Bayo Onanuga is advising us to stop travelling at night.
Remi Tinubu is advising us to start frying akara.
Late Okupe was advising us to start farming in our apartments.
Tinubu is advising us to stop eating 3 square meals because it's a fake life.
And you're telling me this government didn't have a covenant with the underworld?
“This govt is guilty of genocide & I can prove it. In May 2024 the Tinubu administration very proudly declared that Boko Haram had been defeated. That time, Reno Omokri begged me to nominate Nuhu Ribadu for a Nobel Prize for defeating BH, I asked him for proof & he dropped the subject. Nigerian Govt paid a ransom of about N6 Billion, roughly $4M to a foreign terr0rist organization.”
~Mike Arnold says he has a proof that Tinubu’s Government is complicit in the ongoing terr0rism in Nigeria
Five stories will change your life.
Whether you're a creator building a product or a CEO building a company, you need five stories.
Not five pieces of content. Five strategic narratives that drive every piece of communication you put into the world.
Here they are:
The Origin Story: Why you started. What happened to you that made you care about this problem. This is the story that builds trust faster than anything else. People don't trust companies. They trust humans with reasons.
My origin story is the crazy belief after series of rejection. The quest to fulfill my potential, The WAMC challenge. The decision to rebuild publicly. Every time I tell it, someone connects with it because everyone has had a moment where everything fell apart and they had to decide what to do next.
The Enemy Story: What you're fighting against. Every powerful brand has an enemy. Not a competitor - an idea. Nike fights the voice that says "you can't." Apple fought the idea that technology should be complicated. Jali fights the idea that creators can't be real business owners and founders can't learn to create.
Your enemy story gives people something to rally around. It turns your business into a movement.
The Proof Story: What happened when someone did it your way. Case studies. Testimonials. Results. But told as a story, not a statistic. Not "we generated a 340% ROI."
Instead: "She was posting every day and making nothing. Six months later, she had a six-figure offer suite and worked half the hours."
The Belief Story: What you believe that most people don't. The contrarian take. The hill you'll die on.
Mine is that story is the most underleveraged business asset in the world. Not product. Not technology. Not capital. Story. Every time I say it, some people disagree. Good. The people who agree become customers.
The Vision Story: Where you're going. What the world looks like if you win. People don't buy products. They buy futures. They buy the world you're trying to create. If your vision is big enough and articulated clearly enough, people will want to be part of building it with you.
Five stories. Whether you're a creator with 500 followers or a CEO with 500 employees.
Map yours. Then tell them. Relentlessly
This is Day 11 of #buildingmycreatorbusinessinpublic
Cooking gas has gone from being a basic household necessity to an increasingly burdensome expense for many Nigerians.
Refilling a 12.5kg cylinder now costs ₦21,900. This makes no sense.
Few years ago, the same cylinder cost as little as ₦800.
We can’t continue like this.
These Police Officers just parked me at Bolade, Oshodi, pointed guns at me, and forced me to transfer N100,000 them. When my bank app showed "exceeded transfer limit", they dragged me to a nearby POS to do it with my card.
They initially demanded 150k each.
They were 4 in number.
These are the names I could copy:
Francis Adekunle
2087495551
Kuda
Friday Ikpe
9136237110
Okay
This is the phone number of the notorious Officer Friday Ikpe 09136237110. I got it from his opay
@PoliceNG@BenHundeyin@Princemoye1
Please my mutuals, if you see this on your TL, help repost or tag other relevant authorities until these criminals are apprehended.
THE BEST AND MOST DETAILED DOCUMENTARY ON TINUBU'S FAILURE... This girl really took her time to compile Tinubu's propagandas and shortcomings. Retweet massively till it gets to the Jagabandits abeg.
Brazil: For the first time ever, a Brazilian husband and wife were sentenced to prison for the “crime” of homeschooling their daughters.
The judge held that the children needed more diversity, gender and sex education.
Keep in mind, the mother holds degrees in mathematics and pedagogy and the children perform well.
The sentence is suspended, pending appeal.
Pray for this precious family.
"I don't believe we have a cruel choice." — Kevin Warsh
With one line, the new Fed Chair buried a core rule of the British imperial system. Here's what's replacing it. 👇
The Plunder Beneath the Waves: How Foreign Factory Ships Are Stripping West Africa's Seas Bare
A criminal armada of industrial trawlers — backed by state subsidies, shielded by corruption, and ignored by the world — is devastating Nigeria and the West African coast, one drag net at a time.
