Dear @OfficialDSSNG,
1st off, thank you very much for this statement. So, let's try & parse your narration a little.
You admit you interdicted @OkeyNdibe on arrival at the #MMIA. The duration is immaterial. What matters is that for the duration that you had him, he could not exercise free movement.
But that is beside the point for now. You say you are doing #WLAHygiene in respect of actions that go back to military rule.
That ended 27 yrs ago. But you admit that Prof Ndibe was #watchlisted in 2013, which was 13 yrs after the return to civil rule. 14 yrs ago, Okey Ndibe was a professor, a writer, & a columnist.
The other thing happening 14 yrs ago was the breakout of #BokoHaram into an insurgency & the onset of murderous terror on #Nigeria.
2013 was incidentally the year that the Tanimu Turaki SAN Committee on the security problems in Northern Nigeria submitted its report to @GEJonathan. 2 yrs earlier, the Gaji Galtimari Committee on the Boko Haram problem also did the same.
Rather than prioritize the fight against those, you chose to watchlist a man whose entire goal & mission has always been to make the country better.
What you need is more than #WLAHygiene. What you need is institutional hygiene. You may wish to take that even more seriously.
@EhisBukason@HighChiefOkoro The mumu is afraid to put his money where his mouth is. Fear of making any financial commitment knowing fully well that he is a paper tiger in the scheme of things
@Onsogbu Please give credit to the individual that posted the original post. It is unlawful for you to post it and pass it off as if you are the person who the story relates to
@renoomokri The £40 you pay to shave your beard in London is more than the £35 which is the equivalent of the minimum wage of N70,000 per month in Nigeria
@OsosaChris Despite all this alleged defense of the Naira by Tinubu, the economy is in shambles and in a state of dysfunction characterized by a rapid decline in living standards, widespread financial distress, and a breakdown of basic economic functions never witnessed in Nigeria before
Seyi Tinubu Is Not Elected. So Who Gave Him Permission to Do This?
Let us be precise about what we are looking at.
Oluwaseyi Tinubu holds no government office.
He has won no election.
He has received no mandate from the Nigerian people.
He is the President’s son.
And yet leaked documents — verified by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists and reported by OCCRP, Premium Times, and BusinessDay — reveal that Seyi Tinubu was a majority shareholder in an offshore company registered in the British Virgin Islands alongside Ronald Chagoury Jr., son of billionaire tycoon Ronald Chagoury. 
The BVI. The jurisdiction of choice when you do not want the public to know what you own.
Now ask yourself who Ronald Chagoury Jr.’s father is.
Gilbert Chagoury — the Lebanese-Nigerian billionaire whose group received Nigeria’s largest infrastructure contract in history, a $13 billion coastal highway awarded without a public bidding process. 
The same Gilbert Chagoury who was denied a U.S. visa in 2015 on grounds related to funding terrorism, after a 2013 FBI intelligence report linked him to the financing of Hezbollah through Lebanese politician Michel Aoun. 
The same Gilbert Chagoury who was convicted in Switzerland in 2000 for laundering money on behalf of Nigeria’s former military dictator, Sani Abacha. 
Chagoury denies the Hezbollah allegations. He has said so in court.
But the Swiss conviction is not an allegation.
The visa denial is not an allegation.
The FBI report is not an allegation.
The BVI company with the President’s son is not an allegation.
These are documented facts.
And it does not stop at one company.
Seyi Tinubu is also a board member of CDK Integrated Industries, a subsidiary of the Chagoury Group  — the same conglomerate whose parent company just received that $13 billion contract from his father’s government.
When Gilbert Chagoury turned 78 in 2024, President Tinubu issued a public birthday tribute calling him “a valued and treasured person.” “With friends like him,” the President wrote, “one can sleep with a still mind.” 
One can sleep with a still mind.
While Nigerians cannot sleep at all — crushed by fuel prices, a collapsed naira, and a cost-of-living crisis that this same administration has presided over.
Then came the honour.
President Tinubu awarded Gilbert Chagoury the Grand Commander of the Order of the Niger — Nigeria’s second-highest national honour. 
A man with a Swiss money laundering conviction.
A man on a U.S. terrorism screening database.
Nigeria’s second-highest honour.
The question this country must answer.
Nigeria has a process for awarding contracts. It is called competitive public tender. It exists precisely to prevent a president’s business circle from feeding at the national table.
It was bypassed entirely.
Nigeria has ethics rules about conflicts of interest. They exist to prevent the families of sitting presidents from holding positions inside companies receiving state contracts.
They appear to mean nothing here.
And Nigeria has a constitution. It does not grant executive power to unelected sons. It does not authorise the children of presidents to operate as shadow business partners of government contractors while their fathers sign the cheques.
Seyi Tinubu was not elected.
He was not vetted.
He was not confirmed by any legislative body.
He answers to no one.
And yet his fingerprints are on an offshore company, a contractor’s boardroom, and the architecture of a $13 billion deal that belongs to the Nigerian people.
The question is not whether this looks corrupt.
The question is: what exactly would corruption have to look like before Nigeria demanded accountability?
Kio Amachree is a diaspora activist