Some say love is wicked....
But for me, Love is kind..
Love is Life...
Love is a beautiful thing especially when you fall in love with the right person...
It just had to be that person or NOBODY
🎶 NOBODY 🎶 out on YouTube
https://t.co/wxc26ccLBc
#INDvAU#TheWatcherNetflix
I just read the statement issued by Bayo Onanuga on behalf of the Presidency, which supposedly trying to put a defence for the Chief of staff, Gbajabiamila.
However, I think the Presidency's statement was clearly intended to shut down public scrutiny. Ironically, it has achieved the exact opposite. It answered some questions, but in doing so, it exposed even bigger ones.
Let us assume, for a moment, that every allegation against Prince Adeyemi is true. Even then, the statement leaves glaring gaps that no amount of rhetoric can paper over.
You are asking Nigerians to believe that one private citizen woke up one morning, invented a presidential agency, forged his own appointment, secured office space inside the Federal Secretariat, recruited staff, held meetings with diplomats, corresponded with government institutions, allegedly opened a CBN account through official channels, and if the official budget documents are anything to go by, the same "non-existent" agency found its way into the Appropriation Act with an allocation running into billions.
If that is truly what happened, then this is no longer just the story of an alleged fraudster. It is also the story of spectacular institutional failure. Either government systems were astonishingly easy to deceive, or there are questions that still have not been answered.
The statement conveniently glosses over the budget issue. That silence is deafening.
How does a fictitious agency appear in the national budget? Budget allocations do not descend from heaven. They pass through ministries, the Budget Office, executive review and legislative approval. Who introduced the line item? Who processed it? Who signed off on it? Who failed to ask whether the agency even existed?
Those are not political questions. They are governance questions.
Then there is the issue of the Federal Secretariat office. Offices inside government complexes are not roadside kiosks. How was the space obtained? Under whose authority? How long did it operate? Who interacted with the occupants? Who looked the other way?
Again, silence.
Then comes the most curious part of the story.
The Presidency says the very person allegedly identified as the link between Adeyemi and the purported appointment, Dolapo Babatunde Tanimola, had died in a hotel fire just five days before Adeyemi's arrest.
That is an extraordinary detail. Yet we are given almost nothing beyond it.
Was there an autopsy? Was there a coroner's inquest? What did investigators conclude about the fire? Were his electronic devices, communications and financial records examined? If he was central enough to be named in the statement, why is the public expected not to ask what became of the investigation into his death?
These are not conspiracy theories. They are the obvious questions any serious investigator would ask.
The Presidency wants Nigerians to focus exclusively on whether Adeyemi is an impostor. Fair enough. The courts will determine that.
But the Presidency cannot ask the public to ignore the conduct of government institutions in the same breath.
This is bigger than one man.
If the council was fake, explain how it entered the budget.
If the appointment was forged, explain how government systems repeatedly interacted with the supposed beneficiary.
If official channels were deceived, explain where the safeguards failed.
If there was no insider involvement, show the documentary trail that proves it.
Accountability does not begin and end with charging one individual. It also requires explaining how the machinery of government appeared to validate, accommodate or fail to detect what is now described as a complete fabrication.
The public deserves more than a carefully written press statement. It deserves answers backed by records, timelines and evidence.
Until those answers are provided, this matter is far from settled.
*Barr. Solomon Dalung*
Ex Minister of Youths & Sports
I was driving when I noticed a traffic camera flash as I passed. I knew I wasn't speeding, so I figured it had to be a mistake.
Just to be sure, I turned around and drove past the same spot again, this time even slower. Flash!
Curious now, I went around again, driving at a snail's pace. Flash!
At this point, I thought it was hilarious, so I passed by two more times, each slower than the last. Flash, flash!
I couldn't stop laughing. I was convinced the camera was broken.
Two weeks later, five tickets arrived in the my mail...
Every single one was for driving without a seat belt. 😂
"It's obvious you don't like....."
I don't do blind love with footballers. I can speak positively about you in one tweet and condemn you in the next. This fake love you people do where every criticism or fault translates to hate, no be life.
The reason you can't tell if I'm a Messi or Ronaldo fan, is that I don't do the nonsense you people are doing. I'll praise and condemn as the issue deems fit. I like both players. You don't have to spite one to prove love to the other. Even when you're trying to praise the other one you don't like, it is always dishonest and inchoate. The compliment exists to the extent it kowtows to your favourite. No be life una dey live on both sides.
Tinubu's failure is so obvious that his people are not saying that he has not failed. They are saying that nobody can fix Nigeria and that everyone should give up on Nigeria.
Those guys are pathetic.
You have a right to be foolish, I wouldn’t judge you for that. I have been foolish long enough to learn not to condemn the fool. But you have no right to be evil, and to support a continuation of Nigeria in its current form, is to be complicit in the evil that it is..
The people employed as good citizens earn salaries that cannot even sustain them for 10 days after feeding, rent, transport and children’s school fees are removed, yet you expect honest civil servants everywhere.
A constituency has a senator, House of Reps member, chairman and a chancellor, yet no good roads, no clean water, no stable electricity in that area and nothing to show for all the allowances and project funds collected every month. Why does a poor country have so many elected positions? To do what? There are governors, commissioners and countless political offices everywhere, yet there are zero basic amenities to make anyone a good citizen while you listen to one politician stealing billions.
Every 3 and half years another shambolic election with billions thrown everywhere, showing same set of failed people, then you have no choice than to choose who failed less when we clearly know they are failure but because of tribe, religion and the token you have been paid you start fighting on X and want others to also defend your bullshit and then suddenly everybody wants a safe society? lol, This system of government needs a reboot and a complete overhaul because this one is not working.
Dear President BOLA AHMED TINUBU
😭😭😭
If the government has provided 1000 forest guards in the oyo community.
What about borno? Zamfara? Osun? Kebbi?
Niger delta, NIGERIA?
At this point, the entire country needs security.
Water, electricity and good roads didn't get to your area/town, but election materials will get there.
They didn't forget you, they just don't care about your existence. 😝
When the Chibok girls disaster and insecurity were rampaging the north, you people called for Jonathan’s head. Since he was the chief security officer, and rightly so, we all demanded action from him.
Now this insecurity has worsened under this administration, yet you people say we should deflect responsibility to the governors instead?
Were there no governors during GEJ’s time? Make me understand quickly.
In 2014, our current president boldly stated that “on matters of security, the buck of the responsibility falls on the president’s table.”
He’s now the president and commander of a very powerful military. Stop these fucking terrorists!!!!!
If you can see this tweet, please know that your social media pressure is important.
Terrible news and the horrible state of governance can be depressing but please don't get tired of speaking up.
On here, we are truly the 4th arm of the government.
Online pressure works.
A lot of people say it’s not by talking.
Fair enough. For those who feel that way, what exactly is the way forward?
What are your suggestions? What practical steps should citizens take?
Let’s hear them.
Three years on the throne, tell me one thing the common citizen can boast of enjoying today.
Don’t come here and list policies that ain’t having no impact on a 45-year-old civil servant living in abule-egba.
Tell me just one thing the poorest of the poor can say they have enjoyed in the last three years.
Tell me please.