Sanmy

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Sanmy

Sanmy

@virusourcecode

I'm just me... Hate fake pple..

NIG Entrou em Ekim 2010
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Sanmy
Sanmy@virusourcecode·
@jidesanwoolu This is fagba street at the mentioned fagba Junction in ifako ijaye LG. I'm surprised it wasn't mentioned.. Please help include it sir, the suffering is much in that axis.
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Mayor Of Ekiti
Mayor Of Ekiti@Ekitipikin·
This is hands down the wildest movie of 2026! Bro, go watch it now and thank me later.. it’s absolutely insane !!
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Kalu Aja
Kalu Aja@FinPlanKaluAja1·
Nigeria transferred $2.5 billion to Wall Street to service its debt. In total, $5.15 billion was spent to “service” the debt in 2025. Yet more is being borrowed. Yet MDA get nothing in CAPEX. Where is the money going?
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OurFaveOnlineDoc 🇬🇧 🇳🇬
Wow 😭 This is the burial of an army general who was murdered by terrorists on active duty defending this country. These are Soldiers standing guard during the funeral of Brigadier General Oseni Omoh Braimah, Commander of the 29 Task Force Brigade (Operation Hadin Kai), and other troops killed by insurgent attacks in Maiduguri on April 15, 2026. (Source: channelsTV) Tinubu the president was absent. Shettima the vice president was absent. This is sad. This is disgraceful. This is completely disrespectful. This is utterly spitting on their graves. The APC and the Tinubu have absolute disregard for true patriots. May God Himself personally punish these evil insensitive animals in government.
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
Mr. Chagoury, Your Lawyer Is Waiting. So Am I. By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International Gilbert Chagoury, a political operative published an article in The Punch on April 16, 2026, urging you to sue me for defamation. I am writing to tell you directly: please do. I am not hiding in Stockholm. I am not anonymous. My name is Kio Amachree. My father was Chief Godfrey Kio Jaja Amachree QC — Nigeria’s first indigenous Solicitor-General, first Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Justice, first African Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations. He built the legal infrastructure of the country you have profited from for six decades. I am his eldest son. I know what courts are for. I know what discovery means. And I know precisely what happens when a man with your legal history walks into one voluntarily. So let me be precise. Every charge. Every count. On the record. COUNT ONE: The Swiss Conviction for Money Laundering In the year 2000, a court in Geneva, Switzerland, convicted Gilbert Chagoury of money laundering and aiding a criminal organisation. The funds in question were stolen from the Nigerian treasury by military dictator Sani Abacha, whose regime looted an estimated $2 billion to $5 billion from the Nigerian people during his years in power from 1993 to 1998. The court found that Chagoury helped establish accounts at SG Ruegg Bank in Geneva through which more than $120 million was transferred from the Central Bank of Nigeria on behalf of the Abacha family. He was fined one million Swiss francs. He was ordered to return $66 million to the Nigerian government. He later secured immunity from Nigerian prosecution by returning an estimated $300 million held in Swiss accounts — a figure that itself tells you the scale of what passed through his hands. This is not an allegation. This is a verdict. It is in the Geneva court record. It has never been overturned. It has never been appealed successfully. It stands. While that money was moving through Swiss banks, Nigerian children were dying in hospitals without medicine. Nigerian roads were collapsing. Nigerian teachers were going unpaid. The treasury that should have built this nation was being emptied — and Gilbert Chagoury was the man holding the pipe. COUNT TWO: The United States Visa Denial on Terrorism-Related Grounds The United States government denied Gilbert Chagoury a visa in 2015. The denial was based on intelligence findings that he had provided financial support to Michel Aoun, a Lebanese political figure whose party, the Free Patriotic Movement, operates in political coalition with Hezbollah — an organisation designated as a terrorist group by the United States, the European Union, the United Kingdom, and numerous other governments. An FBI intelligence report, cited in U.S. government proceedings, stated that Chagoury had sent funds to Aoun, who in turn directed money to Hezbollah. The report described Aoun as facilitating fundraising for Hezbollah. The intelligence was described as unverified from a source — but it was sufficient for the United States government to bar one of the