Tinubu and Atiku are playing their last card, anyone that loses will never contest again because of age, both are Nigerians,both are our elders, we must not favour one and leave one, the best we can do is retire both of them, no winner no vanquished.#Obidient@PeterObi@labour
The abduction of the Chibok girls in 2014 triggered a global movement. One school abduction was enough to unite Nigerians, attract international attention, and place enormous pressure on the government through the #BringBackOurGirls campaign.
Yet, what has happened since then should trouble every Nigerian.
Under President Buhari's eight years in office, Nigeria witnessed about ten school abductions. Under President Tinubu's administration, in just three years, we have already recorded over ten school abductions.
Despite these repeated tragedies, there has been neither sustained national outrage nor significant international attention comparable to what followed Chibok.
This raises an important question: have we become so accustomed to insecurity that what once shocked our national conscience is now treated as normal?
At a time when millions of Nigerians are grappling with insecurity, poverty, and hardship, it is deeply troubling that those in power appear more focused on political calculations and preparations for the next election than on addressing the urgent challenges confronting our people.
It is, therefore, no surprise that some observers have labelled us a "Now Disgraced Nation". While we do not agree with any attempt to define our great country by its present difficulties, we must acknowledge that persistent insecurity, economic hardship, and leadership failure have damaged our reputation and standing among nations.
The answer is not denial, propaganda, or political distraction. The answer is leadership that is competent, compassionate, accountable, and genuinely committed to the welfare and security of the Nigerian people.
The Nigerian youth must not become indifferent. We must all refuse to normalise failure.
Young Nigerians - Take back your country!
A New Nigeria is Possible. -PO
A Cry From the Persecuted Church in Nigeria: Please Do Not Forget Us 🇳🇬
To Christians around the world,
I write today with a heavy heart on behalf of countless families in Nigeria whose suffering is often overlooked. This is not about politics or attention. it is about children who have lost their parents, widows who have lost their husbands, and communities shattered by violence.
Recently, reports emerged of an attack involving a Christian school in Oyo State. What should have been a place of learning became a place of fear. While many children around the world celebrated Children’s Day with joy, some Nigerian children spent that same period in fear, grief, and uncertainty.
In our camp, we see the pain that headlines cannot fully capture. I remember a young boy who sat near the entrance every evening, waiting for his mother. He believed she would come for him, not knowing she had been killed. I remember a little girl who asked every night, “Did anyone find my daddy today?” Eventually, she stopped asking. not because she understood, but because hope was fading.
These stories are not rare. Many children have become orphans overnight. Many carry wounds that cannot be seen. They struggle with fear, trauma, and loss while the world moves on to the next headline.
Scripture tells us, “If one part suffers, every part suffers with it” (1 Corinthians 12:26). Yet many of these families feel forgotten. This is not just Nigeria’s burden. These are human lives created in the image of God.
Despite their suffering, I have met believers whose faith remains unshaken. Widows still worship. Orphans still sing hymns. Families who have lost everything still proclaim that Christ is Lord. Their faith is a testimony to God’s sustaining grace.
Today, I ask for three things: pray, remember, and stand with the persecuted Church. Pray for grieving families, vulnerable children, pastors serving in dangerous areas, and all those living with the scars of violence. Pray that God will comfort the brokenhearted and strengthen those who suffer for His name.
Please do not forget these children. Do not forget these families. Behind every statistic is a face, a name, and a story. May the Church of Jesus Christ continue to remember and support its suffering brothers and sisters wherever they may be.
May God comfort the brokenhearted, defend the innocent, and strengthen His people. Amen.
I can’t lie we entertainers .. we Dey fuckup I won’t lie including me … we need to speak up … it’s too much injustice goin on .. our country don go 💔🇳🇬
That's me and my brother David.
This is me and my brother David. He is 16. He cannot swallow his own saliva. Please help us save him. Account below. 🙏🏽
780k out of 3M
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Deborah Kelechi Michael
Hello everyone
We would appreciate it if you could kindly go through and give us feedback. Especially areas of improvement
Thank you, and God bless.
Aisha Yesufu
Senatorial Aspirant
FCT/Abuja
I Pledge To Nigeria My Country.
To Reject ATIKU, TINUBU & AND ANY OTHER MODAFUCKER DAT IS NOT PETER/KWAKANSO
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I WILL SHINE MY EYES, ANY RIGGER IN MY COMMUNITY WILL LEARN A LESSON
WE WILL GIVE IT BACK TO THE ENEMIES OF NIGERIA, IN A WOTOWOTO WAY.
RIG AND DIE.
Snatch Ballot Box AT UR OWN RISK.
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Una fathers
In Nigeria, a Christian villager defended his people. The state sentenced him to hang. The terrorists walked free.
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A state high court in Kaduna, northern Nigeria, has sentenced a man to hang for defending his people.
His name is Victor Solomon. His Adara community — Christian farmers in Southern Kaduna State — calls him Zidane.
