
Obala na Ego
4.3K posts

Obala na Ego
@djpascific
An entertainer || Digital Creator || #GoodGovernanceAdvocate #Football #MUFC #Messi #ChristianoRonaldo #Entertainment #youtube
worldwide Katılım Temmuz 2015
467 Takip Edilen661 Takipçiler
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If you like this video, follow me and I'll follow you back. Let's gain ❤️
#baltasarengonga #kaybobo #Withyou #Gaza #fenerinmacivar #GaneshChaturthi2025 #DonBelle #HAECHAN #DesafioDelSigloXXI #ちはやふる
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Nigeria may be one of the greatest free talent factories in human history.
We train our best doctors, engineers, researchers, programmers, nurses, academics and innovators… then export them cheaply to countries that already work.
America benefits, Canada benefits, Britain benefits, Australia benefits and entire Europe benefits as-well.
Meanwhile the country that produced the talent remains broken, and the painful part is this:
excellent people are the rarest resource on earth.
Not oil, not gold nor land.
Excellent human beings.
The kind of people that build industries, fix institutions, create companies, discover medicines, design systems, lead revolutions and move civilizations forward.
Every serious nation knows this.
That is why the West aggressively absorbs the best brains from struggling countries. They don’t joke with talent.
Nigeria loses thousands of its most competent people every year, then we gather online to argue about tribe and politics while our future quietly boards flights out of the country.
Imagine if China lost most of its best engineers.
Imagine if Singapore exported its smartest minds permanently.
Imagine if South Korea trained talents only for other nations to use them.
Would they become great nations?
No.
A nation rises on the strength of its human capital.
And this is why I still believe Nigeria can become first world within our generation but only if we become intentional about building a country our best people no longer feel desperate to escape from.
Because no country develops by permanently exporting its most capable citizens and importing mediocrity into leadership.
At some point, we must stop celebrating survival abroad and start building a nation worth staying back to fight for.
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Obala na Ego retweetledi

Congratulations to Victor Osimhen
I want to join other fans in congratulating one of Nigeria’s many talented exports, Victor Osimhen, for successfully leading Galatasaray S.K. to the Turkish Süper Lig title with a brilliant performance, scoring twice in the decisive victory that sealed the championship.
Your resilience, discipline, and talent continue to inspire millions of young Nigerians to believe in the power of hard work, dedication, and excellence. You have remained a proud ambassador of Nigeria on the global stage, bringing honour to our nation through your achievements and conduct. Nigerians are immensely proud of you and your continued success.
I have often spoken about the transformative power of sports and the immense opportunities it offers to young people. This is why the persistent neglect of the sector in our country is deeply regrettable. The truth is that Nigeria is blessed with countless talents like Osimhen, waiting for the right leadership, support, and environment to rise, excel, and bring glory to the nation.
I reiterate that a new Nigeria, where all sectors develop simultaneously for the balanced growth and health of the nation is POssible.
I wish @victorosimhen9 even greater success in the years ahead. -PO

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@Kiteliban @JoyDeolaa @Ezedavid1994 @Malc_OE @jon_d_doe @SportyStacey7 Even with una thuggery, PO still win una for Lagos
That's a clear sign you're a liar 🤷
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@JoyDeolaa @djpascific @Ezedavid1994 @Malc_OE @jon_d_doe @SportyStacey7 Only a retard thinks it's a lie
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I've told you all that I will use my platform to campaign for Peter Obi.
He may or may not win.
But as far as I am concerned, no other person that will be on the ballot papers for the post of president, is as clean as Peter Obi.
You all know this, but your hatred, envy, greed & tribal and religious bigotry won't let you be great.
Search your conscience.
We have never had a better presidential candidate since the return of democracy.
"Politics is about numbers"
I agree.
But let us have a free, fair and credible elections to test this.
Let us have an election where voters are not threatened by thugs, or ballot boxes being snatched, where the security agencies are not used to rig elections.
Let us have elections where poor people are not incentivised with money, bags or rice and beans or garri.
Peter Obi would win hands down.
End.
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@Kiteliban @Ezedavid1994 @Malc_OE @jon_d_doe @SportyStacey7 Why are you guys afraid of free and fair election?
Mr Truth?
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@Ezedavid1994 @Malc_OE @jon_d_doe @SportyStacey7 They know all these things
They are not blind
But bigotry won't allow them say the truth
They now resorted to insults
But everyone know the truth
Obi, currently is the only savior Nigeria could think of politically rn
If they rig him out, Nigeria is gone like subsidy
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You're mad to open your mouth and say that PO has no legacy project.
He's the first ever governor in Nigeria's history to construct 8 lanes of road as you can see in the picture below.
I give you 1 good month of 31 days to research and prove me wrong on this.
He's the first and only governor in Nigeria's history except Otti recently that placed people above 65 yrs on monthly salary.
He gave Anambra State incessant power supply through a $350M power partnership.
He built Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu teaching hospital from start to finish.
He rebuilt all schools in 174 wards of in Anambra and gave ambulances to all Anambra hospitals.
He drew the plan for Anambra airport and saved money for it which Obiano confessed with his mouth.
He spent money to ensure the discovery of crude in Anambra. Abi you done forget Anambra became an oil producing state in his first tenure?
Before his tenure, Anambra was the most insecure state in Nigeria to the point that Ngige, a sitting governor, was kidnapped twice as governor. Obi made Anambra so safe that in his tenure, Anambra was 5X declared Nigeria's safest state according Nigerian police report.
I repeat, you're a very big id1ot to ever claim Obi failed as governor.
Do you know how many man of the year awards he won as governor?
Anu mpama🙄




