Ashiwaju Hammed

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Ashiwaju Hammed

Ashiwaju Hammed

@rawghina

Ife, Nigeria Katılım Mart 2015
619 Takip Edilen158 Takipçiler
Ashiwaju Hammed retweetledi
Morris Monye
Morris Monye@Morris_Monye·
Why are bandits beheading a math teacher. What’s the aim? Purpose? What do they gain from it?
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Harrison Gwamnishu
Harrison Gwamnishu@HarrisonBbi18·
The man kidnapped and beheaded is crying out to the Government to stop playing politics with the lives of citizens and prioritize security across the country. Today it is one family mourning, tomorrow it could be another innocent Nigerian. People can no longer travel freely, sleep peacefully, or go about their daily activities without fear. Communities are living in panic while criminals continue to operate boldly. This is no longer just news headlines, it is a national emergency. Government at all levels must rise beyond political interests, media statements, and empty promises. Nigerians deserve protection, justice, and safety. Human life must become more important than power struggles and political calculations. Nobody is truly safe when insecurity is allowed to spread unchecked. Enough is enough. End the killings. End the kidnappings. Protect the people. #Security #NigeriaLivesMatter #EndKidnapping #ProtectNigerians Harrison Gwamnishu
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Thεό Abu
Thεό Abu@TheoAbuAgada·
So, someone like Yahaya Bello will be making Laws for Nigeria. This country is cooked.
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oseni rufai
oseni rufai@ruffydfire·
A teacher beheaded and a nation is silent
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Abuja President ⚖️
Abuja President ⚖️@AbujaPresident·
The day Tinubu was sworn in fuel was 185 per litre o. ​You'd just think May 2023 was 10 years ago. 😒 🤔
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Miracle Moore ⚕️🎙️🔥
𝗦𝗼𝗺𝗲𝘁𝗵𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗼𝘁𝗶𝗰 𝗷𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝗵𝗮𝗽𝗽𝗲𝗻𝗲𝗱 𝗮𝘁 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗨𝗻𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗿𝘀𝗶𝘁𝘆 𝗼𝗳 𝗨𝘆𝗼 𝗧𝗲𝗮𝗰𝗵𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗛𝗼𝘀𝗽𝗶𝘁𝗮𝗹, 𝗔𝗯𝗮𝗸 𝗥𝗼𝗮𝗱; 𝗶𝗳 𝘆𝗼𝘂 𝗵𝗮𝘃𝗲 𝗿𝗲𝗹𝗮𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗲𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗿𝗲, 𝗰𝗵𝗲𝗰𝗸 𝗼𝗻 𝘁𝗵𝗲𝗺 𝗻𝗼𝘄. EFCC officers came in some minutes past 9 this morning looking for our dear Professor of Cardiothoracic Surgery. At the time, he was in surgery working on a patient and asked them to hold on, but they didn’t. Instead, they dragged him out, brutalized him, and dragged him on the ground into their bus. Not only did they do that to him, but also to the CMAC of UUTH. He wasn’t even given a chance. The security at the gate locked the entrance, and doctors came out angrily, parking cars to block them from leaving the hospital. These inhumane people, who honestly need proper training after the police and military, opened tear gas, fired bullets, and rained chaos everywhere. In fact, permit me to add that a senior officer among them was allegedly telling his teammates to shoot at the angry crowd. In a hospital??? With patients and doctors around??? They broke the padlock, caused serious commotion and traffic in the area. I truly thank God for my life, but from what I later heard, a stray bullet hit someone and the person died. Currently, UUTH is shutting down. We were asked to go home. Patients are being forced to leave. A strike is imminent. If you have any relatives there, please do well to check up on them immediately. Things are getting serious, and it will not get better until we stand up and fight this injustice. If it was a politician with the same years of experience as these professors, they would never have been treated this way. I have attached evidence. Please, this should spread everywhere. Tag everyone. Medical lives matter.
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BOSS👑
BOSS👑@Shaeikhweeder·
Governor Abdulrazaq wants to go to Senate. Governor Hope Uzodinma wants to return to Senate. Governor Maimala Buni wants to go to Senate. Governor Dapo Abiodun wants to go to Senate. Governor Sule wants to go to Senate. Governor Ahmadu Fintiri wants to go to Senate. Former governor Wamakko wants to return to Senate. Former governor Danjuma Goje wants to return to Senate. Governor Mohammed wants to return to Senate. Governor Yahaya Bello wants to go to Senate. Former governor Amosun wants to return to Senate. Former governor Yahaya Bello wants to go to Senate. Former governor Okowa wants to return to Senate. Former governor Otunba Daniel wants to return to Senate. Former governor Abu Lolo wants to return to Senate. Former governor Hassan Dankwambo wants to return to Senate. Former governor Orji Kalu wants to return to Senate. Former governor Samuel Ortom wants to go to Senate. Former governor Adamu Aliero wants to return to Senate. Former governor Abdulaziz Yari wants to return to Senate. Former governor Simon Lalong wants to return to Senate. Former governor Jolly Nyame wants to go to Senate. Former governor Ramalan Yero wants to go to Senate. Former governor Mahmud Shinkafi wants to go to Senate. Governor Inuwa Yahaya wants to go to Senate. Governor Bala Mohammed wants to return to Senate. Add yours.
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Dr. Chibuike M.
Dr. Chibuike M.@Dr_Chibuike_M·
US-based Nigerian doctor dies during Abia State medical outreach Dr. Uzoma Nwaubani, a U.S.-based doctor, died after a sudden medical emergency while participating in a free medical outreach in Abia State. She had returned to Nigeria with her husband and daughter — a 5th year medical student for the five-day programme organized by Association of Nigerian Physicians in the Americas (ANPA) in collaboration with the Abia State Government. Despite urgent efforts by fellow doctors to resuscitate her, she could not be saved. What began as a mission to heal ended in tragedy. This is sad.
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Dr Pepple
Dr Pepple@drpepple_·
Nigerian doctors practicing in Nigeria, stop offering services for free on Social media. Anyone who needs your services should pay consultation fee and you attend to them privately except you don’t know what you’re doing. Don’t jump in here and be making diagnoses and treatment on public social media. It’s not only unethical, it’s demeaning of your profession. Have some dignity. Have some pride. Don’t appear cheap. The public don’t rate you like that.
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OurFaveOnlineDoc 🇬🇧 🇳🇬
OurFaveOnlineDoc 🇬🇧 🇳🇬@OurFavOnlineDoc·
Let us clarify something here, This is for the sake of public education. 1. Paying 119k consultation fee to see a gynaecologist is *not* ridiculous. This is a very fair charge to see a specialist in a private clinic setting. 2. It takes about 15years of medial school and postgraduate education to become a gynaecologist. You can’t see a specialist and pay peanuts. It costs time, money and a lot of work to become a gynaecologist. 3. Many of you gladly pay 500k for wig, you have no problems with 150k for bridal makeup that nobody notices, which will wash away in 3hours and you can even casually pay 50k to tie gele at wedding but you draw the line at paying less than 120k to see a gynaecologist for your healthcare. If you can spend premium money on ephemeral things like wig and makeup, pls kindly prioritise your health, dear Nigerians. 4. The only way you can see a specialist and pay cheap or pay nothing is if the service is subsidised or funded by the government or by NGOs. This is why government hospitals are cheaper, or sometimes free, compared to private hospitals. You may pay nothing as an end user but someone else is actually covering the true costs of that service. 5. This takes me to my final point: Marie Stopes in Nigeria is a non-profit NGO that is heavily funded by donor grants and international organisations who subsidise the actual costs to make it cheap for you the end user. It is a bad argument to compare Marie Stopes (funded by NGO money) to a private clinic gynaecologist that relies solely on being run by patient’s fees. The actual cost in Marie Stopes will be far higher if not for the donations of good people and organisations who ensure the doctors are well paid and you won’t need to pay high for treatments or consultation. I know life is tough in Nigeria and people find accessing good healthcare very expensive for the average person, however this is not the gynaecologists fault. This is the governments fault who have impoverished us, made us poor, failed to maintain the public hospitals and who have made people’s earnings so little that they can’t afford healthcare. I hope this explanation is helpful.
Elizabeth Adewale@elizaego

