In a school where the average student pays 1.6M per session with over 6,000 students you don’t have oxygen tank in your medical center?? An oxygen tank costs about 100k btw, covenant university you did this on purpose!!
PLATEAU STATE RESIDENTS ARE SEEN DEMANDING FOR THE RELEASE OF THEIR LOVED ONES🥺
The security agency left the perpetrators of this ev!l to arr£$t the vict!ms who tried to defend themselves during the unrest last week 💔
They always foil plots and recover explosives in the Southeast. But they are clueless and incompetent in Northern Nigeria. Only the dumb will not understand the game.
Thank you, Mr. Daniel Bwala, SA to President Tinubu, for helping Nigerians understand exactly why Tinubu should not be voted for in 2027.
If you come across this video please repost🔄 let's appreciate Mr Bwala for speaking.
A innocent Nigerian was invited to the Police (Ogombo Police Station) today, being 6th April 2026, being a public holiday, he had nothing to hide so he obliged.
He was detained in the morning & since then till now they’ve refused to tell him the basis arrest.
His lawyers got to the said station and requested to see the DPO, the said DPO refused to see his lawyers.
WHY IS THE DPO HIDING?
She later came out and instructed her officers to walk his lawyers out from the station.
@PoliceNG@nigerianpolice@PoliceNG_CRU@TunjiDisu1
Let us reflect, sincerely and without sentiment.
In the past few days, the President has reportedly approved ₦3.3 trillion as a “full and final” payment for debts in the power sector. Yet, this is not the first time such approvals have been made.
On May 17, 2024, ₦3.3 trillion was approved for the same purpose. On July 25, 2024, another ₦4 trillion bond was approved to settle similar debts. There have also been other approvals in between, all targeted at addressing the same power sector liabilities.
This raises a fundamental question: were the previous approvals mere announcements without execution?
₦3.3 Trillion Again? Nigeria’s Power Crisis Without End
During the 2023 campaign, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu made a clear promise: that if he failed to deliver stable electricity, Nigerians should not re-elect him. Today, the reality is that power supply has worsened, to the extent that there are even discussions about disconnecting the Presidential Villa from the national grid.
Each time legitimate concerns are raised, what we see appears more like policy pronouncements than measurable progress.
Now, again, we are confronted with another ₦3.3 trillion approval to settle power sector debts.
These debts were largely accumulated under successive administrations of the All Progressives Congress between 2015 and 2025. This raises serious concerns about accountability, transparency, and effectiveness in public financial management.
It is important to note that government institutions and agencies, including the Presidential Villa owe a significant portion of these debts. Year after year, budgets were made and funds appropriated. Why then were these obligations not settled when due? And from what source will this new payment be made? Are we resorting once more to borrowing to service inefficiencies?
Key questions remain unanswered: How did the debt accrue? What is the actual total debt in the power sector? Which components of the debts are due to operators’ inefficiency and should be borne by them? Why have previous approvals not translated into tangible improvements? Who are the real beneficiaries of these repeated payments?
Is the ₦3.3 trillion approved on April 6, 2026, the same as the ₦3.3 trillion approved in May 2024, and how does it relate to the ₦4 trillion bond approved in July 2024?
Nigeria must move beyond recycled announcements and confront the power sector crisis with sincerity, transparency, and decisive reforms.
Until we do so, we will remain trapped in a cycle of debt and darkness.
But with discipline, accountability, and the right leadership, a new Nigeria is still possible. -PO
I was shocked to my bone to see they cut yam to pieces to sell 500 because some people can't afford to buy a tuber of yam anymore.
This is where we are now😭😭😭