Abdulozzy

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Abdulozzy

Abdulozzy

@abdulozzy01

Founder of Stashpro App ( Your private vault for every idea worth keeping)

Southampton, England Tham gia Nisan 2020
972 Đang theo dõi1.2K Người theo dõi
Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@Oluomoofderby I am sure you know the appropriate person or people to tag on this post but you ignored it for start with Abike Dabiri how about that?
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🎙OLUOMO OF DERBY 🇳🇬 🇬🇧🇬🇭 🇿🇼
It’s deeply disturbing to see the growing number of Nigerian citizens in the UK facing extradition to the United States. What makes it even more painful is the silence and seeming indifference. The UK appears eager to send them away without much scrutiny, and our own embassy meant to protect and represent us feels absent when it matters most. At that point, what does it really mean to be Nigerian abroad? Because right now, it feels like you’re completely on your own. This is not just about legal processes, it’s about protection, representation, and dignity. Every Nigerian life should matter, regardless of where they are in the world. We need accountability. We need our institutions to show up and we need to start asking hard questions. Who is speaking for Nigerians when it matters most?
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Sam Amadi
Sam Amadi@SamAmadi·
Renewed Tragedy I finished a TV analysis on the sack of the Ministers of Finance and Housing and a director in a federal ministry called me. It was one of the most emotional discussions I have had in recent time. This guy told me how many technocrats are destroyed by Tinubu’s government refusal to release money for projects. The budget goes to political funds as the World Bank reported. This director said he had never seen this level of state capture. He knew Doris would be downgraded the day she said the truth against official lie. And perhaps that is why a Squeler, an taxation evangelist without candor like Oyedele would replace Edu. He wailed and prayed that somehow God would save Nigeria from Tinubu. His only consolation is that he is going on retirement so he does not continue to deal with hungry contractors and service providers whose bills are not paid because budgets have been tracked and trapped in political funds. I was sobered by this conversation. I ask myself, “who really thinks this administration has done well? Well, only three class of people: 1. Social media influencers who are paid for gigs and are also monetizing, 2. Governors who are receiving windfalls and creating their own political funds, 3. Ethnic bigots who think “it is our turn to eat”, and 4. 1% business pirates whose businesses are part of the platforms for current Ponzi schemes of our economic casino and their accessories I am yet to encounter any Nigerian outside this four categories who believes this government has done well. Let me know if you have.
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Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@inecnigeria think Nigerians are mumu, we are not going to let this slide @joashamupitan must go he has zero integrity and no matter how much you guys try we wont let him off.
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Esther Umoh
Esther Umoh@EstherUmoh10·
We need more of this. Well done Asherkine
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Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@chaplinez70 How Charles Anozodo became a Tinubu boy beats me damn smh
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Charles Anazodo
Charles Anazodo@chaplinez70·
Finally!!!! NBC has woken up to its responsibility.
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Babatunde Gbadamosi
Babatunde Gbadamosi@BOGbadams·
ADC Members only. Please like, repost, and indicate your state, and vote for your preferred Presidential candidate below.