world’s wealthiest men from entering American territory. Chagoury disputed the findings. He sued. He lost. The visa denial stood. This is not gossip. This is the record of a proceeding he initiated himself — in which he named as defendants the FBI, the Department of Justice, the CIA, the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of State, and the National Counterterrorism Center. He put every American security agency on the stand to clear his name. None of them capitulated. The records remain open. Nigeria’s current president counts this man as his closest personal confidante. His son sits on this man’s company board. Nigeria has given this man its second-highest national honour. And the United States government will not let him through its airports. COUNT THREE: The Federal Election Law Conspiracy and Deferred Prosecution Agreement In 2018, Gilbert Chagoury and two associates resolved a federal investigation in the United States into a conspiracy to violate federal election laws. The investigation found that he had schemed to make illegal foreign political contributions to United States presidential and congressional candidates across multiple election cycles — contributions routed through American citizens acting as straw donors to disguise their foreign origin. One of the political figures implicated in the downstream consequences of this scheme was Nebraska Congressman Jeff Fortenberry, who was subsequently convicted of lying to federal investigators about the illegal contributions and resigned from Congress on March 31, 2022. In 2021, Chagoury entered a civil forfeiture settlement of $1.8 million with United States authorities. He later entered a deferred prosecution agreement with the United States Department of Justice. He has maintained he committed no wrongdoing — which is precisely what deferred prosecution agreements are designed to accommodate while preserving the full prosecutorial record. That record exists. In a lawsuit, it becomes an exhibit. COUNT FOUR: The Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway — $13 Billion Without a Single Competitive Bid In 2024, the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu awarded the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway contract to Hitech Construction Company Limited — a subsidiary of the Chagoury Group — at an estimated cost of between $11 billion and $13 billion. This is, by most calculations, the single most expensive infrastructure contract in Nigerian history. It was awarded without a public competitive tender. Without advertisement in the federal procurement gazette. Without the process mandated by the Nigerian Public Procurement Act. The Federal Ministry of Works has not produced documentation of a compliant tender process because no such process occurred. The contract is currently the subject of active litigation in the Federal High Court, brought by a plaintiff invoking the Freedom of Information Act to compel disclosure of procurement documents. The Federal Government has hired no fewer than six Senior Advocates of Nigeria and seventeen other lawyers to resist that disclosure. When a government fights this hard to keep procurement documents secret, the documents are not innocent. At the time of this award, President Tinubu’s son, Seyi Tinubu, was a serving board member of CDK Integrated Industries — a Chagoury Group subsidiary. Documents reviewed by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists and the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project revealed that Seyi Tinubu was also a majority shareholder in an offshore company incorporated in the British Virgin Islands alongside Ronald Chagoury Jr., Gilbert Chagoury’s son. The BVI is a jurisdiction chosen specifically for its corporate opacity. The President of Nigeria awarded a $13 billion no-bid contract to the business empire of a man whose son co-owned an offshore company with the President’s son. Segun Showunmi calls this “infrastructure.” I call it what a Geneva court would recognise. COUNT FIVE: The Snake Island Port — $1 Billion, 45 Years, No Tender In March 2026, a second major contract was awarded to Chagoury Group interests — a 45-year concession for the Snake Island container terminal in Lagos, valued at $1 billion, in partnership with MSC Group, the Geneva-based container shipping giant. ITB Nigeria, the Chagoury subsidiary involved, was awarded this concession without a public competitive process. The companies involved in this transaction carry a documented history of bribery penalties, money laundering convictions, and criminal investigations across multiple European jurisdictions. The Foundation for Investigative Journalism in Nigeria published a detailed account of these legal histories. The Nigerian public has received no explanation of why these companies were selected, on what terms, and under whose authority. Two major