By Kio Amachree
Off the coast of Bonny Island, in the creeks of the Niger Delta where generations of Ijaw and Kalabari fishermen have cast their nets since time immemorial, Promise Bristol has watched the sea die. As head of artisanal fishermen in Bonny, he has seen the trawlers come in the night — vast industrial vessels, their nets a mile long, dragging the ocean floor with mechanical indifference. By morning, the shallows that once teemed with life are scoured clean. "After they have finished fishing," one fisherman in nearby Oyorokoto told investigators, "we hardly see fishes catch." When local fishermen dare to protest, Bristol says, foreign trawlers connive with security agents to attack local fishermen who rebel against their illegal activities.
This is not a remote ecological complaint. This is a civilizational emergency unfolding in slow motion across 6,000 kilometers of African coastline — and the world is largely looking the other way.
**The Scale of the Theft**
West Africa's coastal waters represent one of the most heavily exploited marine zones in the Atlantic — a frontline in the global struggle against illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing. The region's vast Exclusive Economic Zones, rich biodiversity, and relatively limited enforcement infrastructure have made it particularly susceptible to incursions by foreign industrial fleets.
The numbers stagger the conscience. The scourge costs West Africa an estimated $10 billion per year, according to a September 2023 report by the Stimson Center, while the Financial Transparency Coalition found that the region attracts 40 percent of the world's illegal trawlers. Across the entire continent, Africa loses an estimated $11.2 billion in annual revenue to illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing — with West Africa alone accounting for up to $9.4 billion of that loss.
For Nigeria specifically, the damage is both chronic and compounding. In 2018, illegal fishing cost Nigeria an estimated $70 million, and the menace has continued to make life difficult for small-scale fishers, many of them women working in fish processing and sales, who face declining catches and rising unemployment. The Nigerian House of Representatives confirmed that the country loses $70 million per year due to IUU fishing, including loss of license fees, tax revenue, and income that could have sustained artisanal fishermen.
And yet Nigeria has not ratified the Port State Measures Agreement — the primary international instrument for denying illegal fishing vessels access to ports and markets. To have a genuine impact, Nigeria — a major regional player — must ratify the agreement. It has not.
**The Chinese Dragon Net**
The dominant actor in this maritime crime wave is China. China commands the world's largest distant-water fishing fleet and is by far the worst IUU fishing actor in Africa and across the globe. Of the top 10 companies engaged in illegal fishing globally, eight are from China, according to the Financial Transparency Coalition.
Chinese companies — including both state-backed firms and private actors — have rapidly expanded into West Africa's fishing sector, often operating illegally in prohibited coastal waters. Chinese vessels employ bottom trawling and other destructive methods, which, combined with limited oversight and poor enforcement of national and transboundary laws, have caused declining fish stocks, weakened local fishery economies, and deteriorated coastal water quality.
The operational model is sophisticated in its cynicism. Using local companies as legal fronts allows Chinese firms to circumvent fishing license laws that prevent foreign vessels from operating within national exclusive economic zones. Chinese trawlers are notorious for "flagging in" to African nations — abusing local rules to flag a foreign-owned and operated vessel into an African registry so it can fish legally in local waters. In practical terms, this means that vessels owned in Fujian or Zhoushan sail under Cameroonian or Guinean flags, their true beneficiaries invisible behind layers of corporate opacity.
The physical destruction is equally brazen. In Liberia, industrial supertrawlers operate nets that are a mile long, dragging sea beds so aggressively that coral reefs have been washed ashore. Beijing's trawlers are also known to destroy fishing gear used by local fishermen and capsize their canoes, sometimes resulting in deaths. These larger boats have been known to ram smaller vessels, damage their nets and equipment, and spray them with water cannons.
The practice known as "saiko" adds another dimension of criminality. In this scheme, catches are transferred from a trawler to a large canoe capable of carrying about 450 times more fish than an artisanal fishing canoe — an illegal transshipment at sea that allows industrial operators to launder their catch through local markets while evading regulatory scrutiny.
In April 2025, Ghana's Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture suspended the fishing licenses of four Chinese trawlers for twelve months for practicing saiko, dumping unwanted fish, fishing in restricted zones, and harvesting juvenile fish. Four trawlers. In a fleet that numbers in the hundreds.
