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Anthony is one of the maths teachers from Diamond Special College, Owerri Imo State.
His students won N8 million cash today and he won N2 million as well.
I’m happy that we are finally rewarding our teachers by making them millionaires.
This is Onah Tobit representing Anambra State in Primary Category.
He got second position in the South East Maths Olympiad. He lost to the winner with 1 point.
DON-ANELE MARVELOUS MUNACHIMSO
From Diamond Special College Owerri, IMO State Won the Senior Category for South East Maths Olympiad.
He won N5 million and also won N1 million for his teacher.
He recently won $100k scholarship In Canada.
A star is born today!
@Joe_brendan_ People dey overestimate competition and underestimate consistency. If you can show up longer than the noise, opportunity dey wait quietly.
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
THEY TOOK 50 STUDENTS TO PRISON
Prosperity cannot come by taxing Poverty
As I travel the world and meet leaders who have transformed their nations, one lesson is clear: lasting economic and social progress begins with national consensus. Transformative leaders—those who successfully unite their people around a shared vision—share a defining quality: honesty. Government must be transparent and truthful because citizens deserve nothing less from those who lead them. True leaders do not exploit their people to enrich themselves and a few cronies; they build trust, unity, and shared purpose - the foundation of sustainable progress.
It is against this standard of honest leadership that Nigeria’s current approach to taxation must be measured. If taxation is to function as a genuine social contract, it must be rooted in sincerity, fairness, and concern for the welfare of the people. Every tax policy should be clearly explained, including its impact on incomes and its expected contribution to national development. Without this transparency, taxation becomes a tool of confusion and burden rather than a mechanism for growth and development.
Nigeria must rethink taxation if it is serious about economic growth, national unity, and shared prosperity. The purpose of sound fiscal policy is not merely to raise revenue; it is to make the people wealthier so that the nation itself becomes stronger. Yet today, Nigerians are asked to pay taxes without clarity, explanation, or visible benefit.
The solution begins with empowering small and medium-sized enterprises in every community. When small businesses thrive, jobs are created, incomes rise, and the tax base expands naturally. You cannot tax your way out of poverty - you must produce your way out of it.
This makes the ongoing tax fraud saga particularly alarming. For the first time in Nigeria’s history, a tax law has reportedly been forged. The National Assembly itself has admitted that the version gazetted is not what was passed into law. Yet citizens are being asked to pay higher taxes under this manipulated framework—without transparency, without explanation, and without corresponding benefits.
There is no virtue in celebrating increased government revenue while the people grow poorer. Taxing poverty does not create wealth; it deepens hardship. Any tax system that makes citizens poorer violates the fundamental principles of good governance and sound fiscal policy.
Nigeria needs a fair, lawful, and people-centred tax system—one that supports production, rewards enterprise, protects the vulnerable, and restores trust between government and citizens. Only then can taxation become a true tool for unity, growth, and shared prosperity. -PO