port concessions. One coastal highway. All awarded to the same family. All without public tender. All during the presidency of a man who has described Gilbert Chagoury as someone with whom he can “sleep with a still mind.” That is not infrastructure policy. That is a private estate. COUNT SIX: The Citizenship That Abacha Gave Him My critics insist I have no right to examine Gilbert Chagoury’s Nigerian citizenship. They are wrong — legally, constitutionally, and historically. Gilbert Chagoury was born in Lagos in 1946 to Lebanese immigrant parents. His parents were not Nigerian citizens. They were Lebanese nationals who had migrated to colonial Nigeria. He was educated not in Nigeria but at the Collège des Frères Chrétiens in Lebanon. His ancestral village is Miziara in northern Lebanon — where a boulevard bears his name, where the town square is named after his father, and where, by the admission of its own deputy mayor, the entire local economy depends on money earned in Nigeria. It is publicly documented and credibly reported that Gilbert Chagoury received Nigerian citizenship during the military dictatorship of Sani Abacha — the very regime he served as personal economic adviser, and whose stolen funds he was convicted in Switzerland of laundering. The grant of citizenship was not the product of a transparent constitutional process. It was the product of a relationship — between a military dictator who operated entirely outside the law and a businessman who made himself indispensable to that dictator’s financial machinery. A citizenship conferred by a criminal regime, as a reward for services rendered to a looting enterprise, is not a citizenship that places itself beyond scrutiny. It is precisely the kind of citizenship that demands it. COUNT SEVEN: The Passports He Holds But Does Not Disclose Gilbert Chagoury is not simply Nigerian. He is a man of multiple nationalities and multiple passports — a fact his defenders in the Nigerian press conspicuously omit. He holds Lebanese citizenship. He holds British citizenship — he identified himself as a British citizen in his own legal filings before the United States District Court for the District of Columbia when he sued the FBI and the Department of Justice. He holds Saint Lucian citizenship, in whose name he has served as Ambassador to the Holy See and Permanent Delegate to UNESCO in Paris since 1995 — funding that diplomatic mission entirely at his own personal expense, an arrangement that raises the question of what a private billionaire actually purchases when he acquires the diplomatic passport of a small Caribbean island nation. There are credible grounds to believe he holds or has held French residency or citizenship. He has maintained a sustained presence in Paris across decades. He has made major philanthropic contributions to French institutions — the Louvre named a gallery for him and his wife. These are not the habits of a visitor. These are the habits of a man who has ensured that wherever the legal weather turns, he has an exit. When the weather turns in Nigeria — when a new government arrives, when the court orders are enforced, when the FBI files are finally unsealed — Gilbert Chagoury will not be stranded. He has options. He has always had options. The Nigerian people, whose treasury funded those options, do not. COUNT EIGHT: Fifty-Five Years, No Integration, No Intermarriage I will say what others have been too careful to say, and I will say it plainly. Gilbert Chagoury has operated in Nigeria for over fifty-five years. His group employs Nigerians. He has built on Nigerian land, obtained through a concession granted by a governor who is now president. He has extracted Nigerian contracts worth billions. He has received Nigeria’s second-highest national honour. And in fifty-five years, the Chagoury family has not produced a single recorded intermarriage with an indigenous Nigerian family. Not one union. Not one child of mixed Chagoury-Nigerian parentage within the Black Nigerian community. The family has remained entirely within its Lebanese-Christian communal identity — socially separate, culturally distinct, endogamous — while extracting from the Nigerian state on a scale that no indigenous Nigerian family has ever been permitted to approach, let alone achieve. I do not say this to promote ethnic hostility. I say it because it is the legal and social reality of what genuine national belonging means. A man who takes billions from a country’s public treasury while remaining entirely separate from that country’s indigenous social fabric is not Nigerian in any meaningful cultural or familial sense. He is an investor with a passport obtained from a military dictator. That is not the same thing as being Nigerian in the way that the Amachrees are Nigerian. My grandfather Chief Sekin Amachree stood before the Willink Commission in London in 1958 and argued