**The Ecological Catastrophe in Numbers**
The environmental toll is irreversible on any human timescale. In Ghana, total landings of small pelagic fish fell by 59 percent between 1993 and 2019, despite increased fishing efforts. Landings of Sardinella aurita — a favoured species — declined from 119,000 tonnes in 1992 to just 11,834 tonnes in 2019. Côte d'Ivoire experienced a parallel collapse, with its catch plummeting nearly 40 percent between 2003 and 2020.
Rising sea surface temperatures have caused geographic shifts in small pelagic fish populations at a rate of up to 200 kilometres per decade toward areas with more favourable water temperatures — meaning the stocks that remain are moving south and deeper, further beyond the reach of artisanal canoes. But climate change is the complicating factor, not the primary one. The trawlers arrived first.
Fish are the main source of animal protein for more than 60 percent of households in West Africa, a region that produces 32 percent of Africa's annual fish catch. Nigeria imports over half of the fish it consumes, despite having an extensive coastal area rich in marine life. That paradox — an oil-rich coastal nation dependent on imported protein — is the direct product of decades of industrial plunder and governmental neglect.
The human consequences follow logically. About 2.4 million Ghanaians are vulnerable to food insecurity, while 18 percent of Côte d'Ivoire's population faces acute food insecurity. During the lean season between June and August, 30.6 million Nigerians are projected to face acute food insecurity.
**Europe's Dirty Hands**
China is the loudest villain, but not the only one. The West African coast is one of the most productive fishing zones in the world, attracting fleets from China, Russia, Korea, and the European Union. Foreign-owned vessels, including Spanish boats, make up 73 percent of the industrial fleet in West Africa.
Two environmental NGOs, ClientEarth and Oceana, have filed a lawsuit against the Spanish government, alleging failures to investigate and sanction Spanish-flagged vessels suspected of illegal fishing in West African waters. Many Spanish companies establish joint ventures with local firms or reflag vessels to countries like Senegal or Guinea-Bissau, allowing them to benefit economically from rich West African fishing zones while circumventing EU regulations.
In February 2025, several NGOs sued the French government over its failure to end bottom trawling in marine reserves, arguing that authorities had ignored damaging practices in protected areas. Senegal, meanwhile, was issued a yellow card warning by the EU in 2024 due to its inability to control illegal fishing activities.
The legal architecture is designed to protect the powerful. What makes this situation difficult to deal with is that legally, ships observe the regulation of their flag states. Non-African countries play a significant role when they turn a blind eye to their industrial fishing fleets venturing into African waters. State fishing subsidies also promote illegal fishing by enabling fleets to sail and operate anywhere in the world.
**The Road to Piracy**
History offers a precise warning of where this trajectory leads. Rampant illegal fishing off Somalia's coast, coupled with lawlessness, resulted in local fishers taking up arms to attack foreign fishing vessels in Somali waters. These vigilante groups were one of the precursors to piracy in the region — and this serves as a warning to West Africa, where continuous coastal instability could worsen the piracy situation already present in the Gulf of Guinea.
The lack of fish may persuade traditional fishermen to seek illicit employment — such as drug smuggling. In the Niger Delta, where militancy and maritime crime have deep historical roots, the conditions for a new generation of radicalized fishermen are being cultivated deliberately, even if unintentionally, by the impunity of foreign fleets.
Illegal fishing has led to the loss of more than 300,000 artisanal fishing jobs across the region, according to the International Collective in Support of Fishworkers. Those are not just economic statistics. Those are men with families, with traditions stretching back centuries, with nowhere else to go.
**What Must Be Done**
The framework for action exists. What is absent is the political will to enforce it.
Nigeria must ratify the Port State Measures Agreement immediately. There is a need to strengthen governance and legal frameworks, revive outdated fisheries and water resource policies, and enact new laws that clearly outline regulatory loopholes and specify new monitoring and enforcement mechanisms to address them.
Of the top 10 companies engaged in illegal fishing globally, eight are from China — and those companies enjoy state subsidies, low-interest loans, and the diplomatic shield of the Belt and Road relationship. African governments must recalibrate that relationship, or accept permanent subordination of their maritime sovereignty.
Government reforms including closed seasons and subsidy reviews have produced limited results because they are implemented in isolation, without the maritime enforcement capacity to back them. Nigeria must invest materially in its Navy and Coast Guard, equip its surveillance agencies, and pursue the data-sharing frameworks with regional partners that alone can track vessels which routinely go dark on AIS systems to conceal illegal operations.