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@ConstantPolaris Are you sure these nigg**s are the beneficiaries or fake arrangi ?
If they are, then there is problem
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NELFUND is for poor people who can't afford School fees,
Yet somehow these broke people came together and raised 10 Million for the president who rides in a multi million dollars convoy.
Let me say it again
The government uses taxpayers money to give loans to poor people as school fees.
Remember it is a loan, they are expected to pay back.
Those same poor indebted people then came together and miraculously raised 10 million so that the president can be president again.
Supporting the APC is a mental illness.

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Obala na Ego retweetledi

All the evidences and testimonies for all these corrupt lecturers in universities, polytechnics and colleges of educations in Abia State will be shared with the government team that will lead the investigation.
This same process will be used for other states.
Let’s sanitize our education system to create a prosperous nation.
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Obala na Ego retweetledi

Shakira and her label, Sony Music, reached an out-of-court settlement with the Cameroonian group Golden Sounds (also known as Zangaléwa) in May 2010 after facing accusations of plagiarism for the 2010 World Cup anthem "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)". [1, 2]
The specific financial details included:
•Initial Advance: An upfront payment of approximately $400,000.
•Publishing Rights: The group was granted 33.33% of the publishing income from the song.
•Ongoing Royalties: Because the song remained a global hit, members of the group reportedly continued to receive substantial royalty payments every three months for years following the release. [1, 2, 3]
The settlement was reached after public pressure mounted due to the chorus of "Waka Waka" being nearly identical to Golden Sounds' 1986 hit "Zamina mina (Zangaléwa)". As part of the agreement, the original group members were also given official composer credits. [1, 2, 3, 4]
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Obala na Ego retweetledi

Obasanjo:
Politics ❌
Economy ✅
Corruption ❌
Rule of Law ❌
Electoral Reform ❌
Foreign Policy & Diplomacy ✅
Yar’dua:
Politics ✅
Economy ✅
Corruption ✅
Rule of Law ✅
Electoral Reform ✅
Foreign Policy & Diplomacy ❌
Jonathan:
Politics ✅
Economy ✅
Corruption ❌
Rule of Law ✅
Electoral Reform ✅
Foreign Policy & Diplomacy ✅
Buhari:
Politics ❌
Economy ❌
Corruption ❌
Rule of Law ❌
Electoral Reform✅
Foreign Policy & Diplomacy ❌
Tinubu:
Politics ❌
Economy ❌
Corruption ❌
Rule of Law ❌
Electoral Reform ❌
Foreign Policy ❌ Diplomacy ❌

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Obala na Ego retweetledi

I just finished a long call from the Abia State Government team regarding the current state of Abia State University.
Investigations will commence immediately.
Their word is that if after the investigation and it requires them to fire 90% of the staff to sanitize the system, they will do it.
We will not tolerate extortion or students molestations in our universities anymore.
We will expose them, show their faces and jail them.
Extortions, molestations and sorting is the major reason why we have low quality graduates in our universities.
It must stop!
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Obala na Ego retweetledi

I’ve received so many disturbing reports about IMO State University.
The students extortion, sorting and sex for grades in that university is on another level.
Students cannot speak up or they will be heavily victimized.
It’s a very terrible university.
We will identify the evil lectures, expose them and jail them.
These activities weakens the quality of our graduates.
We need to restore the glory of our institutions and start producing globally respected graduates that will lead the new workforce revolution in Africa.
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Obala na Ego retweetledi