Sorry about your experience. 119,000 for consultation with gynecologist is ridiculous. Something that is just 30k at Marie Stopes 😭. Even registration fee is just 5000 naira and their service and care is amazing. I wish more people knew about them.

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Medzonetv
Medzonetv@Medzonetv·
Daniel, while your concern for patients is valid, your premise misses the grim reality on the ground. Most Resident Doctors - the ones on strike - are trainees and employees working 100+ hours a week. They don't own “private hospitals.” They are the foot soldiers currently being owed 19 months of arrears while battling a 16-year-old salary structure. You mentioned “quacks.” Ironically, quackery thrives because the system is hemorrhaging qualified doctors. We have 11k residents for 200 million people. If we don’t strike to demand a system that actually functions, there won't be a single qualified doctor left in the public sector to treat the “incoming victims” you're worried about. A starving, exhausted, and unpaid doctor is a danger to the very patients they are trying to save. The strike isn't a choice; it’s a final, painful cry for help to prevent the total collapse of Nigerian healthcare. The question isn't where do patients go now… rather it's who will be left to treat them tomorrow?
Daniel Regha@DanielRegha

Doctors going on strike doesn't really sit well with me; Even if their reasons are justifiable, what happens to patients or incoming victims? Especially in a country where we are so short-staffed and with so many quacks all over the place. Where do patients go while the strike in ongoing? It's also more upsetting knowing full well that many doctors have their own private hospitals, clinics, and establishment that keeps running while the strike is ongoing. The govt is without a doubt an epic failure on all counts, but medical practitioners need to find a better solution than going on strikes. People's survival depend on their services, and private is unaffordable at this point.

