I am more than happy to welcome my only sister who is now my colleague into the Largest Bar in Africa. Congratulations Sister. Super proud of you.
#calltobar2019#Lawyer#FamilyIsForever
Bola Tinubu and Remi Tinubu are a perfect illustration of what it means to marry one’s type.
A vicious couple bonded by destructive and greedy proclivities.
Zero empathy.
All they care about is political power and total state capture.
When will this nightmare end in our country?
Dear Young Nigerians,
One lesson from the 2023 elections, particularly in Lagos, should never be forgotten.
In the period following the presidential election and leading up to the governorship election, we witnessed a troubling shift in public discourse. Conversations that should have focused on competence, governance, development, and the future of our nation were gradually diverted towards tribal sentiments, ethnic divisions, and unnecessary suspicion among citizens.
Many sincere and well-meaning Nigerians participated in these conversations without realising that they were being drawn into narratives carefully designed by others.
Throughout history, whenever politicians find it difficult to compete on ideas, performance, character, or vision, some resort to exploiting the fault lines of ethnicity, religion, and identity. Their calculation is simple: a divided people are easier to manipulate than a united people.
Today, I see similar efforts emerging again, sometimes in more subtle and sophisticated ways. Narratives are planted, amplified, and circulated, often by individuals who genuinely believe they are defending a worthy cause, without recognizing the broader agenda behind such campaigns.
Let me state clearly that Pastor Enoch Adeboye remains one of the foremost fathers of faith in our nation. For decades, he has consistently preached the virtues of peace, prayer, love, reconciliation, and national unity. Even when faced with provocation, his response has always reflected humility, restraint, wisdom, and grace.
At 84 years of age, it would be unfair for young and able-bodied Nigerians to transfer to him responsibilities that properly belong to them. The task of building a better Nigeria rests primarily on the shoulders of the younger generation. It is their duty to lead the conversations, champion the reforms, and drive the positive change our nation urgently requires.
We must be careful not to become instruments in the hands of those who secretly nurture division while publicly preaching unity. In most cases, their target is not the individual being attacked; instead, it is the person who is attacking. Their real objective is to weaken the bonds that hold us together as one people and one nation.
I therefore urge all young Nigerians: do not allow anyone to recruit you into hatred. Do not allow anyone to weaponise your ethnicity, your faith, or your admiration for respected leaders.
Question every narrative. Verify every claim. Follow the facts. Resist manipulation.
The Nigeria of our dreams can only be built by citizens who refuse to be divided, who choose unity over hatred, and who place our collective future above narrow interests.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
Yesterday, May 19th, in Abuja, I attended the Presidential screening organised by our party, which took over two and a half hours. They carefully reviewed all my documents, including my degree certificates, NYSC credentials, and age declarations.
During the process, I also addressed questions regarding my vision for a new Nigeria and the type of leadership our nation urgently needs right now. Following this, I was cleared and received the presidential nomination form I had previously paid for.
I would like to commend the screening committee, led by former governor Sam Egwu, for their thorough and professional approach. Additionally, I appreciate our party's leadership for upholding the democratic process.
A New Nigeria is POssible. - PO
Wike sold a public park used by residents to stay fit and relax. Wike sold a land meant for Wuye district hospital. Wike bulldozed many public parks and Green areas in Asokoro, Wuse, Maitama, Garki and Guzape and sold them to private developers.
YOU CANNOT REPLACE A HOSPITAL WITH HOUSES AND CALL IT DEVELOPMENT.
Plot 546, Wuye District. Land designated in the Abuja Master Plan for a public health facility. Now reportedly redesignated and allocated for a private residential estate. Construction already ongoing.
I want us to sit with that for a moment.
A growing district. A city that is supposed to be planned. And someone decided that the land meant to serve your health, your emergencies, your children's emergencies, should serve something else.
Even officials within the system have acknowledged this: the land was originally meant for a health centreand a redesignation occurred through official channels. That is not a rumour. That is their own admission.
So the question I am asking and I want every single Abuja resident to ask is this:
How do you remove a critical public health facility from a growing district without a transparent conversation with the people who will be affected?
Because this is not about politics. This is not about which government or which party. This is about a woman in labour. A man with a fracture. A child in a medical emergency. A family that cannot afford a private hospital. These are the people who will pay the price of this decision, not the people who made it.
