“Today Is Making It 1805 Days Mazi Nnamdi Kanu Was Abducted By The Government And Brought Back To Nigeria. 4 Years, 11 Months And 11 Days In Prison For Speaking The Truth! This Is Different From His Arrest On October 14, 2015 Under The Regime Of Buhari. In That One He Spent Close To 2 Years. One Of The Biggest Problems Of Nigeria Is That They Forgot About The Message And Focus On How To Persecute And K!ll The Messenger. Mazi Nnamdi Kanu Should Be Released With Apologies From The Nigerian Government. We Can’t Keep Silencing The Messengers And Disregarding The Messages. We Have People Who Are Enlightened And Ready To Make Nigeria Work… All They Need Is a Platform And Support.”
"Repentant Boko Haram Members Are Given N3Million Payoff After Rehabilitation And Placed On Monthly Salary Of N50,000" — Man Whose Father Was K!lled By The Insurgents Alleges
No army on earth can defeat this army of ideological monsters by:
- Pardoning them through "operations safe corridor" which the EU supports
- Calling them "prodigal sons who deserve forgiveness."
- Integrating them (wild beasts) into a society occupied by humans.
- Letting them live happily ever after, even though they've spent a better part of their lives un-aliving innocent people in the most ritualistic fashion ever.
It doesn't matter who you partner with, if you don't end Operation Safe Corridor" and start dealing with terrorists the way Mali and Burkina Faso deal with them, you're a bloody joker.
All the terrorists who narrowly escaped death in Mali have now shown up in Nigeria where being a terrorist is more lucrative and elevating than any civil engagement you could possibly think of.
I feel like people in Nigeria are living in a psychosomatic simulation.
End the Genocide Now.
When I visited Nigeria, the government responded swiftly to quell a coup in Benin.
Nigeria’s willingness to step in to stop a violent attack in another country, while they stand by as their own Christian citizens are brutalized makes these absolutely horrific scenes unfolding in Plateau State all the more unconscionable.
Christians — who were gathered for a mass burial for those killed in a previous attack — were viciously murdered by radical Islamic terrorists.
The Nigerian Government could root out the terrorism and stop the martyrdom of its own citizens. But, despite receiving early warnings of impending attacks, they are nowhere to be found as Christians are murdered for their faith, like lambs led to slaughter.
Enough is enough.
I am grateful the Trump Administration specifically identified protecting Christians in Nigeria in the administration’s new Counterterrorism Strategy. Now, I am asking the Trump Administration to take forceful action to defend our innocent brothers and sisters in Christ in the Middle Belt of Nigeria, the epicenter of an ongoing Christian genocide.
There was a man…
There was a man who loved his people.
He was born into a land where the law was not made for him. Where his tribe could not vote in the country of their fathers. Where the constitution itself was written to keep his kind in their place. He saw it. He named it. And he refused to accept it as the natural order of things.
He was educated. He had mastered the language of those who ruled, and he used it to expose what they had done. He was a man of words — written, spoken, broadcast — and his words traveled further than the regime could follow.
He believed, for a long time, that words alone could break the chains. He marched. He organized. He pleaded. He addressed the world in the language of reason and law.
The conscience of the powerful was not reached.
So he chose another road. Not because he wanted to. Because every peaceful door had been closed. He believed — and said openly — that a people whose every nonviolent appeal had been met with bullets had the right to defend themselves and to fight back. He did not call it terror. He called it self-defense, and he was prepared to be hanged for saying so.
The regime called it terror. They put his organization on lists. They put his face on wanted posters. They told the world he was a violent man, a dangerous man, a man whose freedom would mean chaos and bloodshed. The most powerful nation on earth kept him on its terrorist watch list for forty-four years.
They came for him. They charged him under laws written to silence him. They tried him in courts that were never going to acquit him. They sentenced him to die in prison.
He went to prison. And he stayed there.
While he sat in his cell, his people kept dying. The regime kept killing them. The world kept looking away. The lobbyists in distant capitals kept calling the survivors troublemakers and the killers misunderstood. The propaganda kept flowing. The history books kept being rewritten.
But something else happened too.
His name kept traveling. From mouth to mouth. From church to church. From parliament to parliament. The young people he had never met learned his name. The old people who had given up hope learned his name. The presidents and prime ministers who had once called him a terrorist began to feel a strange shifting in the rooms where they stood.
His captors had locked him away to silence him. They had only made him louder.
Years passed. The regime tried everything. They offered him freedom if he would renounce his cause. He refused. They offered him comfort if he would denounce his people. He refused. They offered him a quiet exile if he would simply stop being who he was. He refused.
He sat in his cell and he kept loving his people.
And one day — not because the regime had a change of heart, but because the world had finally learned his name — the doors opened. He walked out. Older. Frailer. But unbroken. Unbought. Unrepentant for the cause that had cost him everything.
He did not call for vengeance. He did not call for the regime’s people to be driven into the sea. He called for truth. He called for reconciliation. He called for the kind of justice that would let the children of his oppressors live in peace alongside the children of their victims.
His name became a word. His face became a face the world recognized. His country, once a byword for cruelty, became a country that could begin to heal. The regime that had jailed him as a terrorist became the regime that had to apologize for having done it. The world that had once looked away built statues of him in its capitals.
That man was Nelson Mandela.
He was 71 when he walked out of prison.
In Sokoto today, there is a man.
#EarthShaker
LIVE! Biafra Prime Minister Emergency Broadcast 08.11.2023 IMO STATE LOCKDOWN & Ebuka Obi Gate for supporting the killer Hope Uzodinma starts today. https://t.co/wwKwK8dZJ9
Crisis Rocks INEC's Stakeholders Meeting in Imo
Crisis has rocked the stakeholders meeting organized by the Independent National Electoral Commission for this weekend's scheduled governorship election in Imo state.
The crisis started immediately after INEC's National Commissioner representing South East, Kenneth Ukeagu, who is representing the National Chairman of INEC, Mahmood Yakubu, ordered journalists to shut their cameras and gadgets after he had declared the interactive session opened.
Members of the opposition political parties led by the running mates of the Labour Party governorship candidate, Tony Nwulu and that of the Peoples Democratic Party, Jones Onyereri, opposed the directives.
They said that the call by INEC's Chairman was a confirmation that the All Progressives Congress had made arrangements with the electoral umpire to rig the election.
Nwulu specifically said that there was no way the media would be shut out of the stakeholders' meeting.
He asked Ukeagu if the meeting was "a secret cult" and said that it was a plan by INEC to rig the election in favour of the APC.
The PDP governorship candidate's running mate, Onyereri supported Nwulu and displayed copies of documents he described as fake results sheets posted on the INEC's portal during the House of Assembly election in the state.