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Medzonetv
Medzonetv@Medzonetv·
"The stethoscope is heavy, but the pocket is empty." 💔 🇳🇬 Do you know that the average resident physician in Nigeria cannot afford the very treatment they prescribe for their own patients? They are managing the lives of hundreds while being exactly one personal health crisis away from total financial ruin. While their counterparts in the UK/US start at $60k–$80k, our local Residents are still "trekking" to the ward or squeezing into public transport a decade after medical school. The system is rigged against them.. Even the JAPA dream is a trap. To fund the exams, visas, and flights, many are working 2 or 3 side-hustles just to afford the "chance" to practice abroad. Have you ever been in a position where you couldn't afford the drugs you just prescribed? Let's talk in the comments.👇🏽
FitMedic@FEMMY466

I'm strongly considering quitting this residency thing, I cannot keep earning this amount while working this much. It doesn't make any sense! Monday to Sunday work and if you calculate it per hour, I probably earn less than the cleaners in this place.

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Jesse Jagz Abaga
Jesse Jagz Abaga@Jessejagz·
Nigerian teachers earn ₦40k–₦100k monthly. South African teachers average R21,500 that’s about 2M naira. Same job, same continent just different leaders.
Fidelis Gimba@fidelisgimba1

@Jessejagz Teacher are the most underrated, Being a teacher has lost value,due to the high neglect by the government.

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Jesse Jagz Abaga
Jesse Jagz Abaga@Jessejagz·
If you knew what Nigerian doctors earn monthly, you’d wonder why any of them still go to work.
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ijustin
ijustin@justinijeh·
So… With regards to that Unilag hostel… Let us take a moment to appreciate the genius of the APC government. It is a masterclass in audacity. They took N1.6 billion of your money. Your taxes. Money that could have fixed roads, equipped hospitals, or funded scholarships. They used it to build a student hostel at the University of Lagos, a project meant to solve a desperate accommodation crisis for young Nigerians struggling to get an education. And then, they put a price tag on it that is three times the university’s tuition fee. They built a solution with public money and turned it into a private enterprise. They took a lifeline and turned it into a luxury good. They looked at students sleeping in overcrowded rooms or commuting for hours, and they saw a business opportunity. So, to the APC, to Mr. Gbajabiamila, we say: thank you. Thank you for providing the single greatest metaphor for your entire government. You have, in one building, perfectly summarized your approach to national stewardship. 1.Take public resources. 2.Brand them as your personal achievement, complete with a sculpture. 3.Price them out of the reach of the very people you claim to be serving. This isn’t just a hostel. This is the Tinubu economic model cast in concrete. It is the same logic that sees our national assets as collateral, our citizens as revenue sources, and our collective future as a commodity to be traded. They are not just renting out rooms. They are renting your own money back to you at a premium. They are telling every Nigerian parent that their child’s education is not a right, but a high-end consumer product. They are telling every student that a roof over their head is a privilege, not a basic necessity for learning. This is the difference between a government that invests in its people and a regime that preys on them. A leader with Character, Competence, and Capacity sees a student housing crisis and builds a sustainable, affordable solution. A regime driven by greed sees a crisis and builds a tollbooth. Look at that N1.6 billion building. It is not a gift. It is an invoice. It is a daily reminder of who this government works for, and it is not you. They are betting you won’t notice. They are betting you will be grateful for the shiny new building and forget to ask who paid for it and who profits from it. They are betting you will see the name on the plaque and forget the names on the ballot paper who are struggling to pay the fees. They are wrong. We see the building. We see the price tag. And we see the truth. Remember this building. Remember the students commuting for hours while rooms paid for by their parents’ taxes sit empty or are occupied by those who can afford the extortionate rates. Remember it when they talk about “Renewed Hope.” And then, when the time comes, act accordingly. #ANewNigeriaIsPOssible
BusinessDayNG@BusinessDayNg

INVESTIGATION: Inside the N1.6bn UNILAG hostel that became part of crisis it was built to solve This BusinessDay Investigation takes you inside a taxpayer-funded hostel, now priced out of reach for the very students it was meant to help. Read the investigation here: businessday.ng/investigation/…

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Muyiwa Winnie Adebayo-Ojukwu, PhD
Muyiwa Winnie Adebayo-Ojukwu, PhD@DrMuyiwaWinnie·
In the last month, two of my biggest dreams have come true. This mama is going to become a CARDIOTHORACIC SURGEON! I’m so grateful to God, my amazing friends and family, my mentors, @rushumedcollege and my new home UC Davis! #match2026 #ctsurgery
Muyiwa Winnie Adebayo-Ojukwu, PhD tweet mediaMuyiwa Winnie Adebayo-Ojukwu, PhD tweet mediaMuyiwa Winnie Adebayo-Ojukwu, PhD tweet media
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punster 𝕏
punster 𝕏@canicedaniel·
Do we have to do this every month? @MDCNOfficial
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