A community in Igboland monitored their forest and discovered fulani t£rrorists camp where human parts are scattered. Always monitored your forests and protect your villages.
IPOB leadership one on one with Israeli Knesset Deputy Speaker.
You MUST have relative to survive that’s why you see Fulani controls northern Nigeria, linking theirselves to Iran, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
Biafra-Israel relations.
#FreeMaziNnamdiKanu
Shalom Israel 💙
Foreign aid cannot go to terrorists! My amendment passed, which means NO AMERICAN DOLLARS are going to Nigeria.
Thank you, @DailySignal, for the coverage.
https://t.co/yCT4LqVMnc
‼️BREAKING: My amendment to withhold 100% of U.S. aid to Nigeria until its government stops the slaughter of Christians has PASSED.
American taxpayers should NEVER bankroll governments that turn a blind eye while Christians are abducted, tortured, and murdered.
No more wasteful foreign aid!
She Was Paraded, Be@ten And Burned Al!ve In Front Of Her Two Little Children, Who Watched Helplessly. Her Only Crime Was Asking For Directions In Kaduna State. 💔
In 1991, 9 Justices of @SupremeCourtNg, including #CJN Mohammed Bello, sued in defamation on the claim that they had received Mercedes Benz cars as gifts from military ruler, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida.
As CJN three decades & 3 yrs later, Olukayode Ariwoola was the proud owner of an expensive Mercedes Benz ride gifted to him as serving CJN by @GovWike. That is how we do #JudicialIndependence.
"I have so much respect for rubberstamps that I really am unable to degrade the rubberstamp by calling them (the 10th @nassnigeria) one."
https://t.co/gNdjGhbGOH
"The politicians don't need our votes to get to power. Who do they need? The judges. That is why Nyesom Wike is building mansions for judges. That is why state governors are donating prados and land cruisers to judges across the states. That is why they're making sure judges are the best-paid people in Nigeria. Meanwhile, governors who cannot pay the minimum wage are feeding judges with the kind of money and emoluments you cannot add up." — @ChidiOdinkalu
NIGERIA 🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬
I HAVE NEVER GIVEN UP-NNAMDI KANU
I have never been intimidated or discouraged from pursuing constitutional and legal remedies, no matter how powerful the State involved may be.
When the late General Muhammadu Buhari ordered the rendition of Nnamdi Kanu to Abuja, I took the matter to the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights in Arusha.
I filed an urgent application before the eleven judges, asking why Nigeria 🇳🇬 should not be held accountable under African human rights law.
What I discovered was astonishing.
I was informed that although Nigeria had accepted the Court’s founding Protocol, it had not made the declaration required to allow individuals and NGOs direct access to the Court. Consequently, my application could not proceed in the manner I had intended.
To me, this exposes a serious contradiction. A country that often speaks about the rule of law and leadership in Africa has denied ordinary Africans direct access to the continent’s highest human rights court.
That legal position raises important questions about accountability and access to justice for more than 250 million Nigerians.
My commitment to constitutionalism and the rule of law remains unshaken. The struggle for justice continues.
@SaharaReporters@EbomInno@allafrica@_AfricanUnion@Pamankunda@HyacinthNnamoko@Ipob_supporters@aladinstitute@GuardianNigeria@PBATMediaCentre@IPOB_LONDON
The @NigBarAssoc elects a new set of leaders every even number year. It has for long been the assumption that “the NBA is too important to be left alone.” Elections into its leadership organs unfold as a political market-place for a complex competition of interests, many of them external to the legal profession.
#NBADecides2026
https://t.co/HUphGGcd1C
BREAKING NEWS:
"I asked them to build a seaport in Igboland, but they refused. Instead, they allegedly offered to pay my family ₦300 million every month.
They are not really after me, Nnamdi Kanu. They are after the ordinary Igbo people, I simply happen to be standing in their way.