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Kio Amachree
Kio Amachree@Ivory1957·
AN OPEN LETTER TO PETER OBI — A WORD FROM A SON OF NIGERIA On Power, Courage, and the Unfinished Business of a Nation Kio Amachree | President, Worldview International · Stockholm | April 2026 Dear Mr. Peter Obi, I owe you a confession before I offer you counsel. In the last presidential election, I supported you. Not casually — I believed in you. I watched you speak in Atlanta, and what I saw was something Nigeria has rarely produced: a man who sounded like he had actually read the brief, who understood the gravity of the office he was seeking, and who spoke to Nigerians not as subjects to be managed but as citizens deserving of respect. I was moved. I was persuaded. And I trusted a process that, as I now understand more completely than ever, was never designed to be trusted. I looked across at Bola Ahmed Tinubu — a man who, in the most charitable interpretation of his observable condition, appeared to be fighting a daily battle simply to remain upright and coherent — and I made the mistake of assuming that what was obvious to my eyes would be obvious to the outcome. I did not account sufficiently for the depth of the organised criminality arrayed against the Nigerian people. I did not account for the degree to which the machinery of power in that country has been engineered not to reflect the will of the citizenry but to override it. I switched off in disgust. I am ashamed to admit it, but I did. For a moment, I despaired. What reactivated me was not optimism. It was fury — and the particular fury of a man who was raised to believe that silence in the face of injustice is its own form of complicity. My father, Chief Godfrey Kio Jaja Amachree QC — Nigeria’s first Solicitor-General, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, General Gowon’s personal envoy to Washington during the Civil War, one of the architects of Rivers State — was not a gentle man. He was rigorous. He was demanding. He was, at times, difficult to love. But he built into me something I could not switch off even when I wanted to: the sense that Nigeria is not merely a country one happens to have been born into. It is a responsibility. It is a debt owed to those who came before and those who will come after. My grandfather, Chief Sekin Amachree, sat at the 1958 Constitutional Conference and the Willink Commission. These men shaped Nigeria before it was even Nigeria. I am their reflection — and as any man who has stood before a mirror knows, a reflection does not always like what it sees. But it cannot look away. Now I come to you with what I hope you will receive in the spirit in which it is offered: not as flattery, not as political alignment, but as the hard, frank counsel of one educated man to another. I was educated at Eton College — not the softened, therapeutic Eton of today, but the Eton that broke you down and rebuilt you; the Eton that fed you deliberately terrible food so that you would learn to endure discomfort without complaint; the Eton that placed you among the sons of dukes and diplomats and expected you to hold your own. The school that in its long and morally complicated history produced twenty-four British Prime Ministers — including, most recently, Boris Johnson and David Cameron. I mention those two men for a reason, Peter, and I need you to listen carefully because there is a lesson in them for you. Boris Johnson — the blond, blundering, self-consciously bumbling figure that the British public came to love and loathe in equal measure — is not what he appears. That persona is a construction, polished over years at Eton, refined at Oxford, deployed with extraordinary precision. Johnson’s great-great-grandfather was a Turkish journalist named Ali Kemal, a man of dark complexion and Muslim faith who was so critical of the Atatürk revolution that he was killed by a mob and his body dragged through the streets of Istanbul. His family fled to England during the First World War — on the wrong side of the conflict, since the Ottomans had fought with the Axis against Britain — and his widow, terrified of persecution, changed the family name to Johnson. A safe, plain, English name. Over generations, the Turkish identity dissolved. The grandson of that terrified widow became the Foreign Secretary and then the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. I am not telling you this to diminish Johnson. I am telling you this because it is the greatest lesson Eton teaches, though it never states it plainly: the surface is a weapon. The carefully constructed persona — the apparent bumbling, the Latin quotations, the self-deprecating humour — was armour and ammunition simultaneously. While his opponents were laughing at him, he was outmanoeuvring them. David Cameron, by contrast, came from genuine money and genuine breeding. He had no need to construct anything. He was charming, handsome, instinctively confident, loved his Bob Marley, smoked his weed at school, was caught — and was not expelled, because Eton looked at him and saw a future Prime Minister, which is precisely what he became. Two very different men. Both utterly ruthless. Both winners. The lesson I am drawing for you is this: you must stop campaigning like a man who is trying not to offend anyone, and start campaigning like a man who intends to win. Nigeria in 2027 is not a debating competition. It is a knife fight. And a knife fight is not won by the man who is most correct — it is won by the man who is most prepared to use what is in his hand. Let me now speak plainly about Bola Ahmed Tinubu, because plainness is what this moment demands. In my considered assessment — and I do not use such language lightly — Tinubu represents the most comprehensively corrupt political figure to have occupied the highest office in Nigeria’s troubled history. That is not rhetoric. That is a conclusion drawn from evidence that