And African governments must confront, openly and without diplomatic equivocation, the corruption networks that allow foreign trawlers to fish freely in sovereign waters while local officials pocket licensing fees and look away. Political inaction, corruption, and Chinese impunity threaten fish populations across the West Africa region. That sentence, documented by investigative journalists working in Nigeria and Ghana, should be read as an indictment of every government official who has cashed a bribe while a trawler emptied a Nigerian bay.
**The Last Catch**
Ninety percent of Ghanaians surveyed by Harvard researchers said they do not believe their children will be able to depend on fishing or related trades in the future. Similar sentiments were expressed in Côte d'Ivoire and Nigeria.
A people who have fed themselves from the sea for ten thousand years are being told — by satellite-tracked factory ships owned in Shanghai and Galicia, operated by corrupt licensing arrangements, and enabled by African governments too compromised or too weak to resist — that the sea belongs to them no longer.
This is not merely an environmental story. It is a sovereignty story. It is a food security story. It is, at its core, a continuation of extraction — different vessels, different century, same colonial logic: Africa's resources are available to whoever is strong enough to take them.
The fish are running out. The time to act is not after the last net is hauled. It is now.
---
Kio Amachree is President of Worldview International and publishes Letters from Stockholm on Substack. He writes on Nigerian governance, pan-African accountability, and global justice.
When people tell you to focus on your state and ignore federal government.
Pay them no attention!
Here is the current revenue allocation formula (FAAC) in Nigeria!
• Federal Government: 52.68%
• State Governments (36 states): 26.72%
• Local Government Councils (774 LGAs): 20.60%
Federal government also controls, fiscal and monetary policies, which is the foundation of our Economy.
They influence economic growth, inflation, employment, and broader social outcomes.
The Left and Islam, these two ideologies should be at war, one claims to fight for feminism, LGBTQ rights, secularism, and equality, while the other is rooted in medieval theocracy, submission, and absolute control.
Yet, they’ve formed a perfect symbiotic relationship, using each other for power, influence, and the destruction of Western civilization from within.
For the left, Islam is a weapon.
It is the ultimate tool to dismantle Western values, weaken national identity, and push their own radical agenda.
They don’t care about Islam itself, they exploit it, knowing that the ideology carries a powerful victim narrative that they can weaponize against their political enemies.
The left thrives on oppression narratives.
Islam, with its deep-rooted sense of historical grievance, fits perfectly into the intersectional hierarchy of the “oppressed.”
The left despises Christianity because it upholds traditional morality. But they need a battering ram to dismantle it.
Islam, with its aggressive opposition to Christianity, becomes a convenient ally.
The left knows that Western-educated, patriotic voters won’t buy into their radical agenda.
So they import millions of people from Islamic countries who are more likely to vote for big government, hate Western traditions, and demand “tolerance” while refusing to assimilate.
The more chaos, the better, because a broken society is easier to control.
The left thrives on censorship.
What better way to shut down debate than by labeling any criticism of Islam as “hate speech”?
The left uses Islam as a shield, calling any factual discussion about jihad, sharia, or terrorism “racist.”
But Islam is not a passive tool, it is using the left just as much, if not more.
While the left believes it is controlling Islam, Islam is infiltrating and manipulating the left to expand its dominance.
Islamic jihadists understand that they don’t need a military conquest to take over the West, they just need to infiltrate.
With leftist backing, they gain positions in politics, media, academia, and law enforcement, where they can quietly reshape policy in their favor.
The left’s obsession with open borders and unrestricted immigration is Islam’s golden ticket.
Once a Muslim population reaches a critical mass, it doesn’t assimilate, it dominates.
London, Paris, and Sweden’s no-go zones are the results of Islam using democracy to establish enclaves where sharia law reigns supreme.
Islamic jihadists have learned to disguise their theocratic ambitions under the language of human rights.
They attach themselves to LGBTQ movements, feminist causes, and racial justice protests, even though Islam itself stands against everything these groups claim to support.
It’s a calculated move, gain leftist support, then turn against them when power is secured.
The left believes it can control Islam.
But history shows that every time Islam allies with a non-Islamic force, it ultimately turns against its so-called allies.
The communists in Iran learned this the hard way when they helped overthrow the Shah in 1979, only to be executed en masse by the same Islamic jihadists they had supported.