In October 2018, Islamic terrorists stormed the Kasuwan Magani market, a busy trading hub about thirty miles from Kaduna city. Adara Christian traders working their stalls on a Tuesday. Police counted 55 dead. The Adara counted more than a hundred. The killers murdered some of them inside a police post, in full view of the officers.
The next day, the Adara king — a paramount tribal chief, the Agwam Adara — left a meeting with the state governor and drove home through the bush. The terrorists ambushed his convoy. They shot four of his aides on the spot and dragged the king and his wife into the bush. Five days later, his body turned up. They let the wife live to carry the message home.
That governor was Nasir El-Rufai. Nigerians call him the Butcher of Kaduna. He admitted on the record that his government handed payments to the Fulani Muslim "herders" who slaughtered Christian farmers across his state. His troops shot nearly a thousand men, women, and children at a religious procession in the city of Zaria. And his administration arrested the Adara survivors of the Kasuwan Magani massacre instead of the men who carried it out.
The killing didn't stop with the king. Wave after wave hit the Adara villages through the rest of 2018. The killers burned homes and killed hundreds. They put a whole people under siege.
The state convicted zero killers, yet they arrested more than twenty Adara survivors.
Zidane stood up in the middle of all that. He risked his own neck to defend his people when the government wouldn't lift a finger. The Adara Development Association — the community's main civic organization — has gone on the record calling him a hero.
For that, on January 6, 2026, a Kaduna State High Court sentenced him to death by hanging.
Two different courts tried him on similar facts. The first court cleared him in 2024. The second sentenced him to death. Same man. Same defense. Two opposite verdicts. The current Kaduna government calls it due process and warns Nigerians not to spread "misinformation" about it.
Here is the punchline. The same state that couldn't convict a single man for slaughtering a hundred Christians at Kasuwan Magani — the same state that couldn't convict a single man for killing the Adara king on his way home from a meeting with the governor — that state is now set to execute the survivor who fought back.
That isn't justice. That is a system that has decided Christians have no right to live.
The Nigerian regime has a pattern of sentencing Christians to death for self defense. And it goes out of its way to deny recognition and aid to the millions who are displaced, mostly woman and children, now suffering in horrific conditions in hidden concentration camps around the country.
Contrast that with what this regime does for the terrorists. The Nigerian federal government runs a program called Operation Safe Corridor. Boko Haram fighters and Fulani militiamen who yell Allahu Akbar while savagely slaughter Christian villages get six months of carpentry class at a military camp, a graduation ceremony, and a stipend.
By all international standards, the program is a sick joke. It is estimated that up to fifty percent quickly return to terror -- well fed, rested, educated, and better connected thanks to unwitting taxpayers and a complicit government.
Nigeria's Chief of Defence Staff calls the these savages "prodigal sons." National Security Adviser Nuhu "Bugsy" Ribadu calls them "brothers." The Sultan of Sokoto, who speaks for Nigeria's Muslims, called them hellbound from a podium in Abuja the same week his Fulani militants attacked a Christian burial in Plateau State. Despite his recent, cynical media statement, the Sultan has taken no action to stop them in 20 years - no fatwa, no names named. Many believe him to be the architect.
A vacation and carpentry certificte for the man who hacked apart Christians with a machete. A noose for the man who stood in his way.
Last Christmas, after a year of global pressure, a Christian state governor in northeastern Nigeria pardoned a Christian farmer named Sunday Jackson — convicted for killing a Fulani "herder" who attacked him with a knife. Eleven days after that pardon, Kaduna sentenced Zidane. The regime watched, learned and then pushed harder.
The world saved Jackson and can save Zidane. But only if the world hears his name.
Say it. Share it. Tag the Governor of Kaduna State, Uba Sani. Tag your congressman. Tag your senator. Tag every reporter who covers Nigeria. Use the hashtag #freezidane
Victor Solomon aka Zidane. The man who stood between his Christian people and the terrorists who were killing them.
The man Kaduna State sentenced to hang for it.
#FreeZidane
#EarthShaker
Till today INEC chairman Amputan hasn’t subjected his Twitter handle to independent audit
Until he does that he will be seen as partisan Nigerians will not forget
Dear BRETHRENS
Heard the Nigerian Police in Plateau State are claiming the videos of yesterday’s attacks on mourners burying the seven Christians killed on Tuesday were “made up.” I wonder if this picture too was staged. I wonder if the tears of mothers are staged. I wonder if the blood on the ground was edited. I wonder if the cries of children running for their lives were all acting.
How long will people continue to deny the pain of innocent souls?
The Bible says “Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness” Isaiah 5:20
You can silence the media
You can threaten the weak
You can deny the truth before men
But nobody can hide the truth from God
There is always a reward for everything done under heaven. Men may escape justice on earth, but nobody escapes the judgment of God. It may look like God is sleeping. It may look like heaven is quiet while innocent blood cries from the ground. But the God who answered Pharaoh, the God who brought down Sodom and Gomorrah, the God who humbled Nebuchadnezzar, the God who struck Herod after he glorified himself that same God is still alive.
