees defeated would need!” They filter in & sort of remain in the air.
This is fresh bread from Louisiana, a pork roast. It is tangible. You can feel it, you can smell & touch it. This is lobsters & corn on the cob.
I see a nice steak. This is curry soup, chicken of course! Here is something fresh. Something oddly satisfying that reinvigorates our palates.
I see greatness, a legend is born. His Rite of Passage is complete. My tears are running wild. They are there to protect & lubricate my eyes. This girl was born crying. I am one of the lucky ones. She is so glad she lived in your time.
This is the memory of our forebears. Something truly essential, memorable, legendary.
A New Nigeria is POssible. 😭😫✊
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Anaemelunwa retweetledi
Anaemelunwa retweetledi

“ e get some cabals wey dey this country wey no dey talk, wey u no know…they don’t talk and you don’t know them…
….but the moment you compromise the means of which you become president, from that moment you have failed….”
- Man backs Peter Obi on why he avoids certain arrangements and leaves problematic parties.
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@CrownprinceCom2 @comedy38819 Is there any other thing this man talks about in his apart from Peter Obi
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The proposed Obi-Kwankwaso ticket may sound exciting to some people, but politically, it raises serious questions that cannot be dismissed with emotion.
The lesson of 2023 is clear. Tinubu did not win because Nigerians were overwhelmingly satisfied with APC. He won because the opposition was divided. Atiku, Obi, and Kwankwaso split the anti-APC vote, and that fragmentation gave Tinubu the opening he needed. Anyone who ignores that lesson is preparing to repeat the same mistake in 2027.
Peter Obi has a passionate base, especially among young people and in the South East. Kwankwaso has influence in Kano and parts of the North. But presidential elections are not won by passion alone, or by one-state strength alone. They are won through national spread, alliances, structure, numbers, regional balance, polling unit presence, and the ability to cross the constitutional threshold across the country.
That is where the O.K. ticket becomes risky.
Can Obi secure enough northern trust beyond social media excitement? Can Kwankwaso transfer his base without internal resistance? Can both men overcome the suspicion, ego, regional calculations and political baggage surrounding them? Can they build the national spread required to defeat an incumbent with state power, governors, money, institutions and ruling-party machinery?
These are hard questions.
Tinubu’s camp would rather face a scattered opposition than a disciplined coalition. That is why any ticket that further divides the anti-APC vote may end up helping the same government it claims to oppose.
The 2027 election must not be reduced to vibes, nostalgia, anger, or online confidence. Nigerians are suffering, but suffering alone does not remove a government. Suffering must be organized into strategy.
The opposition needs unity, discipline, a strong rallying figure, and a platform that can convert public anger into electoral victory.
Otherwise, the O.K. ticket may be okay for Tinubu, but not okay for Nigerians.

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