I also requested an international airport and a seaport for Igboland. They allegedly told me that if those projects were approved, the region would develop beyond Lagos. Rather than grant those requests, they reportedly offered me an additional ₦5 billion to remain silent.
I asked for equal rights and fair treatment for the Igbo people within Nigeria. Their response, they said, was that they would 'try their best.' Trying your best to treat my people as equal citizens of one Nigeria is unacceptable.
I then said, 'If that is the case, let my people have a referendum so they can decide whether to remain in Nigeria or leave.' Their answer, according to me, was that prison was the best place for me.
I am prepared to die for the Igbo people if Biafra is not achieved. The freedom of my people is the purpose for which I was born."
~Nnamdi Kanu had said from Sokoto prison
TO THE HONOURABLE MINISTER OF AVIATION, MR. FESTUS KEYAMO
Contrary to your account of events surrounding Mr. Peter Obi’s transit through the Abuja Airport on Saturday, July 4, it has become necessary to set the record straight.
Mr. Peter Obi does not have any police or civil defence personnel attached to him in Abuja, despite being entitled to VVIP protection by virtue of his status as a leading opposition figure in Nigeria. He certainly does not have a police officer serving as his driver. Your reference to a “police driver” appears to have been based on the assumption that he enjoys the level of security protection ordinarily accorded to someone of his standing. He does not.
Mr. Obi travels through multiple airports across Nigeria well over a dozen times every week. As someone who frequently travels with him, I have personally witnessed repeated instances of unusual discourtesy directed at him by some government personnel.
From your own account of events, it is evident that the incident Mr. Obi referred to during his interview occurred on a different date and at a different airport from the one referenced in your tweet.
However, let me address the incident you chose to publicise.
KEY CLARIFICATIONS
1. The incident you posted is entirely different from the one Mr. Peter Obi narrated in his interview. In that interview, he clearly stated: “I was there…” In the incident contained in your tweet, he was not present.
If we now have at least two separate incidents in which vehicles associated with Mr. Obi were clamped under questionable circumstances, does this not suggest a pattern of targeting an individual simply because of who he is?
2. The entire sequence of events you referenced, from arrival to the eventual clamping of the vehicle, lasted approximately five minutes.
At most airports around the world, including major international airports, a ten-minute drop-off window is generally considered acceptable. Where, then, did the claim of 30 minutes originate?
Do you not agree that half-truths can sometimes be more misleading than outright falsehoods?
3. Is it not a fact that several other vehicles were in the vicinity of Mr. Obi’s vehicle without attracting similar attention from airport officials? Indeed, some of those vehicles had been parked there long before Mr. Obi’s vehicle arrived, yet none was clamped.
4. I have personally been at the airport on several occasions when serving and former government officials arrived in large convoys, blocked access routes, and caused considerable inconvenience to the travelling public, without any agency of government taking similar action.
5. Under your watch, there have been other high-profile airport incidents, including:
The disruption involving Senator Adams Oshiomhole and airline staff.
The incident involving Mr. Wasiu Ayinde Marshal (KWAM 1), a known associate of the President, who allegedly attempted to prevent an aircraft from departing.
You are undoubtedly aware of both incidents.
Where was this same enthusiasm to instigate public outrage and issue official condemnations? Was CCTV footage from those incidents also released, or was the CCTV system only activated when it involved Mr. Peter Obi?
6. Can the publication of CCTV footage detailing Mr. Peter Obi’s movements on your personal social media platform be considered a serious breach of his personal security?
Your footage established no wrongdoing. Instead, you further exposed the movements of a leading opposition figure whose security concerns are already significant.
Would you release equivalent CCTV footage of other presidential candidates of Mr. Obi’s standing who travel in private and presidential aircraft funded by taxpayers?
Should a leading presidential candidate not be accorded security protocols consistent with democratic best practices?
The @njcNig has extended the tenure of the Ag. Chief Judge of Imo State until Sept 2026 just as the Attorney-General of the State is making a total arse of himself.
https://t.co/MFfZn4NJtq