She has changed her username and dp like a thousand times to run away from the agenda she started but can't escape. Now, she had to turn her dp upside down and yet everyone still have the energy to turn their phone upside down to acknowledge she's the false rape accuser.
She thought her case will be like that of other women who falsely accuse men of rape for the fun of it, get dragged temporarily and go scot free but unfortunately, it's not her case.
We only needed one scapegoat and we found her.
Now, her name and face is now the brand ambassador of false rape accusers.
Even when an unfortunate man marries her tomorrow, her children will get to know their mother's legacy as a false rape accuser.
The game might be brutal but it's still fair.
Lokoja Judgment: An Unnecessary Serious Setback for Nigerian Democracy
Today was an exceptionally busy day. I left Lagos in the early hours for Emekuku, where I visited the School of Nursing Sciences, an institution I have consistently supported over the years. It was gratifying to inspect projects funded through my previous interventions, including the school’s computer laboratory. Such investments reaffirm my belief that education remains one of the strongest foundations for national development.
From there, I attended the 80th birthday celebration of the Emeritus Archbishop of Owerri, Most Rev. Dr Anthony Obinna, whose commitment to justice, peace, and the common good has inspired many, before proceeding to Madonna University for another engagement.
It was at Madonna University that I received the court news of the Lokoja court rulings through my brother, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso.
Every Nigerian committed to the country’s progress should be deeply concerned. This judgment represents another setback for our democracy and the institutions upon which our future depends.
It is regrettable that some who claim to champion democracy now appear determined to weaken the very institutions that sustain it. In doing so, they are undermining public confidence and endangering the future of millions of Nigerians.
The legislature and the judiciary are increasingly being drawn into this pattern of institutional decline. Democracy cannot thrive where institutions lose their independence and credibility.
Those who seek to weaken Nigeria’s democratic foundations will not ultimately prevail. When a similar situation recently affected the ADC, I condemned it without hesitation. I do so again today because my position has always been guided by principle.
My concern is not about who becomes President. My concern is that Nigeria works. Our politics must move beyond the quest for power and focus instead on building a united nation founded on justice, strong institutions, the rule of law, and equal opportunity. That is the Nigeria we owe ourselves and the one we must leave for future generations.
I therefore urge all well-meaning Nigerians to rise above partisan interests and defend our democracy. The survival of our institutions is inseparable from the survival of our nation. It's when we work together that a new Nigeria of our dream is made POssible. -PO
Without commenting on the legal merits of today's ruling, one truth must never be overlooked:
The ultimate guardians of democracy are not political parties. They are the people.
History leaves us in little doubt.
In India, a government once thought untouchable was peacefully voted out after the Emergency because citizens chose freedom over fear.
In Liberia, a nation scarred by conflict placed its trust in principled leadership and the promise of national reconciliation.
In Ghana, despite economic hardship and political fatigue, the people voted decisively for change, reaffirming that democracy belongs to citizens, not to those who attempt to control its outcomes.
From New Delhi to Monrovia to Accra, history speaks with clarity: no system is beyond redemption when citizens refuse to surrender their democratic rights.
That is why any development that appears to shrink the democratic space should concern us all, regardless of party affiliation. Our duty is not simply to defend one political platform or another, but to uphold the right of Nigerians to freely choose among genuine alternatives.
In the end, governments are elected by the people, and governments are changed by the people. The ballot box remains the most powerful instrument of democratic change.
In 2027, the sovereign will of the Nigerian people must be allowed to prevail.
— KKP
26 June 2026
This is deeply troubling.
When those in power begin to use the courts to shrink the democratic space rather than expand it, every Nigerian should be concerned. Democracy only works when citizens have genuine choices, not when one party appears determined to run unopposed.
The APC should have enough confidence in its popularity (as it claims to have) to face opponents at the polls instead of weaponizing the judiciary against the opposition.
Nigerians deserves free, fair and genuinely competitive elections. And this continuous abuse of our institutions for partisan advantage will erode public trust and put our democracy at risk.
The olodos are fighting back.
We are already suffering from an entire batch of uprisen olodos.
If you care enough for the next generation, to prevent geometric explosion of baby olodos - please stop procreating with women like this.
There is a different between abuse and defamation. Calling Atiku an incompetent old man who is useless is an insult. He may not bother. If someone says last Friday, Atiku sent some youths to rob Mr. Musa of N300m, he would and should file for defamation.
Sometimes I mistakenly assume you guys are truly ignorant. But i am wrong. You guys are just plainly mischievous
The Agbado Division of @PoliceNG arrested Pelumi at home and his body mysteriously turned up in a morgue in Ikorodu. 6 years later, DNA has confirmed he’s the one.
What was Pelumi’s crime? He simply recorded and posted the scene where a known politician came out from his SUB and shot at protesters at Abule Egba during the October 2020 #EndSARS protest. The police did not arrest the person that discharged firearm into a crowd, they arrested, tortured and killed a young Nigerian student that was working as an intern at @Officialgboahtv for posting a crime scene on Social Media.
Do I need to demand #JusticeForPelumi?
Sir @aonanuga1956, don't be stupid and foolish at the same time.
Kindly find a good Hausa translator to explain the video to you and your gullible audience.
Those are bandits moving freely, while police officers on ground are lamenting in Hausa: "Akwai matsala a qasar nan", There is a serious problem in this country!
With all due respect, tell your boss @officialABAT to RESIGN immediately.
This is no longer governance.
This is total failure and national embarrassment.
The North is bleeding while you people are busy defending the indefensible.
Shame! 😡
#TinubuResign
They overpaid but they didn’t back out and sign a second-rate midfielder instead. He will make them compete in all 4 competitions and earn that money back for the club.
Omo, the brain of the average Tinubu supporter is uniquely vague.
See how a middle-aged political jobber sat down and spilled gibberish with hubris and arrogance. Yet, some people believed the nonsense.
By the way, everyone knows the man who can't do without the media. Had Tinubu not spent billions buying over the e-rats (like this one👇), I'm sure they wouldn't be all over the TL constituting nuisances.
Tinubu spends on traditional media (TVC and Max FM), yet allocates huge sums on an army of heedless thvgs across social media.
Shameless lot!✍️