This MamaPee advert on Peter Obi is super!
Should be played over & over again to our youths, parents, elders, new & old voters.
Nigeria Will Be “OK” if we do the right thing.
A new Nigeria is POssible.
*SHARE FAR AND WIDE!*
Why are all of Tinubu's aides posting about Peter Obi?
Festus Keyamo
Bayo Onanuga
Daniel Bwala.
Which aide has not spoken about Peter Obi today?
What does PO have that they need?
If you have NIN you can retrieve your Tax ID in minutes. For your business Tax ID, use the CAC registration number.
Watch this video for the simplified process.
#oneNigerianon-negotiable
If you have NIN you can retrieve your Tax ID in minutes. For your business Tax ID, use the CAC registration number.
Watch this video for the simplified process.
Tax ID Card:
https://t.co/oMpqQ520Et
https://t.co/Z8rnaeI2ir
2: Insert your NIN: to retrieve your NIN, dial *346#
-(a): then input your names and date of birth.
3: Your tax ID will be displayed
🇳🇬NIGERIA
In Nigeria, a Christian, Sunday Jackson, is sentenced to death for self defense against a Fulani militiaman who attacked to kill him on his farm.
In Nigeria, the government rejects death sentence for the same Fulani Islamist militia because “it will worsen insecurity” they say.
I am quickly reminded, then, that the NSA of the Nigeria’s Federal Government supplies arms to Miyetti Allah, a terrorist group that has claimed responsibility for deadly attacks on Christians across the Middle Belt.
Aha!
There are hundreds of Christians students abducted by Islamists and the same NSA, so far, has only assured the Christians that the Christian children are safe in the hands of their captors.
RESPONSE:
I believe @Sistaliano wrote this public post for two reasons:
-to offer condolences on the passing of Omoshalewa, Iyalode Efunsetan (@absoluteOMP),
-and to misrepresent facts and history by recasting Shalewa's public conduct as heroic.
Before anything else, I register my condolences on Shalewa's passing. Despite being frequent victims of her sustained hostility toward Igbo people, we did not wish her — or anyone — death. Death is tragic precisely because it denies people the opportunity to change, to reflect, or to witness change.
You described Shalewa as a warrior, comrade, and fearless woman who stood for what is right.
There is truth here — mixed with serious falsehood.
Lewa was indeed an X (Twitter) warrior.
But she led an army of hate, primarily against Igbo people.
She operated behind anonymity, unable to attach her face to her words — a disguise that enabled relentless dehumanisation. Until very recently, many assumed the account belonged to a man.
Mocking the memories of Biafran children who died slowly and painfully from starvation is not “standing for what is right.”
That was not courage.
That was a moral failure.
You claimed she stood to defend land, heritage, culture, and people, fighting for Yoruba with unmatched conviction. This raises a necessary question: what land was she defending, and against whom?
Biafrans have repeatedly attempted to leave Nigeria — and were prevented mostly by the South West.
When they sought to live within Nigeria, they were met with hostility: “My Lagos, not your Lagos.”
When they sought leadership, even winning a presidential election was deemed insufficient.
So the question must be asked plainly:
What exactly do you want of the Biafrans?
You do not want them to leave.
You do not want them to stay.
You do not want them to lead.
Meanwhile, the oil and gas wealth of Biafraland continues to be exploited under this permanent stalemate. You said her passing leaves a void. That may be personally true.
But it is also true that society is quieter — and better — without the near-daily hate she released into public space.
You spoke of “carrying her torch.”
Yet when ₦25 million was needed to keep her alive, that torch produced no light.
A sum Biafrans could have raised in hours was not raised by those who praised her most.
This exposes the hypocrisy of performative solidarity built on hate.
You prayed that her legacy would live forever.
But how does one justify the eternal preservation of a legacy of hatred?
Shalewa was not born hateful. No child is.
I do not blame her.
I blame the system that cultivated that hatred — a system that taught her to see people struggling like herself as deserving of pain, suffering, and death simply because they were Igbo or Biafran.
While I join you in mourning her passing as a human being,
I hope we never again encounter an online presence built so completely on dehumanisation.
We do not need to make myths while offering condolences and though we grief, we must not be dishonest with history.
Do you understand how deep wickedness and bitterness can be when someone is on her sickbed yet still hates and wishes people death?
She even mocked Nigeria Civil war victims, Now you want her to rest in peace
We wish all the Ronus what they wished us