Nigeria's healthcare system is already overstretched. Our public hospitals are overcrowded and under-resourced. Distance to care costs lives. When you remove a planned facility from a community, you are not delaying development, you are increasing risk. Real risk. To real people.
The Abuja Master Plan exists for a reason. It is a promise that every district will have hospitals, schools, and security infrastructure, the things that allow people to live with dignity. Once you start tampering with that structure without accountability, you are not adjusting land use. You are breaking trust. And Nigerians have noticed the pattern: spaces meant for public good quietly becoming opportunities for private gain.
Whether or not due process was followed, perception matters. Trust matters. And right now, people are asking questions that deserve clear answers.
The relevant authorities owe Nigerians three answers:
1. Why was this land redesignated?
2. What public interest assessment was done before that decision?
3. How will the healthcare needs of Wuye residents now be met?
Nobody is against development. But development that sidelines essential services is not progress, it is imbalance. Abuja must not become a city where plans exist only on paper, while reality serves something else entirely.
We can do better. And we must demand better.
Aisha Yesufu
On the first anniversary of the birth into heaven of our dear #PopeFrancis, his words and actions remain written in our hearts. We carry on his legacy by always proclaiming the joy of the Gospel, announcing God’s mercy, and promoting fraternity among all men and women.
If the two disciples of Emmaus recognize Jesus when He breaks the bread for them, we too should recognize Him in this way. Not just in the Eucharist, but wherever there is a life that becomes broken bread, wherever someone makes a compassionate gift of themselves, like He did. With the grace of the Risen Christ, we can become this broken bread that transforms reality. #GospelOfTheDay (Lk 24:13–35) #ApostolicJourney #Angola
TGIF!
Abuja, we’re still on this matter! #SaveJabiPark
Join us tomorrow for a peaceful demonstration at Jabi Park.
Construction 🚧 update: the park has been fenced off and split in half, given to two different developers to turn it into a “commercial hub”.
There is bread for everyone if it is given to everyone. There is bread for everyone if it is taken, not with a hand that snatches away, but with a hand that gives. In this way, the food was abundant. It was not rationed out of necessity. It was not stolen in strife. It was not wasted by those who gorge themselves in the presence of those who have nothing to eat. #ApostolicJourney #Cameroon
https://t.co/rtIuNbQl83
#Peace is not something we must invent: it is something we must embrace by accepting our neighbor as a brother or sister. We do not choose our brothers and sisters: we must simply accept one another! We are one family, inhabiting the same home: this wonderful planet that ancient cultures have cared for over millennia. #ApostolicJourney #Cameroon
My greatest problem is that y'all treat politics and elections like a game of tinko tinko
Cuz the fuck do you mean "I was going to vote for Peter Obi but you insulted me so now I'm going to vote for Tinubu"???
Is this fucking Grade 1??????
I can’t 100% say what Peter Obi will do but I can reliably say what he won’t do.
He won’t remove subsidy without a plan.
He won’t splurge on a private jet and a new VP mansion when the Nigerians are being told to suffer severe hardship for patriotism sake.
He won’t have the biggest cabinet in history when the country is in a cash crunch period.
He won’t visit victims of terrorism attack in Jos and stay at the airport.
He won’t have school kids queue in the rain to greet when he’s visiting a state where over 200 people were murdered by terrorists.
He won’t be forced to speak up when
generals and scores of soldiers are being killed by terrorists.
He won’t appoint Adelabu as the Minister of Power.
He won’t go on a jamboree trip abroad every other forthright.
He won’t have do nothing governors and ministers line up to greet him by his bedroom door when he wakes up like he’s Prince Hakeem of Zamunda.
He won’t name every new public infrastructure after himself.
He would have admitted his mistake and fired Bosun Tijanni.
He won’t tell Nigerians buying fuel at 1,250 to be grateful they are better off than their neighbors.
He won’t order the Senate President to represent him at events (what a crying shame).
He won’t hire people like Daniel Bwala and Reno Omokri.
He won’t use rice as the solution for every problem.
And he would sure as hell not address Nigerians with condescension and utter disrespect.
He’s not a saint.
He’s not perfect.
He’s not the messiah.
But I see him as compassionate and sufficiently honest man willing to do his best for Nigerians.
This is why he must be on the ballot because he’s the only one deserving of my vote.
Go out and get your PVC.
Not a single sacrifice this President has made.
When the economy is hardest, he makes zero sacrifice and lives large.
Came into power and splurged on a new Jet, Yatch, mansion for VP, fleet of armored SUV, and billions for travel.