Is Governor Otti right about Azumini seaport?
By: ALOY EJIMAKOR
Those who have raised questions on the proposed Azumini seaport in Abia State should read this.
It is no longer news that Nigeria’s seaports have proved inadequate for the economy. For too longer, the Lagos ports remain the country’s main gateway to the world, yet its terminals are perpetually congested and the cost of moving a container from Lagos to Southeast is crushing.
Port Harcourt and Onne help, but they are overstretched and still force goods destined for Aba or Onitsha onto crumbling roads and expensive trucks. Abia State - landlocked on paper but blessed with a direct riverine lifeline to the Atlantic - has a better idea, thanks to Governor Alex Otti’s bold vision of dredging the Azumini River and its connecting waterways through Obeaku to create a modern seaport.
Governor Otti’s recent approval of an immediate feasibility study with China Harbour Engineering Company is not just timely; it is visionary. The geography is on Abia’s side. The Azumini Blue River is not a mere seasonal stream. It joins the Imo River system, which already flows about 240 kilometres into the Atlantic Ocean through Akwa Ibom State.
To be clear, the Azumini–Obeaku corridor sits just 19 nautical miles (about 35 kilometres) from the Atlantic. With targeted dredging, this natural channel can be deepened and widened to larger vessel standards.
The economic case writes itself. Abia is already Nigeria’s shoe, garment and small-scale manufacturing capital. Aba and Onitsha traders lose billions annually to Lagos port delays and stressful road haulage. A functional seaport at Azumini would slash logistics costs by 40-60 per cent for Southeast importers and exporters.
The ripple effects would be enormous: thousands of direct jobs in dredging, port operations, warehousing, ship repair and logistics; indirect jobs in manufacturing and agriculture (cassava, palm oil, yam exports). Foreign direct investment would follow. Investors who currently bypass the Southeast for Lagos would suddenly see Abia and the greater Southeast as a viable hub.
Critics have raised three familiar objections: cost, environment and “why not just fix Lagos?” Each deserves a straight answer.
Cost? Yes, dredging is expensive. But so is the status quo. Nigeria loses an estimated $10 billion yearly to port inefficiencies. Public-private partnerships (precisely the model China Harbour used successfully at Lekki Deep Sea Port) can spread the burden. With oil revenues, diaspora bonds, AfDB financing and private equity, the numbers can work. Compare it to the billions already sunk into road expansion that never quite solve the problem.
Environment? The Azumini Blue River is a natural treasure and any project must protect its unique clarity and biodiversity. Modern dredging technology can minimise adverse impacts. The port can incorporate modern green standards like solar-powered terminals.
Why not Lagos? Because one port complex cannot serve 200 million people forever. National policy already encourages port de-concentration. An Azumini seaport would not compete with Lagos; it would complement it, easing pressure on the Apapa-Oshodi corridor and giving the Southeast direct access to the sea. Germany’s inland port of Hamburg proves that riverine access, properly engineered, can rival coastal giants.
Sceptics who call this “impossible” ignore history. The Imo River was cleared for navigation under colonial rule over a century ago. Today, we have better technology, stronger political will under Governor Otti, and a willing international partner with proven Nigerian experience.
More importantly, a seaport at Azumini represents a bold declaration that a mercantilist Southeast will no longer be relegated as an economic hinterland; and that Nigeria’s federalism is real and finally free from the institutional redlines that have convulsed the system.

