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The question of who is opposition in Nigeria,
The case of Bauchi governor, Bala Mohammed former member of defunct @OfficialPDPNig (who is now decamping to @OfficialAPCNg ) and the packaged fraud, @PeterObi who found company with his thieving and killers colleagues in @ADCNig
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Thank God for the sake of the masses it didn’t survive 🙌🏾 b4 person wey get power go start dey think say e fit use my body pass me
Interesting STEM@InterestingSTEM
The Mouse head transplant experiment
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lol so this pple are just moving the same crowd around, dressing them in different attires and using tipex and slashes to rule us 😂
NEFERTITI@firstladyship
Renting a crowd all the way from Lagos state to Owerri to shed crocodile tears for the cameras is beneath Seyi Tinubu. The City Boys should get creative. You can see they rented the wrong crowd. This ingrate was hired on credit. 🤦♀️😭
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@lindaikeji She the kind question she ask, why person no go avoid am
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The Closure of Showmax and the Quiet Takeover of Africa’s Media Space
A year after acquiring a majority stake in MultiChoice, French media giant Canal+ has announced the closure of Showmax, Africa’s largest homegrown streaming platform, citing financial losses. But this decision goes far beyond corporate restructuring. It raises deeper questions about who controls Africa’s media ecosystem, who shapes the continent’s narratives, and who ultimately profits from them. For nearly a decade, Showmax served as one of the few platforms built primarily around African audiences and African storytelling, creating opportunities for filmmakers, writers, actors, and producers across the continent. Its closure now risks pushing Africa’s digital storytelling space further into dependence on global platforms like Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Disney+.
The situation is even more striking when viewed against how fiercely France protects its own cultural space through strict content quotas and investment rules designed to safeguard French storytelling. Yet through media networks tied to billionaire Vincent Bolloré and the wider Vivendi conglomerate, French corporate power is now expanding into Africa’s media landscape, where similar protections for local ownership and cultural control remain weak. At a time when African creatives are finally reclaiming their narratives, surrendering control of the platforms that carry those stories would be a step backwards.
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"We heard on the news that they have been killed and buried, and we were not told who killed them, we were not told where they were buried."
A resident of Abuja, whose husband has gone missing, says that the widows of five deceased NELAN members have yet to get any responses from the Ebonyi State government concerning the killings and the burial of their husbands.
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No matter how you put it, it is insane that black women have made gluing Asian women’s hair to our heads a beauty standard.
That is a whole body part!
We openly despise the hair that grows from our heads and covet other races’ hair and turned it to a beauty and class signifier.
𝐀𝐬𝐚𝐤𝐲𝐆𝐑𝐍@AsakyGRN
Women of Cambodia seen cutting their hair by selling it to traders who will then sell it to African/Black women 🤦🏾♂️
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VIDEO📹;
SOMANY VICTIMS! INSPECTOR GENERAL OF POLICE @TunjiDisu1 THE CRIMINAL LAGOS TASK FORCE LED BY AKERELE NEEDS TO BE CHECKED URGENTLY
AS WE SPEAK AND INNOCENT MAN IS STILL IN PRISON SINCE FRIDAY!!
Nahhh this place ain’t real
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They should run for office
It's not illegal under INEC
Nigeria Stories@NigeriaStories
BREA: Two police applicants arrested with forged NECO results in Bauchi State
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In this photo, I am holding my Master’s thesis, which I defended during the war in Gaza…
Not in a quiet hall like in universities around the world,
but in Gaza, under the sound of planes and bombardment.
Sometimes I studied by the light of a candle,
sometimes while I was hungry,
and sometimes after returning from searching for food for my children, Imad and Adam.
And sometimes while I was freezing from the severe cold inside my tent.
The nights were long,
and fear was always close,
but my dream was greater than my fear.
Every night I told myself:
Do not stop… read one more page.
Maybe this is the one thing the war cannot take away from you.
I was not only seeking a degree.
I was trying to tell the world that in Gaza there is a human being who loves knowledge,
that in this besieged land there are minds that still dream,
and that bombardment may destroy houses…
but it cannot destroy determination.
This degree is not mine alone,
but for every child in Gaza who still dreams of holding a book instead of carrying fear. 💔
I dedicate this success to you, my friends around the world ❤️

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