Do you remember this brilliant 15-year-old girl, Josie Ani from Evergreen Schools, Enugu?
She met me at the South East Educators Conference while trying to sell her book titled Diary of My Ink.
So far, she has made ₦970,000 in sales. She will be donating 10% of her earnings to charity and using the rest to support her NGO, where people in Enugu can exchange plastic waste for free transportation.
She transformed her experiences in secondary school and life into beautiful poetry.
I saw a little Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in her, and I believe we need to support her as she continues to make great strides.
I have already bought my copy, and I absolutely love it. We need this book in every home and in the hands of every child.
You can get your copy here https://t.co/nJ8yfRYG2j and it will be delivered to you.
Insecurity: Nigeria Cannot Continue Like This
I received with deep shock and sadness the tragic death of retired Major General Rabe Abubakar, who reportedly died while in the custody of kidnappers. Earlier, before this heartbreaking news, I also received disturbing reports of renewed bandit attacks in Sokoto and Kwara States.
The armed bandits reportedly blocked a market route in Sokoto and abducted traders, while terrorists invaded communities in Kwara State, kidnapping scores of citizens and killing innocent people, are heartbreaking and alarming. These incidents are not isolated tragedies; they are clear manifestations of the deepening security crisis confronting our nation.
But particularly painful is the reported death of Major General Rabe Abubakar, a distinguished military officer who dedicated a significant part of his life to defending Nigeria and protecting its citizens. It is tragic that a man who served his fatherland with honour, rose through the ranks of the Nigerian Armed Forces, and retired after years of meritorious service, would meet such a heartbreaking end at the hands of criminal elements. His death is a national tragedy and a sobering indictment of the insecurity that has engulfed our country.
When traders can no longer travel safely to markets, farmers cannot access their farms, communities live under constant fear, and even retired senior military officers are not spared from the menace of kidnapping and violent crime, it becomes evident that our nation is facing a grave security emergency.
Security remains the foremost responsibility of any government. Every life lost, every citizen abducted, and every community displaced represent a painful failure of our collective duty to protect the Nigerian people. The recurring attacks in Sokoto, Kwara, and many other parts of the country demonstrate that insecurity is not only persisting but spreading in both scope and intensity.
I once again urge the Federal Government and our security agencies to move beyond rhetoric and adopt a more proactive, intelligence-driven, technology-based, and coordinated approach to tackling insecurity. We must strengthen our security architecture, improve intelligence gathering, secure our borders, equip and motivate our security personnel, and ensure that those responsible for these heinous crimes are apprehended and brought to justice.
A nation where citizens live in fear cannot prosper. A nation where economic activities are disrupted daily by criminal elements cannot attract investment, create jobs, or guarantee a better future for its people. We must urgently reclaim every part of our country from terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, and all criminal gangs threatening our collective existence.
My heartfelt condolences go to the family of Major General Rabe Abubakar, his former colleagues in the Armed Forces, and all Nigerians who have lost loved ones to insecurity. I also sympathise with the families of those killed, those abducted, and the affected communities in Sokoto, Kwara, and across the nation.
The recurring tragedies and embarrassing security failures we continue to witness make the quest for a New Nigeria not only necessary but inevitable. We must build a nation where every citizen can live, work, travel, and pursue legitimate economic activities without fear.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
@OgarEmmaOwogeka@TheAjakeManger Leave every colleague and face me! I want this to be between me and you
Rapist I am not reading any of this rubbish you have been typing, I just want to see a letterhead 😂😂😂
Fool dey write epistles
As a black man, I am safer in Brazil than I am in Morocco.
That counts for something.
In Brazil, racism is illegal with zero tolerance - in Morocco, you have to be a racist to qualify as a Moroccan.
I know my own people. 🇧🇷
I love my people. 🇧🇷
Supporting my people. 🇧🇷
Ronaldinho didn't make me fall in love with football, only for me to turn my back on him and support Morocco.
If Ronaldinho made you love this game and you support Morocco, you are sick.
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This is one of the beauties of the World Cup.
Japan's PR once skyrocketed because their fans stayed back to clean the stadium after a match.
This mexican is returning Bafana Bafana Tshirt after learning the xenophobic culture of South Africans. 👏👏
This house you are seeing is in maitama Abuja.
If you go to that street,you would see all his old cars he isn't driving again parked outside filled with dust.
Most of the cars are all painted White.
People working for people like this are suffering,you would think they are enjoying themselves because they are working for a big man.
They keep them in abject poverty so that they won't leave them and depend on them all the time.
Some of these guys don't get paid as at when due.
I know his house in maitama very very well.
Ready for my 2nd hatewatch of the World Cup.
I'm African so I will be supporting the only African team playing, Brazil 🇧🇷
The towel thieves who are too kleptomaniac to be Arabs, too brown to be Europeans & don't think they're Africans - should get their support from the court.