Coord, Mission 1 Million Entrepreneurs; President, B.V.S.T Academy;
Principal Consultant, LEAD-P;
Founder, The Initiatives
President, Youth of All Nations.
(1) Cheap technology in Africa.
China
(2) Cheap and affordable electrical appliances in Africa.
China
(3) Interest Free Loans/Loans with 3 to 5% Interest as against predatory loans from western countries and institutions.
China.
(5) Africa's partners in industrialization and in infrastructure development.
China.
(6) Cheap and affordable cars that have flooded the African market. Making car ownership a reality for a lot of Africans.
China.
(7) Cheap and affordable STEM Toys/Baby Tec
China.
(8) Affordable digital Economy & ICT.
China.
(9) Affordable Public Health & Pharmaceuticals
China.
(10) Agricultural Export Support by removing all tariffs for African nations.
China.
(11) Africa's solar belt program via which tens of thousands of homes in Africa now have electricity?
China.
(12) Africa's partner in building super industries like the $20 billion Dangote Refinery?
China.
Lastly, guess the country, so called geopolitical analysts and social influencers castigates the most in Africa?
Yeah, you guessed right.
China.
Let me add this:
The reason we have what looks like a middle class in several African countries today is China.
China didn't just lift itself out of poverty, it took the entire Global South with it and we in Africa are direct beneficiaries of China's massive industrialization.
Instead of spreading propaganda against the Chinese, we should be grateful to China and learn from them to better our systems.
Some of you won't be able to afford smart phones or home appliances and basic civilian technology if China had no cards in global politics and power.
Some of your parents couldn't even afford TV when the West controlled everything.
Stop being stup*d, know who your true partners are.
In 1991, Isaac Wright Jr. was wrongfully convicted in New Jersey on drug kingpin charges and sentenced to life in prison.
While incarcerated, he studied law using the prison library, acted as a “jailhouse lawyer,” and helped overturn convictions for over 20 other inmates.
Some years later, he successfully proved his own innocence by exposing police corruption and perjured testimony. His conviction was overturned, and he was fully exonerated.
After his release, he earned a college degree, graduated from law school (St. Thomas University School of Law, 2007), and was admitted to the New Jersey Bar in 2017, becoming the first person in U.S. history to go from a life sentence in that state’s courts to being licensed by the same court.
The original trial judge, Michael Imbriani, was later convicted of judicial misconduct, theft, and other crimes and sentenced to seven years in prison.
Isaac now practices law, often in the same courtroom where he was once sentenced.
This is very troubling?! What happened to the previous budgets that have not been implemented in this administration? March 31, 2026 deadline has since passed.
🗣️ Dear Citizens,
On December 19, 2025, a promise was made. By March 31, 2026, all capital liabilities from previous years would be cleared, and Nigeria would move to a single, clean budget cycle.
No overlaps. No rollovers.
Now, look at the date again. March 31, 2026 has passed. So, what happened to that promise?
Are all capital liabilities from previous years fully funded and closed? Are we truly operating on a single budget cycle today?
If not, what does that mean for transparency, planning, and accountability?
And more importantly, what should citizens do when commitments like this are not clearly accounted for?
Do we move on, or do we ask questions?
#2026BudgetNG #AskQuestions
@wdunlap@SternDrewCrypto Bill Gates' mission is obvious. It's in plain sight and not hidden. I just wondered why he should be trusted to 'save' human population when his campaigns and works contradict the rhetoric.
@SternDrewCrypto This exposure is frightening! The global players and sponsors of this biowarfare and subtle systematic depopulation of people deserve to face ICC! They are agents of destruction and do not deserve any privilege to hurt any human again.
Gas flaring releases methane, a heat-trapping gas that worsens climate change and damages health.
In Nigeria, it’s happening daily in the Niger Delta, affecting air, water, and farmland.
Beyond pollution, methane from gas flaring is also wasted energy. Nigeria is burning gas that could generate electricity, while losing trillions in potential revenue.
The solution exists: capture the gas, commercialize it, and power homes.
The government has promised to end gas flaring by 2030. But the reality on the ground has not changed.
We are calling on government and industry leaders to act now.
End gas flaring. Protect lives.
#ZeroFlare2030
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?