is now, in significant part, part of the public international record. There is the matter of the United States federal narcotics investigation — the case that cost him his forfeited funds in Chicago and that lies at the core of the FBI and DEA files that a United States federal court, under Judge Beryl Howell, has ordered released. Those files, due by June of this year, may well constitute the most consequential document release in the history of Nigerian political accountability. The man currently sitting in Aso Rock has a documented relationship with American federal law enforcement that has never been honestly reckoned with by the Nigerian political establishment or the Nigerian press. And then there is Gilbert Chagoury. Let us be precise: Chagoury is a man convicted in Switzerland of money laundering and reported by American intelligence as having financed Hezbollah. He is also the man to whom Tinubu’s administration has directed billions of dollars in no-tender infrastructure contracts — including the controversial Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway — without competitive bid, without transparency, without the basic procedural safeguards that any functioning government owes its people. The relationship between Tinubu and Chagoury is not incidental. It is structural. It is the architecture of how power and money move in this administration. And then there is the son. Seyi Tinubu. A young man installed on corporate boards, positioned as a conduit for the family’s accumulation of influence, presented to the public through the cynical theatre of rice distributions to the poor while billions are being distributed to the connected. He is not a peripheral figure. He is the succession plan. He is also, for your purposes, the most humanly comprehensible point of attack — because nothing angers ordinary Nigerians more than watching a president’s son live like a king while they cannot afford to eat. Peter, here is my direct counsel to you. Stop being careful. The time for careful has passed. These are not normal political adversaries operating within a normal political system. These are people who have weaponised the state, corrupted the judiciary, terrified the press, and enriched themselves beyond any defensible measure while the Nigerian naira has collapsed and ordinary families have been reduced to desperate improvisation simply to survive. You are not going to defeat them by being measured. You are going to defeat them by being relentless. Make the Chagoury contracts the centrepiece of your campaign. Demand accountability for every naira. Make Nigerians understand not just that money has been stolen — they already know money has been stolen, they have always known — but where it has gone, into whose hands, and at whose instruction. Make the connection between the billions flowing to Chagoury’s companies and the intelligence reports linking Chagoury’s network to Hezbollah financing. Ask the question publicly and loudly: are Nigerian state funds being used to finance terrorism? Ask it until you get an answer. I write this from Stockholm. I cannot vote. I cannot march. I am a Swedish citizen of Ijaw and Niger Delta royal lineage, a diaspora voice, a man who has slept in palaces and on floors and worked on Wall Street and in the City of London and in the Nigerian National Assembly and in the boiling heart of African civic struggle. I have no party. I have no financial interest. What I have is a name, a history, and a conscience that my father — for all his severity — programmed to be incapable of looking away. I pray that the United States releases those FBI and DEA files on schedule. I pray that the Central Intelligence Agency, which has long maintained its own complex relationship with Tinubu, makes the calculation that he has become more liability than asset — particularly as the Chagoury-Hezbollah nexus moves from allegation toward documented fact in international law enforcement circles. These are not fantasies. These are live proceedings in active jurisdictions. Nigeria does not need saving — that framing is too passive, and it places too much burden on a single individual. Nigeria needs someone willing to fight for it with the same ferocity that those who have looted it have fought to keep it. My grandfather helped write the terms of this nation’s existence. My father spent his life in its service. I have spent mine trying to honour them both while finding my own voice in a world that did not always make room for it easily. I am offering you that voice. The counsel of an Old Etonian who was taught not how to be a gentleman — though that too — but how empires are built, how power actually functions, and why the most dangerous man in any room is often the one who appears least threatening. I am offering you the analytical framework of a man who has studied Nigerian politics from the inside and from the outside, who understands the diaspora, who understands the international legal architecture that can be brought to bear, and who believes, despite everything, that this fight is still winnable. Go for the jugular, Peter. Do it with evidence. Do it with precision. Do it with the controlled fury of a man who has genuinely reckoned with what is at stake. Cast away the niceties — they have cost you enough already. Nigeria is watching. The diaspora is watching. And the dead — among them the men whose names I carry — are watching too. I wish you strength, clarity, and the wisdom to know that in this particular fight, mercy extended to the wrong people is simply cruelty extended to the right ones. Go well. And go hard. Kio Amachree President, Worldview International Stockholm, Kingdom of Sweden Son of Chief Godfrey Kio Jaja Amachree QC, Nigeria’s First Solicitor-General
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NEFERTITI
NEFERTITI@firstladyship·
Professor Joash Amupitan must step aside. Retweet massively, don’t say anything.