When God’s vengeance comes, it comes like fire.
Pharaoh hardened his heart and thought nobody could stop him, until the Red Sea became his grave
Haman built gallows for Mordecai and ended up hanging on them himself
Jezebel mocked righteousness until dogs ate her flesh according to the word of God
“Vengeance is Mine; I will repay, saith the Lord” Romans 12:19
We are wounded but we are not silent
We are grieving but we are not defeated
We are crying but we will not stop speaking for humanity
The truth is this:
We will never give up
We will keep speaking
We will keep praying
We will keep fighting for humanity
Until one day the world will no longer pretend not to see our pain
The blood of innocent people is crying before God day and night
And one day, justice will answer.
“Defend the poor and fatherless: do justice to the afflicted and needy” Psalm 82:3
Please remember Plateau State in your prayers.
Remember the widows.
Remember the orphans.
Remember the wounded.
And remember those whose only crime was their faith in Christ. 💔😭
Today, Thursday 7th May, I continued with my commitment to supporting critical areas of development—education, healthcare, and helping people out of poverty—with a visit to the University of the Niger, Umunya, Anambra State.
The university, which was established just five years ago, has continued to make remarkable progress, and I have made it a point to visit every year to support the good work being done there. My last visit to this institution was at its teaching hospital in Ogidi.
Today, I encouraged the students to remain dedicated to their studies, reminding them that the world today is driven by knowledge, and the future of Nigeria rests in the hands of young people like them.
In support of scholarships and educational development, I made a donation of 25 million naira for the development of the institution.
I sincerely commend the Diocese on the Niger, for their foresight, vision, and steadfast commitment to educational and institutional growth. I also wish to express my appreciation to the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Chinedu Nebo, for his evident dedication to education. His commitment is reflected in the many schools and institutions he continues to support in their growth and strengthening.
I remain fully committed to the growth of education and the development of students in our country because no nation can rise beyond the strength of its education and human capital.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
Fellow Nigerians, good morning.
I woke up this morning after my church service with a deeply reflective heart, and despite every constraint, I felt compelled to share these thoughts with you.
Many people do not truly understand the silent pains some of us carry daily—the private struggles, emotional burdens, and quiet battles we face while trying to survive and serve sincerely in difficult circumstances.
We now live in an environment that has become increasingly toxic, where the very system that should protect and create opportunities for decent living often works against the people—a society where intimidation, insecurity, endless scrutiny, and discouragement have become normal.
More painful is when some of those you associate with, believing you would find understanding and solidarity among them, become part of the pressure you face. Some who publicly identify with you privately distance themselves or join in unfair criticism.
We live in a society where humility is mistaken for weakness, respect is seen as a lack of courage, and compassion is treated as foolishness—a system where treating people equally is questioned simply because you refuse to worship status, tribe, class, or power.
Personally, I have never looked down on anyone except to uplift them. I have never used privilege, position, or resources to oppress others, intimidate the weak, or make people feel small. To me, leadership has always been about service, sacrifice, and helping others rise.
Let me state clearly: my decision to leave the ADC is not because our highly respected Chairman, Senator David Mark, treated me badly, nor because my leader and elder brother, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, or any other respected leaders did anything personally wrong to me. I will continue to respect them.
However, the same Nigerian state and its agents that created unnecessary crises and hostility within the Labour Party that forced me to leave now appear to be finding their way into the ADC, with endless court cases, internal battles, suspicion, and division, instead of focusing on deeper national problems and playing politics built more on control and exclusion than on service and nation-building.
Even within spaces where one labours sincerely, one is sometimes treated like an outsider in one’s own home. You and your team become easy targets for every failure, frustration, or misunderstanding, as though honest contribution has become a favour being tolerated rather than appreciated.
And when you choose to leave so that those you are leaving can have peace, and you step out into the cold, you are still maligned and your character is questioned. Despite all your efforts to continue working for a better Nigeria and engaging people with sincerity and goodwill, those who do not wish you well continue to attack your character and question your intentions.
There are moments I ask God in prayer: Why is doing the right thing often misconstrued as wrongdoing in our country? Why is integrity not valued? Why is the prudent management of resources, especially when invested in critical areas like education and healthcare, wrongly labelled as stinginess? Why are humility and obedience to the rule of law often taken to be weakness rather than discipline?
Let me assure all that I am not desperate to be President, Vice President, or Senate President. I am desperate to see a society that can console a mother whose child has been kidnapped or killed while going to school or work. I am desperate to see a Nigeria where people will not live in IDP camps but in their homes. I am desperate for a country where Nigerian citizens do not go to bed hungry, not knowing where their next meal will come from.
Yet, despite everything, I remain resolute. I firmly believe that Nigeria can still become a country with competent leadership based on justice, compassion, and equal opportunity for all.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO