@teesoft@feyisayor04 There no truth in anything youre saying. Youre just spewing nonsense from all sides of your mouth. Cos he has 2 wives now. He’s immune to market runs. Chai
Agba o kan ogbon
Several people are still missing to this day. Auxiliary told their families they were in prison, when in reality, many of them had already lost their lives.
Ironically, the same person he risked everything to defend is now the one who has put him behind bars.
That is why, as a road transport worker, I know my limits. I don't force myself into every meeting, I don't attend every gathering, and I don't involve myself in every political fight. Some battles are simply not worth sacrificing your life for.
I personally know colleagues who lost their lives in the course of these struggles. Sadly, as another campaign season approaches, transport workers will once again become the foot soldiers for politicians. While those at the top negotiate and move on, it is ordinary people who bear the consequences.
Ambassador School, Ota, Ogun State, took one of its students to France in April this year for the same competition.
Now, in July, they are in Rome for the same program that Alex is currently attending, with four students. In fact, Ambassador School, Ota, Ogun State, took 16 students to the competition in Rome.
As the Yoruba say, "The biggest drum makes the loudest noise." So, should Abike Dabiri also mention the 16 students, @ruffydfire?
Call For Expressions of Interest
The Office of the Special Assistant to the President is inviting qualified Nigerian youths with a background in Agricultural Extension to submit their details for consideration.
Eligibility Requirements
Applicants must meet the following criteria:
1. Have a minimum of two (2) years of field experience in the agricultural extension sector, either as: * An Agricultural Extension Agent, or * An Input Dealer working directly with farmers.
2. Possess a valid and functional email address and phone number.
3. Have a functional bank account with a name that exactly matches the name on their National Identification Number (NIN).
4. Be able to read and write.
Qualified candidates who meet the above requirements are encouraged to submit their details as directed in the application process.
We encourage all eligible young professionals to take advantage of this opportunity.
https://t.co/VsWEDonA4T
20 key Youth programs by Federal Government that Youths should know about and maximize:
1. Student Loan for Tertiary Education: Interest-free loan, payable three years after graduation and upon securing employment. Apply at: https://t.co/K9Ck5obHnP
2. Technical and Vocational Education (TVET): Free education with a monthly stipend of N45,000 per student. Learn more at: https://t.co/UYQ85AVyg9
3. Million Technical Talent (3MTT): Training program for 3 million individuals in IT, with employment facilitation. Register at:
https://t.co/qKbzBzczUP
4. Nigerian Youth Academy (NiYA) Startup Grants: N1 million grants for 200 youth-led startups and N500,000 for 100 informal sector beneficiaries. Learn more at:
https://t.co/FkevPGWtgQ
5. NiYA Gig Digital Work Platform: Digital platform linking Nigerian youth to paid opportunities locally and globally. Learn more at:
https://t.co/lXKz3VPNVr
6. Youth Investment Fund: Financial support for young entrepreneurs. Learn more at:
https://t.co/jPP2HO3BTs
7. National Youth Development Bank: Bank providing access to capital for young entrepreneurs. Learn more at:
https://t.co/kTZCxAQWGs
8. Digital Literacy for All: Initiative to achieve 70% digital literacy by 2027. Learn more at:
https://t.co/BgbDA9Kk3H
9. Labour Employment and Empowerment Programme (LEEP): Program to create 2.5 million jobs through training and entrepreneurship development. Learn more at:
https://t.co/MxG0ReCwaE
10. NDE Renewed Hope Employment Initiative: Trained and resettled over 33,000 youth with starter packs in vocational skills. Learn more at:
https://t.co/eNKMFSIqb6
11. CNG-Powered Tricycle Empowerment Scheme: Distribution of 2,000 CNG-powered tricycles to Nigerian youth. Learn more at:
https://t.co/eCCeXhtSKs
12. Yo! Health Youth Initiative: National campaign promoting health and wellness among youth. Learn more at: https://t.co/188laxzdPY
13. Ministry of Steel Development Youth Bootcamp: Training youth in metallurgy, industrial welding, and mechanical design. Learn more at:
https://t.co/pNzNlILtBj
14. Nigeria Health Fellowship: Trained and employed 774 youth to strengthen healthcare workforce. Learn more at:
https://t.co/QJ2WPzyj7i
15. Reimagining Hope Creative Residency: Empowering young creatives in film, music, fashion, and tech industries. Learn more at:
https://t.co/vw86PJjz4O
16. NextGen Resilience Corps: Youth mobilization initiative for climate change, environmental sustainability, and local innovation. Learn more at:
https://t.co/agnwmAfgy2
17. Stockholm Junior Water Prize Nigeria: Competition for Nigerian teens to innovate in water management and environmental sustainability. Learn more at:
https://t.co/dZ8es0SCMF
18. SMEDAN Creative & Garment Studios: Empowering Nigerian youth in creative economy and fashion industry. Learn more at:
https://t.co/eOJNIvC1m1
19. NDDC Youth Entrepreneurship Fund*: N30 billion committed to youth entrepreneurship in the Niger Delta. Learn more at: https://t.co/SHR6Vund9Y
20. AfDB $100 Million Loan for Youth and Women-Led Enterprises: Targeting over 38,000 youth-led businesses with capital and business support. Learn more at:
https://t.co/HitwUQXxMc
#NigerianYouths #YouthEmpowerment #YouthOpportunities #NigeriaGovernment
#NigeriaStudents #SkillUpNigeria #FederalGovernment
Anambra State Facebook page posted the 177 SUVs Peter Obi bought for the Traditional Rulers in Anambra in 2013. That is 13 years ago.
Now, let's look at the comment section and see what Ndi Anambra had to say about Obi administration 13 years ago.
These same people are now projecting the same Man they once confirmed to be a failure to be president now..
Read through the comment section.
The Yoruba Buts Cheered Her When She Dragged Lagos – Now She's an Influencer, and They Are Silent
Let us talk about Ella. And let us talk about the Yoruba Buts who made her famous.
Ella, the young woman who rose to fame as the "BRT Girl," has announced she is quitting her 9-5 job to become a full-time influencer. First, it was Raye. Now, Ella. Same script. Same playbook. Same destination.
But this is not about Ella. This is about the Yoruba Buts who enabled her. The ones who cheered her when she was dragging Lagos, who celebrated her when she was calling out the government, who shared her videos and made her a hero. Where are they now? Silent. Nowhere to be found.
These are the same Yoruba Buts who pride themselves on being liberal. The ones who preach "One Nigeria" and insist that everyone belongs everywhere. The ones who will tell you that tribe does not matter, that competence is all that counts, that we must be open and accommodating. They wear their liberalism like a badge of honour. But their liberalism is a one-way street. They cheer outsiders who come to Lagos to drag the city, but they are silent when their own people are marginalised. They celebrate activists who use Lagos as a stage, but they do not ask why those same activists do not go back to their home states to demand accountability. They are quick to support anyone who criticises the Yoruba establishment, but they are slow to defend Yoruba interests when they are under threat.
The formula is simple. Leave a poverty-stricken home state. Come to Lagos. Find a grievance. Launch an "activism" campaign. Get noticed. Become a hero. Then drop the activism and become an influencer. Ella followed this script to perfection. She became a hero of the people. Now she has announced she is quitting her 9-5 job to become a full-time influencer. The activism that made her famous has served its purpose. She has monetised the attention. She has built a personal brand. She has moved on.
This is not new. Raye, another viral Lagos activist, followed the same trajectory. First, the outrage. Then, the attention. Then, the pivot to personal brand building. The pattern is so consistent it has become predictable. These are young people who left their home states, came to Lagos to hustle, built a platform on the backs of the city's struggles, and then monetised the attention. Lagos gave them a platform, they dragged the host, and now they are leaving the activism behind to become influencers.
And the Yoruba Buts who cheered them on? They are silent. They are not questioning why she abandoned the activism that made her famous. They are not asking why the problems she exposed are still unresolved. They are not demanding accountability from the influencer who used their city's struggles as a springboard for personal fame.
The question is simple. Why do these activists never go back to their home states to demand good governance? Why is it always Lagos? The same people who come to Lagos to seek greener pastures do not go back to their home states to demand better roads, better schools, better hospitals. They do not hold their own governors accountable. They do not demand that their leaders fix the problems that pushed them to leave in the first place. Instead, they come to Lagos, find a grievance, launch an activism campaign, and become heroes. And the Yoruba Buts cheer them on. They give them platforms. They make them famous. They celebrate them for dragging the host. And when the activism has served its purpose? They become influencers. They monetise the attention. They leave the struggle behind. And the Yoruba Buts? They move on to the next viral activist.
This is not about hating success. This is about calling out hypocrisy. If you are going to use Lagos as your stage, at least ask yourself why you are not using the same energy to fix your own home. If you are going to claim to fight for the people, at least start with your own people.