@Ochizzy

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@Ochizzy

@Ochizzy

@Ochizzy_

AGATU (Idoma) by tribe from Nasarawa state, The middle belt Nigeria

Lagos, Nigeria Entrou em Şubat 2022
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Máfejópamí
Máfejópamí@VillageParrot·
You have time o. They should first produce videos of the interviews their demagogue granted, talking about solutions. After they show us the videos, they should show us his workings. Wild animals.
Agent Jake@Hitee_

So many ridiculous think-pieces in the last 48hrs attacking PO just because he said he won’t respond to ‘how’ with Oseni , quite ridiculous with different supposed intellectual lazy long texts . This was PO in Chatham house during the last elections.

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Adewale
Adewale@SoEdunOkanESita·
Bola Tinubu did not come to power to make Nigeria work. He came to power to make Nigeria worse.
Peter Obi@PeterObi

Accountable Borrowing: The South Africa Example. I have consistently maintained that borrowing, in itself, is not a bad thing. Every nation borrows. The critical issue is not the act of borrowing, but what the borrowed funds are used for and whether citizens can clearly see and measure the impact of such borrowing in their daily lives. There is a lot to learn in the open and transparent manner in which South Africa handled its recently secured a $1 billion loan from the New Development Bank, with a clearly defined purpose. Publicly announcing the targeted purpose of the loan for all to know and monitor, upgrading water supply systems, modernising sanitation infrastructure, improving electricity distribution, and strengthening waste management services across eight major metropolitan cities, including Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban. This is indeed what accountable borrowing should look like; the purpose is clear, the projects are identifiable, and the expected benefits to citizens are measurable. Such investments directly improve living conditions, enhance productivity, and stimulate economic growth. In Nigeria, however, the opposite is the case: public debt has risen dramatically under the current administration, and its deployment is shrouded in secrecy from the people who will indeed pay back the loan. Today, our total public debt has increased from about ₦87 trillion in 2023 to nearly ₦200 trillion. Yet, despite this unprecedented accumulation of debt, Nigerians are often left without a clear and detailed account of how these borrowings are being deployed to improve critical sectors such as education, healthcare, power, security, and infrastructure. Borrowing must never become an end in itself. Every loan obtained in the name of the Nigerian people must be tied to specific, productive investments capable of generating economic value, creating jobs, reducing poverty, and improving the welfare of citizens. Good governance demands transparency and accountability. The government must be able to clearly explain what was borrowed, where it was invested, and what measurable outcomes have been achieved. The ordinary Nigerian should be able to see and feel the benefits of every debt incurred on their behalf. At a time when millions of Nigerians are struggling with rising costs of living, unemployment, insecurity, and declining purchasing power, fiscal discipline and prudent management of public resources are no longer optional; they are imperative. Every borrowing decision should answer one simple question: How does this improve the life of the ordinary Nigerian? If that question cannot be convincingly answered, then we risk merely transferring today's burdens to future generations. A New Nigeria is POssible. - PO BRICS bank approves $1 billion lifeline for South Africa’s struggling cities | Business Insider Africa share.google/9EBaaAdSS5EDAq…