Has a big cabinet with some of the most incompetent ministers we have seen.
We now have an apartheid power supply system that has gotten worst. He goes off grid and splurges on solar.
Fuel prices are high he mouths the same worthless CNG plan and tells Nigerians to be grateful.
People are being killed in hundreds and lazily tweets 2 days later and when he manages go get himself to visit the victims, he addresses them at the airport.
Every other day, something is being named after him. No decorum or class. Just embracing and encouraging shocking levels of subserviency from the shameless political class.
Nigerians pay more for everything. A generation of young people are having their productive years wasted with no form of care or remorse.
I have benefited absolutely nothing from Tinubu’s government. He promises better future that requires sacrifices. Sacrifices he has shown no interest in making.
A leader should be an example. Make some sacrifices. Show you care.
I don’t respect it!
From Pharisee to Tax Collector: Rethinking Tinubu’s Kenyan Comparison
In a recent remark in Yenagoa, Bola Ahmed Tinubu suggested that Nigerians should find solace in being “better off than Kenya and other African countries.” While this may have been intended to soften the impact of economic hardship and rising fuel prices, the comment risks downplaying the severity of the current crisis. It echoes the biblical parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector in the Gospel of Luke (18:9–14). A similar warning is found in the Qur’an (53:32), which cautions against self-righteousness.
Like the Pharisee who boasted of his superiority over others to mask his own spiritual void, such downward comparisons serve more as a refuge than a remedy. This validated an earlier dismissive remark by President Ahmed Bola Tinubu during electioneering: “Na statistics we go shop?” Yet statistics remain indispensable - they are the language through which nations understand their condition and chart progress. No country can develop in isolation from measurable realities or without comparing itself with peers. Comparisons, when properly grounded, are not instruments of escapism but tools of accountability. What is objectionable is not comparison itself, but comparison stripped of credible, verifiable data—mere tax collector comparisons that soothe rather than solve.
On key development indicators such as security, the Human Development Index, life expectancy, GDP per capita, literacy levels, and electricity access, Kenya consistently outperforms Nigeria. Nigeria is the fourth most terrorised nation in the world, while Kenya is not among the ten worst. Kenya’s HDI ranking is 143 out of 180 countries, with a coefficient of about 0.630, compared to Nigeria’s ranking of 164 out of 180, with a coefficient of about 0.530. Its GDP per capita is roughly $2,200–$2,300, compared to Nigeria’s $807–$835. Kenya’s poverty rate is about 43% of the population (approximately 23 million people), while Nigeria’s is about 63% (around 150 million people), over six times that of Kenya. Kenya’s life expectancy is about 67 years, while Nigeria’s is about 54 years. The literacy rate in Kenya is approximately 81–85%, compared to Nigeria’s 62–65%.
Kenya’s electricity access is higher, while Nigeria has one of the lowest levels of electricity access in the world. Kenya has about 3.5 million out-of-school children, while Nigeria has about 20 million. Kenya’s inflation rate has been about 4.5% or lower over the past three years, while Nigeria’s has remained above 15% within the same period. Kenya’s exchange rate has been around USD 1 to KES 130 over the past three years, whereas Nigeria’s exchange rate rose from below ₦500/$1 to above ₦1,250/$1 within the same period. Even with developments in the Middle East and rising oil prices, Kenyans have not experienced the sharp increases in petroleum product prices seen in Nigeria.
Across other key indicators, Kenya also performs better. In the end, these indices clearly show that Kenya ranks higher than Nigeria on several development metrics. The standard of living of Kenyans is better than that of Nigerians. If the President considers Kenyans to be suffering despite these stronger figures, then Nigerians are in a far more difficult situation. He should therefore refrain from self-consolation and, in honest reflection, take responsibility for the situation and make a determined effort to drive improvement. This requires a posture of humility, accountability, and commitment to addressing the factors that have slowed Nigeria’s development.
A new Nigeria is POssible. -PO
And PETER OBI is not the lesser evil, never in our history have we had a politician that the opposition couldn’t stifle by pinning some of their crimes on them. In the context of politics, He is a SAINT, squeaky clean SAINT OBI.
The Sunday Eucharist is indispensable to the Christian life. It is there that our faith is grows and strengthens. It is there that our efforts, though limited, are united by God’s grace to the actions of the members of a single body — the Body of Christ — for the accomplishment of a single great plan of salvation that embraces all humanity.