The same fate awaits the left.
Radical feminists think they’re empowering women, until they’re forced into hijabs.
LGBTQ activists think they’re fighting for equality, until they’re thrown off rooftops.
Socialists think they’re creating utopia, until they find themselves living under the Caliphate.
Islam is not here to be anyone’s pawn. It is here to conquer. And the left, in its blind hatred of the West, is paving the way for its own destruction.
When I was Muslim, I knew the story in Surah 2.
King Saul leads his army out, God tests them at a river — don’t drink, or you’re not with me — and only a few pass. Then they fight, and David kills Goliath. Surah 2:249-251.
Clean story. Until you open the Bible and find that the river test isn’t Saul’s at all.
It’s Gideon’s. Judges 7.
God tells Gideon his army is too big. So he tests them at the water. The men who lap like a dog go one way, the men who kneel go another. God whittles 32,000 men down to 300, so Israel can’t brag that they won by their own strength.
That’s the test. And it belongs to GIDEON. A judge. About 150 years BEFORE Saul was ever king.
You know what shook me?
The Quran took Gideon’s water test, pinned it on Saul, and then stitched the David and Goliath battle onto the end of it.
Two separate stories, from two different centuries, fused into one.
It’s the exact same thing the Quran does with Moses and Jacob. Take a detail from one hero, glue it onto another, compress the timeline.
I used to say the Bible mixed things up.
But the Bible keeps Gideon and Saul as two distinct men, 150 years apart, with two distinct stories.
It’s the later book that merged them.
And here’s what I couldn’t ignore.
Gideon’s 300 won so that no one could boast. The whole point was: the victory is God’s, not yours.
That’s the Gospel in advance. You don’t win by your strength. You win by His.
“Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord.” Zechariah 4:6.
The Bible kept the story straight because the story was going somewhere.
It was going to a cross, where God won the victory alone, so no one could ever boast they saved themselves.
The UN just released a report from a twelve-day Nigeria "investigation" by its Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief. Finding: no evidence of religious persecution.
One detail sets the table: the Rapporteur was there at the invitation of the Nigerian government.
The Rapporteur's reasoning: she did not see a direct government order to kill Christians. No instruction from Abuja, up and down the chain of command, ordering one religious group destroyed. Therefore — not genocide. Not persecution. Move along.
The problem is, that is NOT the legal standard. That is a red herring. Disgusting.
In 1994, Hutu militias — not the Rwandan military, not a government chain of command — killed 800,000 Tutsi in 100 days. The International Criminal Tribunal ruled it genocide. The killers didn't have government memos in their pockets. They had machetes and a mission. Intent to destroy a group is the standard. Not a signed order.
The Rapporteur, Prof. Nazila Ghanea, holds a chair in international human rights law at Oxford University. She knows the legal standard for religious persecution and genocide. She chose intentionally to kick up dust with a false argument to justify her obviously pre-determined conclusion. That's not an investigation, it's a whitewash. This should be a crime.
Here's what her twelve-day investigation looked like. She went to Abuja, Jos, and Kano — cities. Not to Barkin Ladi, not Benue, not Taraba or Southern Kaduna, not Gwoza, where the massacres continue. Her own statement confirmed her activities were "limited to Kano and Plateau states." She met with government officials and "religious leaders." In Nigeria that means she sat with the apparatus running the cover-up and took notes.
In her own words, she acknowledged that "at the village and hamlet levels in particular concentrations of the country, scores of innocent people experience killings, mass violence and the total decimation of their livelihoods, time and again, witnessing little or no justice." She acknowledged the scale of killings "could qualify as genocide." Her own senior legal experts told her directly they "cannot say that genocide is not happening anywhere in Nigeria."
Then she issued a report saying there is no evidence of religious persecution.
Prior to her trip, the European Centre for Law and Justice, Genocide Watch, and 21Wilberforce each submitted documented evidence of anti-Christian massacres for her consideration. She came home and said there's nothing to see.
Lying to hide the genocide is nothing new for the UN. I build schools in displacement camps in Abuja. The UNHCR wrote a detailed report about those camps in 2015. When I contacted them in 2020, they officially denied the camps exist. But they do, and the victims are still there.
More than 185,000 Christians and non-jihadist Muslims have been killed since 2009. More than 20,000 churches burned. Twelve million driven from their homes.