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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
Accountable Borrowing: The South Africa Example. I have consistently maintained that borrowing, in itself, is not a bad thing. Every nation borrows. The critical issue is not the act of borrowing, but what the borrowed funds are used for and whether citizens can clearly see and measure the impact of such borrowing in their daily lives. There is a lot to learn in the open and transparent manner in which South Africa handled its recently secured a $1 billion loan from the New Development Bank, with a clearly defined purpose. Publicly announcing the targeted purpose of the loan for all to know and monitor, upgrading water supply systems, modernising sanitation infrastructure, improving electricity distribution, and strengthening waste management services across eight major metropolitan cities, including Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban. This is indeed what accountable borrowing should look like; the purpose is clear, the projects are identifiable, and the expected benefits to citizens are measurable. Such investments directly improve living conditions, enhance productivity, and stimulate economic growth. In Nigeria, however, the opposite is the case: public debt has risen dramatically under the current administration, and its deployment is shrouded in secrecy from the people who will indeed pay back the loan. Today, our total public debt has increased from about ₦87 trillion in 2023 to nearly ₦200 trillion. Yet, despite this unprecedented accumulation of debt, Nigerians are often left without a clear and detailed account of how these borrowings are being deployed to improve critical sectors such as education, healthcare, power, security, and infrastructure. Borrowing must never become an end in itself. Every loan obtained in the name of the Nigerian people must be tied to specific, productive investments capable of generating economic value, creating jobs, reducing poverty, and improving the welfare of citizens. Good governance demands transparency and accountability. The government must be able to clearly explain what was borrowed, where it was invested, and what measurable outcomes have been achieved. The ordinary Nigerian should be able to see and feel the benefits of every debt incurred on their behalf. At a time when millions of Nigerians are struggling with rising costs of living, unemployment, insecurity, and declining purchasing power, fiscal discipline and prudent management of public resources are no longer optional; they are imperative. Every borrowing decision should answer one simple question: How does this improve the life of the ordinary Nigerian? If that question cannot be convincingly answered, then we risk merely transferring today's burdens to future generations. A New Nigeria is POssible. - PO BRICS bank approves $1 billion lifeline for South Africa’s struggling cities | Business Insider Africa share.google/9EBaaAdSS5EDAq…
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Everest
Everest@novieverest·
GEJ was begging Buhari to come for a debate. Boys were saying that GEJ has failed and they don't need a debate. Crazy guys.
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Baron Chymaker.𝛑
Baron Chymaker.𝛑@chymaker·
He has been consistent that he will declare war against bandits Has @officialABAT or @atiku said anything close to what was said here? If yes, post the video 👇🏿
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Sarauta Maryam
Sarauta Maryam@SarautaMaryam·
The FG’s luxury estate for Appeal Court judges is a reminder that elections are won at the polls, not in court. Expecting those same judges to overturn the system that rewards them with this 👇🏽 is wishful thinking. 🤣😂
Sarauta Maryam tweet mediaSarauta Maryam tweet media
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A.M TEMIDAYO
A.M TEMIDAYO@AnewNaija·
They said Peter Obi cannot win, yet they’re fully obsessed with him. The same APC loyalists who claim he has “no structure” are losing their minds on X trying to prove he’s unelectable. From Arise to Channels to News Central to TVC, those who should be hiding their heads in shame over the pitiable state of the nation are busy buying airtime to talk about a man that has zero chance, according to them. It’s like going to the cinema to watch a movie they swear nobody watches. If he’s so irrelevant, why does his name trigger emergency meetings in every APC WhatsApp group? Why does he trend faster in their camp than Tinubu? Watching APC strategize against Obi is like watching a goalkeeper mark an empty post — frantic, sweaty and screaming at the wind. They call him “social media president” by day, then unleash 200 faceless accounts by night to attack him. For a party so sure he can’t win, they campaign against him like he’s already sworn in. Why is Peter Obi giving them sleepless nights? I thought real winners don’t lose sleep over a candidate who can’t win. The joke is on the CORNfused lots.
A.M TEMIDAYO tweet media
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Obitrize
Obitrize@Obitrize_042·
I know how politics works in the north because of my experience. The north will not risk their votes for Atiku because Atiku can never beat Tinubu in the south. And also having that Tinubu has failed the north, the chances of voting Peter Obi for one term is high because it gives the north the chance to return to the centre fully via Kwankwaso. So the chances of rigging 2027 election will be too obvious that they won't try it.
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Máfejópamí
Máfejópamí@VillageParrot·
What Tinubu is campaigning on is Coastal road, NELFUND and fictitious finance numbers that have no reflection in the lives of Nigerians.
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Obiasogu David
Obiasogu David@afrisagacity·
“A Gift” for an Appeal Court Judge in a country with the highest number of people in multidimensional poverty.”✍️
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KWEKU THE HUSTLER
KWEKU THE HUSTLER@Urchilla01·
Over 40 kids and 8 teachers have been in the kidnappers' den for a full month now. At least one kid and one teacher have been killed. All while Tinubu concentrates on politics So-called neutrals care less about this than what Peter Obi has to say. They're not neutral. It's their job to distract you from Tinubu's failures
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Everest
Everest@novieverest·
When it got to Tinubu, he whispered his ideas into the ears of Asiwaju's baby. We still haven't heard of his ideas.
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Ndi Kato (Ungwan Masara's finest)
A governor in the Middle Belt is or was a Catholic priest so isnt married. Still he has created the office of the first lady. What are we doing here?
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Shehu Gazali Sadiq
Shehu Gazali Sadiq@Rejoice_inlife·
Wise people love Peter Obi. Stupid people love Tinubu. This is the battle for the soul of Nigeria. Good will surely triumph over evil. Peter Obi is coming.
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Chelsea FC Women
Chelsea FC Women@ChelseaFCW·
The FIRST brother-sister sibling duo to represent England at a FIFA World Cup. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🔵 Congratulations to the James family. 💙
Chelsea FC Women tweet media
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Parallel Facts
Parallel Facts@ParallelFacts·
Ireti Kingibe Confirms Akpabio Forged Her Signature and Those of Other Senators to Suspend Kogi Lawmaker Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan, as More Evidence Emerges parallelfactsnews.com/forged-signatu…
Parallel Facts tweet media
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Eziokwu
Eziokwu@Iameziokwu·
If we were a serious country, this kind of act should lead to automatic disqualification for the candidate. Every time, INEC and EFCC talk about how vote buying is illegal, but they never prosecute or seek to disqualify candidates who do this. Because, isn't this voter inducement? Which may also be classified as a form of vote buying. If it wasn't already in the electoral act, it should be included clearly. And I think the punishment should be immediate disqualification btw once it is investigated and traced to any candidate. The annoying part of this situation is that during elections, these kinds of “massive” palliatives usually find their way to the common man. But during the normal, non-election seasons, other palliatives somehow never find their way down to the grassroots. The leaders would rather store it, share it among themselves, or keep it till the next election. This reminds me of that Lagos Politician who shared Covid-19 palliatives at her birthday. Back to this massive election palliative, what exactly is this supposed to do for the people? It just shows how much the so-called leaders do not care about the people. They only remember the people during elections. And even then, they only give pennies. And for those who collect this to vote, we hope it will be enough to last for four years sha. One pack of noodles per year, and one tomato paste every two years.
CHUKS 🍥@ChuksEricE

Man displays 2 sachet tomatoes and four packs of Indomie noodles allegedly received during the APC campaign in Ekiti State ahead of the governorship election scheduled for Saturday.

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