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
I will be a guest on Arise Prime Time today at 8:00pm, where I will be discussing issues of national importance and our collective path toward a better Nigeria. I invite you to join the conversation. A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Ibrahim H Abdulkarim
Ibrahim H Abdulkarim@ziter001·
Dear Esteemed Members of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), Fellow patriots and nation-builders, As we stand at this critical crossroads in Nigeria’s history, one truth rings louder than ever: Peter Obi is the perfect candidate to defeat the APC and Tinubu in 2027 and to finally deliver the Nigeria of our dreams. Why? Because he is the president Nigeria can actually afford. Unlike other aspirants weighed down by heavy political baggage, Peter Obi carries none of the burdens that have crippled previous leaderships: *No large family obligations draining public resources *No army of political associates demanding contracts and favours *No expensive lifestyle or taste for luxury that turns governance into a personal ATM *No cabal waiting to hijack the Villa *No long list of enemies to fight or decades-old grudges to settle *No foreign liabilities or diploma controversies *No belief in marabouts or supernatural powers dictating policy *No interfering First Lady or First Family turning the seat of power into a family enterprise *No Weakness that comes with old age He comes clean, focused, and ready to work for Nigeria and not for himself or a small circle of cronies. But Peter Obi is not just “affordable” PO is highly effective. His agility and energy are unmatched. He moves across the country with ease, listens to the people, and makes decisions without drama. He will: 1. Ruthlessly cut the cost of governance so that every kobo works for the people 2. Spend government money wisely, strictly on priorities that matter 3. Channel massive resources into human capital; education, health, and lifting millions out of poverty 4. Place National Unity for Prosperity at the very top of his agenda; one nation, one destiny, shared progress 5. Our institutions will be strengthened and made truly independent, free from interference by any arm of government. 6. True separation of powers will return: Federal, State, and Local Governments will function as genuine partners, not rivals. 7. Security agencies will be fully empowered, properly funded, and focused on protecting every Nigerian’s life and property. This is not just another campaign promise. This is Peter Obi’s proven track record speaking for itself, a man who has governed before with integrity, frugality, and results. ADC members, the moment has come. The people are tired of recycled politics, expensive governance, and broken promises. They are hungry for a leader they can trust, afford, and be proud of. Let us rally behind Peter Obi, the man who can defeat APC/Tinubu not with money or machinery, but with character, compassion, competence, and a clear vision. Together, we will build the Nigeria of our dreams: secure, united, prosperous, and truly for all. A president we can afford🤝 Peter Obi for President 2027!
Ibrahim H Abdulkarim tweet media
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Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@PeterObi Keep pressing his useless neck until he returns the people's mandate
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Peter Obi
Peter Obi@PeterObi·
From Pharisee to Tax Collector: Rethinking Tinubu’s Kenyan Comparison In a recent remark in Yenagoa, Bola Ahmed Tinubu suggested that Nigerians should find solace in being “better off than Kenya and other African countries.” While this may have been intended to soften the impact of economic hardship and rising fuel prices, the comment risks downplaying the severity of the current crisis. It echoes the biblical parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector in the Gospel of Luke (18:9–14). A similar warning is found in the Qur’an (53:32), which cautions against self-righteousness. Like the Pharisee who boasted of his superiority over others to mask his own spiritual void, such downward comparisons serve more as a refuge than a remedy. This validated an earlier dismissive remark by President Ahmed Bola Tinubu during electioneering: “Na statistics we go shop?” Yet statistics remain indispensable - they are the language through which nations understand their condition and chart progress. No country can develop in isolation from measurable realities or without comparing itself with peers. Comparisons, when properly grounded, are not instruments of escapism but tools of accountability. What is objectionable is not comparison itself, but comparison stripped of credible, verifiable data—mere tax collector comparisons that soothe rather than solve. On key development indicators such as security, the Human Development Index, life expectancy, GDP per capita, literacy levels, and electricity access, Kenya consistently outperforms Nigeria. Nigeria is the fourth most terrorised nation in the world, while Kenya is not among the ten worst. Kenya’s HDI ranking is 143 out of 180 countries, with a coefficient of about 0.630, compared to Nigeria’s ranking of 164 out of 180, with a coefficient of about 0.530. Its GDP per capita is roughly $2,200–$2,300, compared to Nigeria’s $807–$835. Kenya’s poverty rate is about 43% of the population (approximately 23 million people), while Nigeria’s is about 63% (around 150 million people), over six times that of Kenya. Kenya’s life expectancy is about 67 years, while Nigeria’s is about 54 years. The literacy rate in Kenya is approximately 81–85%, compared to Nigeria’s 62–65%. Kenya’s electricity access is higher, while Nigeria has one of the lowest levels of electricity access in the world. Kenya has about 3.5 million out-of-school children, while Nigeria has about 20 million. Kenya’s inflation rate has been about 4.5% or lower over the past three years, while Nigeria’s has remained above 15% within the same period. Kenya’s exchange rate has been around USD 1 to KES 130 over the past three years, whereas Nigeria’s exchange rate rose from below ₦500/$1 to above ₦1,250/$1 within the same period. Even with developments in the Middle East and rising oil prices, Kenyans have not experienced the sharp increases in petroleum product prices seen in Nigeria. Across other key indicators, Kenya also performs better. In the end, these indices clearly show that Kenya ranks higher than Nigeria on several development metrics. The standard of living of Kenyans is better than that of Nigerians. If the President considers Kenyans to be suffering despite these stronger figures, then Nigerians are in a far more difficult situation. He should therefore refrain from self-consolation and, in honest reflection, take responsibility for the situation and make a determined effort to drive improvement. This requires a posture of humility, accountability, and commitment to addressing the factors that have slowed Nigeria’s development. A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
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Peter Ayodele Fayose
Peter Ayodele Fayose@GovAyoFayose·
I heard reliably that Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State is plotting the removal of the Olubadan of Ibadanland, Oba Rahidi Adewolu Ladoja. The plot is to commence this week, with Government Query to be issued against the Olubadan, citing his absence at the failed coronation of High Chiefs in Ibadanland two weeks ago, and other allegations. As for us, we will be watching the Sìgìdì of Seyi Makinde tó fẹ́ se eré ẹ̀tẹ́... ~ Ayo Fayose
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Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@chaplinez70 Keep twerking maybe Tinubu crumbs go reach your side
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Ayo Mairo-Ese
Ayo Mairo-Ese@ayomairoese·
This AI generation, it will be very difficult to deny certain things
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Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@joashamupitan You are only committed to Tinubu and APC . Zero integrity like Wike
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Prof Joash Ojo Amupitan
Prof Joash Ojo Amupitan@joashamupitan·
My succinct and irrecoverable priority is simple. As the chairman of INEC I will work ardently to restore your trust and protect your vote. I understand that many Nigerians have lost confidence in the electoral process, and I am committed to changing that experience through our strategies. ~ Prof. J.O. Amupitan (SAN)
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Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@chaplinez70 Once there was a person damn how the mighty become dumb by APC
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Abdulozzy
Abdulozzy@abdulozzy01·
@joashamupitan Oga will you keep quiet, nothong independent about inec, you think Nigerians are dumb as you
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Prof Joash Ojo Amupitan
Prof Joash Ojo Amupitan@joashamupitan·
My views and engagements are based solely on my personal opinions, professional responsibilities, and commitment to truth and fairness. I operate independently and do not take directives from any political group or interest.
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Prof Joash Ojo Amupitan
Prof Joash Ojo Amupitan@joashamupitan·
I want to address a recent claim circulating that I am affiliated with or working for the ruling party, All Progressives Congress. Let me state this clearly and without ambiguity — I am not a member of APC, nor do I work for or represent the party in any capacity.
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Segun(🦁)Showunmi (PhD)
Segun(🦁)Showunmi (PhD)@SegunShowunmi·
The ADC Titanic is steaming toward the iceberg, and instead of stepping away while there is still time, many are rushing aboard eager to share in what is clearly an avoidable wreck. Some of these are not amateurs. They are seasoned, even brilliant politicians, choosing against better judgment to tie their fortunes to a vessel already listing under the weight of its own contradictions. At some point, courage must give way to honesty. If you insist on boarding, then be prepared to accept the consequences that follow. Political choices, like all others, carry their own fate. And for those of us who once held you in high regard, there is only the quiet task of accepting what is now plainly a self-inflicted political demise. Otunba Segun Showunmi The Alternative.
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