for the rights of Niger Delta minorities before this nation was even formally born. He did not do so as a visiting businessman. He did so as a man whose roots were in that soil across generations. My father Chief Godfrey Kio Jaja Amachree QC built the legal system of this country from the inside — as Solicitor-General, as Acting Attorney-General, as Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Justice, as the first African to serve as Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations. We did not come to Nigeria to extract. We are Nigeria. Do not tell me I cannot question who belongs here. COUNT NINE: The FBI Files and Judge Beryl Howell This is the count that concerns Gilbert Chagoury most. I know it. His lawyers know it. The Presidency knows it. In the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, a case is currently proceeding before Judge Beryl Howell compelling the FBI and the DEA to disclose files relating to Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his associates. The court has set a disclosure deadline of June 2026. These files exist within the broader landscape of American law enforcement’s decades-long interest in the financial networks surrounding the Abacha regime — networks in which Gilbert Chagoury was a central node. When those files are released, they will not be released into a vacuum. They will be released into a Nigerian political environment twelve months from a general election, with an active, documented, internationally published body of reporting — this reporting — already in place to contextualise every page. I am not speculating about what those files contain. I am stating that they exist, that their release is court-ordered, and that Gilbert Chagoury should consider very carefully whether a defamation action filed between now and June 2026 is the wisest use of his legal resources. A Final Word You have built roads. You have built towers. You have built a city from reclaimed ocean. You have put your name on a gallery in the Louvre and a boulevard in Lebanon. You have made yourself, by any measure, a man of consequence. But you helped a dictator steal from the poorest people on earth. You moved his money through Swiss banks while Nigerian children died in hospitals without medicine. A Geneva court said so. You paid for that verdict. Nigeria is still paying for what preceded it. No concrete poured since then changes what the court found. No national honour conferred secretly on a birthday changes the record. No political operative publishing articles in The Punch changes what I have written — because what I have written is documented, sourced, and true. I am Kio Amachree. I am my father’s son. And I know what an Amachree does when slandered. We go to court. Sue me, Mr. Chagoury. I will be there before you finish briefing your first lawyer. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027
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osimeh favorite
osimeh favorite@de_dave__·
@OurFavOnlineDoc Tinubu being present won't change anything and you know this is just emotional propaganda... No be everyone dey go burial like Peter obi who is always on black Incase burial fall out for any location
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oseni rufai
oseni rufai@ruffydfire·
Hahahaha
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iOccupyNigeria
iOccupyNigeria@iOccupyNigeria·
THE RECEIPT HE CAN’T DELETE. Nigeria purchased it with state funds as a national asset, but Tinubu made it a family affair. It is meant to be a Nigerian vessel, but he flagged it in the Marshall Islands to avoid Nigerian oversight. The money is supposed to come to the Nigerian treasury, but it goes to his personal accounts through Mauritius. Every single day, an estimated $16 million (₦25 billion) in national wealth is siphoned through this parallel economy by Bola Tinubu. Small Problem: He forgot about the paper trail. From the Bight of Benin to the Maltese mixer to the Mauritius laundry, after a painstaking investigation, we have the full map of the biggest oil heist in Nigeria's history, all being run from Aso Villa by Bola Tinubu. Watch this space. The full forensic exposé drops Monday morning. The ghost is about to speak.
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Obiasogu David
Obiasogu David@afrisagacity·
Did you guys know that ISWAP terrorists protested in Nigeria yesterday! I mean, ISWAP TERRORISTS, armed with sophisticated gvns and machetes, blocked a FEDERAL highway and protested because the Nigerian Army attacked them through an airstrike. Welcome to Tinubu’s Nigeria!✍️
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W.A.R.🍷🌹
W.A.R.🍷🌹@iamkoruzz·
@afrisagacity When a stranger protests in the home of a man and his legitimate wife and children, then the stranger is not entirely a stranger, at best, he's a bastard fathered by the father of the house.
