Omoologo 👑

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Omoologo 👑

Omoologo 👑

@bimanthrosoc

I'm a creative thinker who is always motivated to positively change the World. Highly dexterous in planning & organizing and my watchword is CARE FOR HUMANITY

Katılım Eylül 2013
195 Takip Edilen255 Takipçiler
prim
prim@lollysabella·
You will no longer find it difficult to cut ceramic tiles at different angles
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Omoologo 👑
Omoologo 👑@bimanthrosoc·
@_ebelechukwu I think you're the silly one here for using such a word, yet you claim to be a corporate lady. Work on yourself
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Omoologo 👑
Omoologo 👑@bimanthrosoc·
@_ebelechukwu Some of you ladies just have problems. If the lady were to be a guy, the comment would have been different.
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Just Smile
Just Smile@JSmile15846·
“A soldier can stand strong for a nation… but becomes soft the moment their child runs into their arms. ❤️🇺🇸” “No battlefield is harder than leaving your child behind for duty. These moments hit different. 🥹” “They wear uniforms to protect millions, but to their kids… they’re simply ‘Dad’ and ‘Mom.’ ❤️”
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PETER OBI IS COMING
PETER OBI IS COMING@GabbyyTeee27·
Just repost for more awareness please.. This is the official logo of NDC..
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Dr Yunusa Tanko
Dr Yunusa Tanko@YunusaTanko·
May 19, 2026 PRESS STATEMENT Nigerians, Go Get Your Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) Now The Obidient Movement calls on all Nigerians who are eligible to vote (18 years and above) and are yet to obtain their Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs) to seize the opportunity provided by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) through the ongoing Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) exercise. No responsible Nigerian should sit on the fence at this defining moment in our nation’s democratic journey towards a New Nigeria. This crucial nationwide exercise is ongoing and will end on Friday, July 10, 2026. This is the last opportunity for Nigerians to secure their PVCs in preparation for the forthcoming 2027 General Elections. Our movement is borne out of a shared yearning for good governance. We affirm that active participation in the electoral process is not just a constitutional right, but also a sacred duty we owe ourselves and future generations. Our PVCs are the key to unlocking the many untapped potentials of this great nation and ending corruption, insecurity, unemployment, and poverty. We call on civil society organisations, the media, religious bodies, private organisations, government institutions, traders, community leaders, and families to mobilise Nigerians on the need for voter registration and active participation in the voting process. Democracy only thrives when citizens actively participate in electing those who govern them, while voter apathy encourages poor leadership. If you need to replace your lost PVC, transfer your polling unit, or correct your data, quickly log on to the dedicated CVR online portal at: cvr.inecnigeria.org Alternatively, visit the nearest INEC State or Local Government Area office nationwide between 9:00am and 3:00pm. The general public is also informed that INEC will display the register of voters from Thursday, July 23, 2026, to Wednesday, July 29, 2026. This exercise will allow the public to scrutinise the published voters’ records and enable the Commission to correct any observed anomalies. We urge Nigerians not to postpone collecting their PVCs. We must register to vote. We must vote, and we shall defend our mandate. Remember, a registered voter with a PVC today is a powerful voice for change tomorrow. A New Nigeria is POssible. E Signed: Dr. Yunusa Tanko National Coordinator Obidient Movement
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Bola Ahmed Tinubu
Bola Ahmed Tinubu@officialABAT·
On matters of security, the bulk stops at the President's table. Like in other countries, Jonathan is the Chief Security Officer.Stop Boko H
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OMA ANN
OMA ANN@ann_omatf·
They’ll definitely regret showing up at that burial. Everywhere went completely silent. Respect to you sir for speaking the raw truth right to their faces.
