If Tinubu had stabilized the Nigeria economy at N750 to $1 after removing the petrol subsidy and floating the Naira... Then I will understand if any one say Tinubu knows what he is doing.. Achieving stability at N1350 is an over kill, reducing the purchasing power by 300% 😢
I am willing to accept no economic growth and 50% inflation if the government takes all the oil revenue and genuinely and effectively fights and defeats insecurity once and for all.
France will do your taxes
UK will make your steel
US will fight your terrorists
China will build your Secretariat
Mauritius will do FDI
Later, you will blame MTV, sorry CIA
If you start a chain in North America selling these authentic Nigerian meals with meat pie and puff puff, you will become a millionaire.
Guaranteed.
This is an organic, fibre-rich, gluten-free diet.
Even selling the spices and drinks is a multimillion-dollar venture.
What needs to happen is standardisation: creating a step-by-step guide for making egusi, specifying the herbs and spices, and ensuring the finished product is consistent. This is what the Thai government did.
It's not just about selling food; it's about the infrastructure built around it.
When you specify the spices, you generate demand for these spices in Nigeria and encourage exports. Go to any Thai restaurant, and the menus are almost the same, with standardised spices. The customers then get a uniform experience, and a “Nigerian” diet is branded (we take Jollof rice branding from those noisy Ghanaians)
This is a project.
The federal government and its agencies are running too low on integrity.... Soon nobody will take it seriously... @NBS_Nigeria seem to think it is in existence to project the presidency positively by tampering with globally established reference base
Our nation was still mourning the demise of exemplary statesman Pa Ayo Adebanjo, 96, when the sad news of your passing away was brought to my attention.
Chief Edwin Clark, 97, the Ebi-Ebekekere, Owei of Western Ijaw in Delta State, was a Trojan war horse in the battlefields for independence. Above all, he was a diehard proponent of nation-building, true federalism, equity, and good governance.
Undoubtedly, he was a veteran freedom fighter, educationist, philanthropist, legal luminary, and astute administrator who mentored many nationalists and patriots like us.
Clark spoke loudly and worked assiduously in support of inclusiveness, especially for the minority ethnic groups in Nigeria. He was fiery, fearless, and forthright in his peaceful and constitutional pursuit of an egalitarian society in our country. Sadly, that lofty dream seemed to have dimmed before his eyes.
But, we, his mentees, shall rekindle the torch and continue the drive for a better Nigeria.
Between 1953 and 1983, Clark paid his dues from the ebb of the ladder at the local government level up to becoming a State Commissioner and even a distinguished senator of the Federal Republic.
I sincerely share in the grieving mood of his nuclear and extended families, particularly PANDEF, the Ijaw nation, Delta State, and Nigeria in its entirety.
Rest on Pa Clark, the loud voice of reason against foul political practices. You were an architect of rule of law, justice, and fairplay.
May God receive your gentle soul and allow you to blissfully rest in eternity. -AA
There are about 4 ways citizens react to government when it is not performing
Completely apathetic
Dismissively Critical
Hopefully Critical
Wishfuly defensive
Where are you with this government?
@PoliceNG Somethings are lawful but not expedient, no amount of legalese can upturn the reprehensive way the appointment of Kayode Egbetokun was made, it is immoral, fails the integrity test... It may seem legal but remains illegal in people's opinion and mind 😢
With the amount of fraud and crass incompetence going on with nnpcl... It will benefit Nigeria more, if we sell all 4 refineries.. After all, Nigeria is now self-sufficient in domestic petrol production