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
AN OPEN LETTER TO OTUNBA SEGUN SHOWUNMI A Response to Your Cowardly Defence of Gilbert Chagoury By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International Otunba Showunmi, I have been made aware of your published attack on me in the Punch newspapers, in which you chose to dismiss my documented exposé on Gilbert Chagoury as “misinformation” and to encourage the Chagoury Group to sue me. I am writing this letter to ensure that you understand, in terms you cannot misread, what you have done — and what will happen if you do it again. Let me first establish who you are, so that Nigerians reading this can calibrate your judgment accordingly. You are a man who spent years as the opposition spokesman for Atiku Abubakar, attacking Bola Tinubu and everything his administration stood for. Then, in June 2025, you walked into Tinubu’s private residence in Bourdillon on Sallah Day, took a photograph with him, and emerged to announce to Channels Television that “Tinubu is smarter than Peter Obi” and that his brain is “very alert.” You called yourself not anti-Tinubu. The same Tinubu whose government you were paid to oppose. The same Tinubu whose benefactor, Gilbert Chagoury, you now rush to protect. This is the foundation on which your credibility rests: sand. You hold an honorary PhD in “Narratology” — a word that apparently means the art of telling whatever story is most convenient for whoever is currently paying attention. You were recruited as Atiku’s spokesman after Reno Omokri reportedly interviewed you and negotiated your salary — a fact that both Omokri and former PDP national publicity secretary Olisa Metuh confirmed publicly, while you, in your characteristic style, dismissed it as “rubbish.” A man who cannot honestly account for how he got his own job is not qualified to audit the journalism of others. Now let us turn to the substance of what you called misinformation. Gilbert Chagoury was convicted in a Swiss court in the year 2000 for laundering funds stolen by the late military dictator Sani Abacha. This is not an allegation. This is a court verdict in a jurisdiction governed by the rule of law. The United States denied Chagoury a visa on terrorism-related grounds. This is a matter of U.S. government record. FBI and DEA intelligence reports link Chagoury to suspected financing of Hezbollah. These documents exist. The $12.7 billion in contracts awarded to Chagoury-linked firms — most notably Hitech Construction — without competitive public bidding under the Tinubu administration is documented in the public domain, including by BusinessDay, Sahara Reporters, and international investigative journalists. Leaked documents from the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists reveal that Seyi Tinubu held a majority shareholding in an offshore company in the British Virgin Islands alongside Ronald Chagoury Jr. Not one word of this is misinformation. Every word of it is on the record. So I ask you plainly: which part of a Swiss court conviction is misinformation? Which part of a U.S. visa denial on terrorism grounds is a lie? Which part of documented offshore corporate structures is fabrication? You cannot answer that question. Because there is no answer. You simply chose the side of power over the side of truth — as you have made a career of doing. You described me as a diaspora Nigerian encouraging a “Lebanese convicted criminal” to attack a prominent Nigerian. Let me be direct about what you actually did: you used language designed to make the telling of documented facts sound like an assault, and you called on a man with a money laundering conviction to use legal instruments to silence a Nigerian journalist and political commentator. That is not commentary. That is the action of someone who has placed themselves in the service of interests hostile to Nigerian accountability. You should know something about me before you go any further. My father was Chief Godfrey Kio Jaja Amachree QC — Nigeria’s first indigenous Solicitor-General, first African Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Justice, and the first African to serve as Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations. My grandfather presented the Niger Delta minority case before the Willink Commission in London in 1958. My family built institutions in this country before Ogun State politics existed in its current form. I did not arrive at this fight by accident. I arrived at it by inheritance and by choice. I am warning you now — clearly, publicly, and on record — that if you publish one further defamatory statement about me, if you make one further false claim that my documented reporting constitutes misinformation, or if you encourage any legal action against me based on falsehood, I will sue you personally in every jurisdiction available to me. I will do so with the full force of legal counsel in Nigeria, the United Kingdom, and Sweden. I will name you, your publication, and any editor who chose to amplify your statements. You want to talk about lawsuits? I welcome that conversation. But understand that in any court of law, the first thing that will happen is that every document I have cited will be placed into evidence. The Swiss conviction will be entered. The U.S. visa denial grounds will be entered. The ICIJ offshore corporate records will be entered. And then the court will ask you to explain, under oath, what was false. You will not enjoy that day. I have written about Nigeria’s governance failures for decades from Stockholm. I have been published by Vanguard, Sahara Reporters, Starconnect Media and elsewhere. I have never been successfully sued for defamation because I do not write defamation — I write documented truth. That is a distinction you would do well to study. In the meantime, I suggest you return to what you are better equipped for: deciding which powerful man’s residence to visit next, and which principles to abandon on the way there. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027
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Annie▫️
Annie▫️@AnnUdoh5·
In 1985 Nigeria Airways had 17 Planes, Emirates had only 3 Planes. In 2026,Emirates has 356 planes, Nigeria has None.