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Dudes Posting Their W’s
Dudes Posting Their W’s@DudespostingWs·
When you finally appreciate all the work your dad did for you to grow up
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
Debt Servicing, Borrowing, and Nigeria’s Fiscal Priorities During his recent foreign tour, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu stated that Nigeria will spend about $11.6 billion on debt servicing, a figure that should concern anyone interested in the country’s economic future and long-term development. There is nothing inherently wrong with borrowing when it is guided by prudence and directed toward productive investment. Countries such as Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, and Indonesia are all heavily indebted, yet their borrowings are largely channelled into education, healthcare, infrastructure, and innovation - sectors that generate long-term economic returns and sustain repayment capacity. As a result, despite high debt levels, their obligations remain more manageable because they are tied to measurable productivity. Nigeria’s situation, however, is markedly different. A huge proportion of past borrowing has been directed toward consumption, with limited visible or sustainable developmental outcomes to justify the scale of indebtedness. It is also important to note that a huge portion of the debt currently being serviced was accumulated under the Tinubu administration itself, while borrowing has continued at a significant pace. The administration’s recent external borrowing alone includes about $6 billion (from First Abu Dhabi Bank in the UAE—$5 billion, and UK Export Finance via Citibank London—$1 billion), a further $1.25 billion under consideration from the World Bank, and an additional $516 million arranged through Deutsche Bank, bringing the latest known external loan commitments to roughly $7.8 billion. In addition, domestic borrowing through monthly bond issuances continues to add to the overall debt stock. Against this backdrop, Nigeria’s 2026 budget shows that health is ₦2.46 trillion, education is ₦2.56 trillion, and poverty alleviation is ₦865 billion, giving a combined total of about ₦5.885 trillion for these three critical sectors. By comparison, debt servicing at about $11.6 billion (approximately ₦17–₦18 trillion, depending on exchange rate assumptions) is almost three times higher than the total allocation to health, education, and social protection combined. This imbalance highlights a troubling fiscal reality in which debt obligations increasingly crowd out investment in human capital and poverty reduction. Moreover, even within the limited allocations to these sectors, funds may not be fully released, and a significant portion of what is eventually released could be misappropriated. Ultimately, the central issue is not borrowing itself, but whether borrowed funds are being converted into measurable productivity, inclusive growth, and improved living standards. Without this, debt servicing shifts from being a temporary fiscal obligation to a long-term structural burden that constrains development and deepens economic vulnerability. A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
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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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
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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NEFERTITI
NEFERTITI@firstladyship·
This is subsides, loans, & taxes. This is your 2025 Budget. This is why Ministry of Health got ₦36 million & MDAs got nothing. Any other Strategy apart from rice & vote buying? 🤡
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Sahara Reporters
Sahara Reporters@SaharaReporters·
Nigeria Seeks Fresh $1.2billion World Bank Loan, Second Largest Under Tinubu Govt | Sahara Reporters bit.ly/3R2LxXu
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oseni rufai
oseni rufai@ruffydfire·
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Dr. Kenon
Dr. Kenon@drkenon2·
This is Ajang Alfred Iliya, representing Jos South/Jos East Federal Constituency. He was elected in 2023 under LP platform, massively supported by Obidient Movement. On December 12, 2024, he defected from LP to APC. He betrayed the same people that elected him.
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Jobs with Aramide