@FinPlanKaluAja1 "Where did all the revenue go?"
Someone who should know told us not long ago, didn't he? He was involved in budget passage and oversight, and couldn't have said so without having his facts. Plus, no one has come forward to debunk his claims. Are we still in doubt?
Foreign interests working against Africa's growth, says Dangote
Aliko Dangote, founder and president of the Dangote Group, says foreign interests are working against Africa’s growth.
The billionaire spoke on Thursday at the Investing in Africa forum, held on the sidelines of the ongoing IMF-World Bank spring meetings in Washington, DC.
Calling for stronger regional integration, the philanthropist dismissed the idea of successful implementation of a single African market without a functioning regional market.
“The Africa free trade will work, but it can only work when the regional markets work,” the industrialist said.
https://t.co/haaUzUnmcv
A few days after 'admitting' that its decades-old anti-industrial position for Afrixa was wrong, @WorldBankGroup is back to regular programming, advising Nigeria to return to importing petrol and exporting crude oil.
A report by @ucee for @Spearhead_Af
I wonder the place of DSS and intelligence gathering. Several communities across Nigeria have become devastated, lives wasted and survivors dispersed or reduced to IDPs in their own country. It's a big shame. Govt can do better.
🗣️ Dear Nigerians,
@TrackaNG submitted a Freedom of Information request on March 2, asking for clarity on the cost, process, and key details of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway project.
We are asking these questions because projects of this scale involve public funds and have real implications for communities, livelihoods, and the environment. Nigerians deserve to know how decisions are made and how resources are being used.
Till date, there has been no response.
#AskQuestions #GetInvolved
The vaccine dosage was obviously too high and done too many times.
I had the original Wuhan virus before there was any vaccine and it was much like any other cold/flu. Bad, but not terrible.
But my second vaccine shot almost sent me to the hospital. Felt like I was dying.
This should be headline news EVERYWHERE.
A Pfizer insider who was former head of toxicology in Europe has just come out and said something that many "conspiracy theorists" suspected.
He estimates that 20 000 to 60 000 people in Germany have died from the c*vid vaccine.
This was said at a parliamentary enquiry commission in Germany.
So why isn't this massive news being reported everywhere?
Is the mainstream media that has recieved millions in funding from Bill Gates deliberately covering this up... 🤔
Nigeria Is Not A Country. It Is Gilbert Chagoury’s Private Estate.
I was in Geneva today. Two hours with a very senior Swiss banker — a good friend. The subject was Gilbert Chagoury.
This man does not laugh easily. He laughed constantly.
Every time I described what was happening in Nigeria — every contract, every honour, every port deal — he laughed. Not with me. At Nigeria. And I sat there feeling something I rarely allow myself to feel. Shame.
Here is what I was telling him.
Since Tinubu took office, Gilbert Chagoury — a man convicted in Switzerland for laundering Abacha’s stolen funds — has collected over $12.7 billion in Nigerian federal contracts. The Lagos-Calabar Highway. Tin Can Port. Apapa Port. Snake Island. All without competitive bidding. And the President’s son Seyi sits on the board of a Chagoury Group subsidiary — then goes on television to tell Nigerians his father is not enriching his friends.
My banker friend laughed at that one the longest.
In January, Tinubu gave Chagoury Nigeria’s second highest national honour. The presidency didn’t even announce it. Someone posted a photograph on X.
Then came London. A £746 million port financing deal sealed at Downing Street during Tinubu’s state visit — with Chagoury reportedly in the delegation, and his company already selected to execute the contract. The British know his history. They have decided it does not matter.
My Swiss friend told me plainly: Nigeria will never be taken seriously as long as a man who helped Abacha loot the treasury can return decades later, collect billions in contracts, receive national honours, stand beside the President in London, and face zero consequence.
He is right.
I will not stop writing. But tonight I drove back to my hotel carrying the weight of a country that deserves so much better than what it is being given.
Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden
#NigeriaIsNotForSale #ChaouryNigeria #TinubuChagoury #FollowTheMoney #NigerianDiaspora #EndImpunity #WhoOwnsNigeria #AfricanAccountability
Picture of Gilbert Chagoury the de facto President of Nigeria , a convicted money launderer who funds Hezbollah and was found guilty of Election tampering in the United States !!!