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ADC Vanguard
ADC Vanguard@ADCVanguard_·
I just saw a video of the houses Wike gifted to 40 judges. If these houses have been accepted by the benefiting judges, the EFCC should seize them and return them to the state. If this is not done, the judges that benefited must be made known to Nigerians so that Nigerians can refuse to have them adjudicate on cases involving them in their courts. Nigerians can demand they resign their positions as judges of the federal republic of Nigeria. Let those houses serve as their severance benefits from the Nigerian state because it's the collective patrimony of Nigerians that was used to build those houses and not the personal resources of Wike as an individual. Monies from our treasury should not be used to bribe and corrupt our official institutions and those who run them for the selfish and personal interests of individuals in high places against us. I remember a time during lPMB regime when the DSS led a sting operation on judges who had been surreptitiously investigated and found to be corrupt. This same Wike obstructed the arrest of these judges in Portharcourt as the Rivers State Governor and there were no consequences for his brazen interference then. This has emboldened him to do worse as FCT minister. We need to start resisting illegal and criminal manipulation of our official institutions by anti-progressive elements bent on bastardizing our systems for their personal whims and caprice. EFCC, SEIZE THOSE 40 HOUSES NOW. Hajara Usman
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Daniel Regha
Daniel Regha@DanielRegha·
Tinubu's son (Olayinka Tinubu) just graduated from the University of Surrey in the United Kingdom (UK), but he (Tinubu) recently gave a speech that there's no better place than your own country. So why didn't his own son do his masters in Nigeria?
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Obiasogu David
Obiasogu David@afrisagacity·
This is the Ajaokuta Steel Company Limited, which Tinubu claimed has been privatized. It is as dead as it looks, has NEVER functioned in full capacity since 1979, when it was built. Even though it hasn't functioned and has zero productivity since Tinubu came into power, he has allocated over N18 billion to it, in just 3 years. If the Ajaokuta Steel Company were privatized by Atiku as Tinubu claimed, why then is Tinubu plunging billions into a private company’s project? A larger chunk of the allocation to the company was spent on paying Staff salaries. Who are the Staff of Ajaokuta Steel Industry receiving salaries, for a company that is dead? Again, if it were privatized as Tinubu claimed, why is Tinubu’s government paying salaries to the staff of a private company? The simple answer to the questions raised is that, the Ajaokuta Company is a conduit pipe for crude looting and grand corruption. Ordinarily, the corruption around the Ajaokuta Steel Company alone is enough to kick Tinubu and his cohorts out of Aso Rock. But do Nigerians give a damn?✍️
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Obiasogu David@afrisagacity

Since Tinubu knew that Ajaokuta Steel was dead and not working, why has he continued to allocate billions of Naira to it? 2024 - N5.18 billion 2025 - N6.21 billion 2026 - N6.69 billion. Strikingly, over 80% of the funds went toward staff payments. Who are the staff working at the Ajokuta Steel that Tinubu’s government has been paying billions to? Is it not grand cr!minality to splash billions of taxpayers’ money on a moribund infrastructure that yields zero value to the country?✍️

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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
You Want to Come After Me for Using AI? That’s the Best You’ve Got? Let me address the trolls. The Tinubu foot soldiers. The ones sliding into my comments calling me a cheat for using artificial intelligence. You amuse me. I use AI. I use the internet. I use Google. I use every research tool available to a professional operating in 2026 — because that is how educated men and women conduct serious work in the modern world. I also use my Eton education. My University of Pennsylvania Wharton degree. My decades of experience across Wall Street, international law, diplomacy, and governance. I use my eyes. I use my brain. I use my judgment built over a lifetime none of you can touch. Every investigative journalist, every lawyer, every analyst, every serious professional on this planet uses AI as a research tool today. That is not cheating. That is competence. That is the standard. Now here is what AI actually does when I point it at your President. It finds the DEA files. The FBI intelligence reports. The court records from Chicago. The Swiss money laundering conviction of his Lebanese partner Gilbert Chagoury. The U.S. visa denial on terrorism-related grounds. The forfeiture of $460,000 in drug proceeds that Bola Tinubu signed away without trial. The offshore corporate