And the UN just handed Nigeria a clean bill of health.
The only certain conclusion from the report is that the UN Rapporteur is either corrupt, complicit, or a complete ignoramus. And her Oxford position likely rules out ignoramus.
The United Nations is not a neutral observer in Nigeria's genocide. It is a participant in covering it up.
#EarthShaker
Owning Up to Leadership Failures and Political Responsibility
This morning, I listened to the British Prime Minister’s speech announcing his planned resignation in July. As a keen observer of global politics, my primary interest lies in examining what successful nations do right and the structural factors that cause others to lag or struggle with governance and development.
The Prime Minister’s planned resignation comes amid mounting public frustration over a stagnant economy, a worsening cost-of-living crisis, and a perceived failure to honour key campaign pledges.
Looking inward in our dear country, we can recall our own situation. Before 2015, our President on several occasions championed the call for the then President Goodluck Jonathan to resign over economic hardship and insecurity affecting Nigerians. During the Chibok school kidnapping incident, he demanded the immediate resignation of President Jonathan, arguing that the government had failed in its most fundamental duty of protecting lives.
During the 2023 election campaign, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu made several promises, including improved electricity supply. He also challenged the electorate not to vote for him for a second term if he failed to deliver on those commitments—particularly in providing stable power, fighting corruption, and improving the welfare of Nigerians.
At present, however, these conditions have worsened. Electricity supply remains unreliable, insecurity has intensified in many areas, including kidnappings, and economic hardship has deepened rather than eased. Similar concerns are reflected across other critical sectors such as security, infrastructure, transportation, and anti-corruption efforts, all of which have regressed. We are in the worst possible condition.
I, therefore, join Nigerians of goodwill in calling for the resignation of the President over monumental failure in governance. Such a gesture would help enthrone a political culture rooted in accountability and responsibility, rather than further entrenching impunity. It would also send a powerful message that public office is a sacred trust, not an entitlement, and help build a society in which future leaders understand that failure carries consequences. Only by ending the culture of impunity can we secure a better future for the society our children will inherit in a New Nigeria that is possible. -PO
This little boy, Godwin Chijindu Ikeobi, a JSS1 student of Government College, Owerri, surprised me today.
Today he won first place in the Junior Category at the Mathematical Association of Nigeria (MAN) Imo State Chapter Olympiad exam.
He failed to qualify for the final round from Imo State for the 2026 South East Maths Olympiad and has been crying and depressed.
He attends a government school and felt he was disadvantaged. He was one of the reasons I deployed learning content for all participants in the 2027 South East Maths Olympiad for education equality.
He took the lessons seriously and has been studying them on his own daily. Today he has proven that your background cannot limit you if you are determined to succeed.
He beat all the private and public schools in Imo State today to attain that position.
What a star!
Today, on my final day as Director of National Intelligence, I’m releasing never-before-seen communications and documents exposing how Dr. Fauci provided millions in US taxpayer dollars to fund dangerous gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab, worked with politicized elements within the Intelligence Community to suppress the truth about his actions and hide the virus’ lab-leak origins, and lied to Congress while under oath in 2024. It’s time you know the truth.
https://t.co/3YJSstB7d4
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DISAGREE!
For one to convert to Islam, he has to say the 'Khalimatus Shahada' that is, "Asshadu Allah ilaha illahu wa'ash hadu Anna Muhammadan abduhu wa rasuluhu". Meaning, "I bear witness there is no God worthy of worship except Allah. And Muhammad is the servant and prophet of Allah." According to the Quran, Muhammad is the first Muslim on earth.
Now answer these questions:
1. If the name of Muhammad is included in the Khalimatus Shahada, then all the prophets from Adam to Isah (Jesus) were not Muslims because, during their time, Muhammad had not been born. How did they become Muslims then?
2. If the prophets were Muslims as the Qur'an insists, how did they become Muslims when the Shahada was not introduced during their time?
3. How did Muhammad (himself) become a Muslim when the Shahada includes his name?
4. Since Muhammad is the first Muslim, how did the prophets before him become Muslims?
Enough of this your ideology that JESUS is a Muslim. He is not, and He will never be!
Peter Obi said there is no reason Nnamdi Kanu should be imprisoned, and some people got angry,
Yet your country rehabilitates terrorists. Hypocrites!
The only reason you are upset is because Nnamdi Kanu is an Igbo man.