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@PeccaviConsults @Chetuyachinago So how can you focus on education and development when your colonial master made sure power settled in the north?
Sometimes, some of u supposed to be created as imbeciles tbh
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@Chetuyachinago This is nonsense. Ignore the fact that Singapore focused on education & development rather than tribalism & corruption. It took the decision to leverage its location, while in Nigeria our problem was not money but how to spend it
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Singapore and Nigeria are both colonial projects set up by the same gangs of imperial cartels.
While Singapore managed to become a gleaming capitalist success, Nigeria was left to rot into the poverty capital of the world.
This remarkable divergence between these two nations is of course not due to culture or systematic corruption in Nigeria. The true culprit is the cold and unforgiving Math of Geography.
The British did not see Singapore as a country. To them it was just another mosquito infested swamp with an insignificant number of people. They used it as a cutthroat forward operation to violently counter the Dutch spice monopoly in the East Indies.
Singapore was designed from day one to be nothing more than a highly efficient cashier for the empire. When the British packed up, the Americans walked in and bought the franchise.
America needed Singapore to serve as a logistical ground for the Vietnam war.
And indeed, during the whole duration of the war it was in Singapore that warships were packed, fighter jets would refuel, ammunition stockpiles were warehoused, wounded soldiers were treated in transit, and naval vessels underwent massive repairs.
To make things easier for America they even built an oil refinery in Singapore to make bombing Vietnam easier and more efficient. Because of the war America was contributing to over 15 percent of Singapore's GDP while making Singapore one of the biggest oil manufacturing hubs in the world at that time. It got filthy rich fueling the jets that dropped missiles on its Asian neighbors.
Nigeria on the other hand, was too big and completely unnecessary for the British to develop. All they wanted was a giant extractive plantation and not a state. You do not need functional hospitals or world class universities to siphon crude oil out of the Niger Delta or haul cash crops to the Atlantic. You only need a few compliant local overseers and a secure pipeline to the coast. In fact, systematic dysfunction is necessary for extraction because you leave the state too weak and divided to challenge your plunder or seek for better trading terms.
As the global economy mutated from industrial manufacturing to digital finance, the American empire decided to upgrade its favorite Asian pet once again.
America and its Western allies began transferring astronomical financial assets, routing multinational corporate headquarters, shifting massive foreign direct investments, establishing regional banking monopolies, and integrating the island into exclusive global clearing systems.
They handed over technological patents, advanced telecommunications infrastructure, and lucrative free trade agreements, and this allowed Singapore to ditch the oil stained overalls for a bespoke luxury suit.
The island seamlessly transitioned from a military gas station to a sophisticated global money laundering hub. It became a pristine, high tech vault where Chinese oligarchs, Western tax dodgers, and Third World dictators could legally scrub their looted wealth under the polite and respectable guise of wealth management.
As a reward for spreading its legs to these corporations and billionaires, Singapore was rewarded with shiny skyscrapers because it learned how to wash the dirty money of the ruling class without asking any inconvenient moral questions.
So while the technology and wealth flowed to Singapore, Nigeria was being engineered to fail.
These cartels of imperialists created the World Trade Organisation and drafted laws that made it too expensive for Nigeria to refine and sell its resources so that they continue to flow uninterrupted to power Western industries.
They weaponized the International Monetary Fund(IMF) and the World Bank to shove Structural Adjustment Programs(SAP) down the throat of the country, forcing the reckless privatization of state assets and the crippling devaluation of the currency just to ensure the population stayed desperate and the labor stayed cheap.
They flooded the nation with Western NGOs that masquerade as humanitarian saviors while actually neutralizing genuine grassroots political resistance by making local activists entirely dependent on foreign donor grants.
Furthermore, the Nigerian Police and Army are routinely trained, armed, and funded by the West not to defend the national borders, but to act as a hostile internal occupation force dedicated to protecting multinational oil installations from the very citizens being exploited.
Even the Nigerian judiciary is systematically molded to uphold colonial commercial contracts over human rights, guaranteeing that any legal dispute over stolen land or poisoned water ends in favor of the foreign cartels.
So we can actually conclude that the empire made a highly calculated and brilliant decision by investing in Singapore instead. An investment in Nigeria would have been far too chaotic.
If they transferred all those technological patents and financial skyscrapers to Nigeria it would be a catastrophic risk. Nigeria has a population of over 220 million people, a vast ungovernable landmass, and a monument of natural resources buried underground. Allowing such a massive country to become a wealthy, self sufficient industrial hub would be geopolitical suicide for the West.
At any moment their thriving youth population could simply wake up, organize a massive rebellion, nationalize their resources, and close down the foreign embassies just as the Iranians did to the Americans in the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
For Singapore, no such things will ever happen. The island has no resources to nationalize, no vast population to mount a rebellion, and no survival strategy other than serving the empire.
It is the perfect, obedient corporate vault.
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@Chetuyachinago That is to say that the West are evil politically/economically during colonialism/neocolonialism
But our own African leaders(especially Nigeria)enabled these evil for their personal interest
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Obala na Ego retweetledi

Enugu has light problem
Only few areas in Enugu has steady light
Some of the roads are very bad
There’s no water in Enugu
Every flat literally have their fetcher to draw water from wells which eventually dry up in dry season.
The first culture shock you will experience when you come to Enugu is having tankers sell water to you every month.
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Obala na Ego retweetledi

Today, Thursday 7th May, I continued with my commitment to supporting critical areas of development—education, healthcare, and helping people out of poverty—with a visit to the University of the Niger, Umunya, Anambra State.
The university, which was established just five years ago, has continued to make remarkable progress, and I have made it a point to visit every year to support the good work being done there. My last visit to this institution was at its teaching hospital in Ogidi.
Today, I encouraged the students to remain dedicated to their studies, reminding them that the world today is driven by knowledge, and the future of Nigeria rests in the hands of young people like them.
In support of scholarships and educational development, I made a donation of 25 million naira for the development of the institution.
I sincerely commend the Diocese on the Niger, for their foresight, vision, and steadfast commitment to educational and institutional growth. I also wish to express my appreciation to the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Chinedu Nebo, for his evident dedication to education. His commitment is reflected in the many schools and institutions he continues to support in their growth and strengthening.
I remain fully committed to the growth of education and the development of students in our country because no nation can rise beyond the strength of its education and human capital.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO




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Obala na Ego retweetledi