Jobs with Aramide@AramideOyekunle·
LIST OF CONFIRMED FAKE JOB VENUES: 1. Plot 5, Voda Paint plc, University Press House, Fumec Bus stop off Adeniyi Jones Ogba Lagos 2. 3rd floor, 8 Thomas Salako Street, Ogba Bus Stop, Ikeja Lagos 3. No 2, Sunday Street, off Ikorodu , Palmgrove, Lagos 4. 65c Opebi Road, Opposite glass house by salvation Bus stop, Opebi, Ikeja, Lagos 5. HYINSCO Office. No. 4, 2nd floor, upward sanitas outlet, Alara sStreet, off commercial avenue, Onike, Sabo Yaba, Lagos 6. Plot 5, university press building, along industrial road, Ogba, Lagos 7. 4B, Ogungbeye street Oppt African Shrine by Cadbury bus stop, Agidingbi Ikeja, Lagos 8. Plot 14, Block A, Voda Paint, Surulere House, off Fumec bus stop, Surulre industrial road, Ogba, Lagos. 9. No 4, Ahl Ogungbeye Street off Amaraolu road, Opp Mega chicken bus stop by first gate, Agidingbi, Ikeja, Lagos., 10. 1, Olabisi Close, Mende, Maryland (Lagos Resident only) HR 08074645567 11. 32, Olufemi Road, off Ogunlana Drive, Surulere Lagos, YDNJI. 12. Ajumobi Street, Off Acme Road, Mega Chicken bus stop, Ikeja, Lagos. 13. 6, Deji Oyenuga Street, opp Kehinde Odusote Estate, Anthony Village. 14. WESTCORP SERVICES LTD. 6, Deji Oyenuga Street, Opposite Kehinde Odusote Estate, Anthony bus stop, Lagos. 15. SOAR GROUP, Suite 2, Ikosi Road, Oluyole bus stop, Oregun ikeja, Lagos 16. Boat House, 21, Ogunnusi Road axis bus stop, Ogba, Ikeja, Lagos 17. 8, Bisi Ogabi Street, Balogun Awolowo Way, Ikeja. or 8 Bisi Ogabi St, off Allen Busstop behind watercress hotel,Ikeja, Lagos. 18. BSM premise, No 4, Kareem Ogungbeye Estate Agidingbi first gate bus stop. 19. 9, Oremeji Street Isolo, Heathstream Alliance and Wellness Homes, Beside Sunrise Microfinance Bank, Gbagada. 20. PSIS HR BOARD, L’monarch Towers, 65, Opebi road opp Glass House by Salvation Bus stop Ikeja, Lagos. 07010616106 21. 6, Remilekun Street Off Falolu Road, by Akerele Road Surulere. HR Matrixglove 07080403158 22. 6, UBIAJA CRESCENT GARKI 2, ABUJA, 08159694497 23. Global Resources, 19 Bode Thomas Road, Awoyokun/Onipanu bus stop. 24. Dream Land Enterprises Limited, No 114, Ijiolu Close, Elekahia Road Portharcourt, River State. REF NO(GS/SD/70) 25. Ground floor, No 2, Akin Osiyemi Street 0pp sterling bank bus stop, Allen Avenue, Ikeja, Lagos 26. LS-RESOURCE, 3rd floor Crownet LPaza Idris Gidado Street Wuye, Abuja. 27. 129, Okota Rd, Atinuke Plaza, beside Rainoil filling station, Cele bus stop, off Oshodi-Apapa Exp. Lagos. 08130902820 28. 23 ogunleti street, off Ogudu road Ojota Lagos. 29. Schleez Nigeria Limited, first floor, left wing, No 49, Olowu Street, Off Mobolaji Bank, Anthony Way, Ikeja, Lagos. 30. 1st floor Xpress House, Beside Ostra Hotel and Halls off Otunba Jobifele way, Central Business District (CBD) Alausa Ikeja, Lagos. 31. 13 Ajumobi Olorounje Street, off acme road, firstgate bus stop, Agidingbi Ikeja. 32. 7, Obasa road, Chemline building, behind forte oil filling station, Oba Akran, Ikeja 33. M.H.S, 4b Toyin Street, opposite victory Home School before unity b/stop, Ikeja, Lagos. 34. 3rd Floor, 240 Herbert Macaulay Street, besides Sweet Sensation, Alagomeji Bus stop, Yaba, Lagos 35. 150b Oba Oguniyi road, Ifako-Agege Pencinema beside Pythagoras College. 36. 3, Orishigun str Iyana-school b/s Ketu Lagos 37. 34, Abeokuta Street, off Anifowoshe Community, Ikeja 38. Building 25, Ajayi Road, besides Olatunbosun street, Oke-ira Ogba. Lagos State 39. 1 Olatunbosun close, beside Adidde supermarket, Ajayi road, Ogba 40. 4 Toyin Street, Ikeja 41. No. 3, Orishigun street (Lapo Bank Building 2nd Floor) Opposite The Apostolic church grammar school Kosofe Ketu Lagos. 44. Abeokuta road by Prognosy pharmacy opposite Lagos cooperation, scheme 1 bus/top oko-oba, agege 42. 36 Yaya Abatan Ogba besides nationwide filing station or 36, Yaya Abatan Road, Ogba, Lagos. 43. 03, Francis Aghebo Close Ojodu Berger Bustop, beside Rainoil Filling Station. Add anyone you know!
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TheCable
TheCable@thecableng·
SDP adopts Adewole Adebayo as presidential candidate for 2027 poll The Social Democratic Party (SDP) has adopted Adewole Adebayo, its 2023 presidential candidate, as the party’s flagbearer for the 2027 election. Adebayo emerged through a consensus arrangement at the SDP national convention held in Bauchi on Saturday thecable.ng/sdp-adopts-ade…
TheCable tweet media
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