structures. The missing oil revenues. The EFCC cases he buried. The contracts awarded without public tender to men his family does business with. AI does not invent these things. It finds them. They exist. They are on record. In American federal courts. In Swiss courts. In FBI files now subject to disclosure by order of Judge Beryl Howell in June 2026. Your complaint is not about AI. Your complaint is that the evidence exists and someone keeps pointing at it. So understand this clearly. My use of AI does not make your President innocent. It does not erase the drug money. It does not clean Chagoury’s record. It does not refund the billions being extracted from Nigerian oil revenues while your people queue for fuel. It does not explain why Seyi Tinubu’s associates are detaining student union presidents and arresting nurses who speak out. You came after me — a man with the education, the platform, the legal understanding, and the family legacy to take this fight seriously — and your weapon was he uses AI? That is your defence? That is what Aso Rock sent you to do? If people like you are the government’s first line of response to accountability journalism, then Nigeria’s problem is even deeper than I thought. You are not just complicit in corruption. You are embarrassing about it. Go back to whoever is paying you and tell them they need a better strategy. Tell them the files are coming. Tell them June is approaching. Tell them no hashtag campaign, no troll army, no amount of social media noise will make a U.S. federal court disappear. You are pathetic. And you are outgunned. Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International #KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027
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Elliot
Elliot@elliot_solution·
A Nigeria medical doctor governed Rivers State and stole N100 billion or $75 million from state funds. He wasn't arrested because the wife was a Supreme Court Justice. He served two terms. 1999 to 2007. Oil-rich state. Theoretically one of the wealthiest in Nigeria. In January 2007, three months before his tenure ended, the EFCC released an interim report. Fraud. Money laundering. Conversion of public funds. Abuse of oath of office. The number they put on it was over N100 billion stole from Rivers State. Odili did not wait for the charges. He went to a Federal High Court in Port Harcourt. On March 23, 2007, Justice Ibrahim Buba granted him a perpetual injunction. The EFCC was barred from investigating him. Arresting him. Prosecuting him. They could not even look at Rivers State finances during his eight years in power. Odili walked out of office untouchable. His wife is Mary Odili. She was appointed to the Supreme Court of Nigeria in 2011. She sat on that bench until she retired in 2022. For 11 of those years she was one of the most powerful judicial officers in Nigeria. During the same years the EFCC was trying to appeal her husband's injunction. The EFCC filed the appeal in 2008. It went nowhere. Justice Ibrahim Buba, the judge who signed the original injunction, was later removed from the bench for issuing similar orders shielding other powerful people. In 2018 the Court of Appeal finally granted the EFCC leave to challenge the 2007 ruling. Rivers State fought back. The state Attorney General and the Speaker of the House of Assembly took it to the Supreme Court to block the EFCC. The Supreme Court dismissed their appeal on March 10, 2025. 18 years. That is how long the injunction held. 18 years the EFCC could not ask Peter Odili one question about N100 billion. He is 77 years old now. He has never been tried. Never been charged. Never spent a day in a cell. The draft criminal charges prepared by Festus Keyamo in 2007 are still sitting in a file. Nobody has read them in court. Meanwhile Nuhu Ribadu, the EFCC chairman who first investigated Odili in 2007, is now Nigeria's National Security Adviser under Tinubu. The man who tried to prosecute him is now the second most powerful security official in the country. And Odili is still free. 😂💀🇳🇬
Elliot tweet media
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Sanmy retweetou
Obiasogu David
Obiasogu David@afrisagacity·
“We, in Taiwan, envy Nigeria so much. You have all the resources, we have none. We have all the natural disasters, you don't have any. We have nothing but our brains.” Taiwan Ambassador to Nigeria, Andy Yih Ping Liu, compares Nigeria with Taiwan in a very emotional speech!😢✍️
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BK Sports
BK Sports@bettingkingz9·
@AfiaDimple_ 600 followers until you hit 80k! Let’s make it happen for her ❤️
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Sanmy
Sanmy@virusourcecode·
@oku_yungx Omo!!!! This na See finish ooo
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Oku
Oku@oku_yungx·
This is the President of Ghana praying we do well so we don’t apply for loan from them 😁😭 See we are finished ‼️
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