If you want to do IVF or you want to remove Fibroid but you don’t have money. Just go to the nearest Access bank in your area and reach the customer service. All you need is just letter from the Hospital and the invoice from the hospital.
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@NationalGridNg Why not have measures in place for emergencies like this?
No, the key players have no such intentions as to proactively put measures in place for emergencies like this, they embezzle funds they would have used for it and write epistles without solutions later when it happens.
Hey guys please let’s help teddy onwuchekwa to find his father❤️ his father left when he was 2years old and he grew up without seeing him but his picture,he is now 17years old and he wants to search for his father,his father is Igbo and this is all he knows,please let’s all help EDDIE FIND HIS FATHER
Please REPOST to help him find his father. Thanks 🙏💖
@General_Somto I dunno how Nigerians pay 4 cheapest flights locally in the world. Attached is ticket prices 4rm Beijing to Guangzhou in China; a 3.5hrs flight. Prices are $99 - $129 depending on d airline but in Nig. airlines charge over $300 for an hour flight. Very greedy & pathetic!
@officialABAT Where are the abductors? Where they killed/arrested? It’s not enough to just say they’ve been rescued. We equally want to hear that the perpetrators of these heinous acts of terror have either been killed or arrested. It’s time for aura for aura! No more mercy!
The political class in Nigeria, especially those in APC, have no qualms with Nigerians suffering-as long as they remain in power, rotate power within themselves. That is why they jump/decamp from one political party to another to intensify the sufferings of Nigerians.
The political class in Nigeria, especially those in APC, have no qualms with Nigerians suffering-as long as they remain in power, rotate power within themselves. That is why they jump/decamp from one political party to another to intensify the sufferings of Nigerians.
RESPONSE TO FEMI OTEDOLA’S SUBSIDY FRAUD CLAIM UNDER JONATHAN
Billionaire businessman Femi Otedola recently revisited Nigeria’s controversial fuel subsidy regime, asserting that corruption remains rife in the system. He made this claim while weighing in on the dispute btw the Dangote Petroleum Refinery and fuel marketers.
In his intervention last week, Femi, an ex-major player in the downstream petroleum sector, accused members of the Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association of Nigeria (DAPPMAN), a body he claimed he founded, of sustaining a corrupt business model built on subsidy fraud and obsolete infrastructure.
What stood out, however, was Femi's allegation that “over N2 trillion was siphoned through questionable subsidy claims under the Jonathan administration.” Whether this was meant to score cheap political points or ride the corruption chant, the intent to single out one administration for rebuke was clear.
While no one should defend corruption, it is important to respond with factual clarity and historical accuracy. His claims are hypocritical, selective, and reek of a convenient rewriting of history.
The subsidy regime predates Jonathan and lasted decades. It was entrenched under Obasanjo, continued under Yar’Adua, remained during Jonathan’s time, and persisted under Buhari with even greater opacity. To lay the blame solely on Jonathan is misleading, especially as Otedola himself enjoyed enormous privileges during the era.
At the height of the regime, his company, Zenon Petroleum and Gas Ltd, was one of the biggest importers of diesel and other products, controlling as much as 90% of diesel imports and up to 40% of others. The same system he now condemns was one he benefited from immensely.
Indeed, subsidy claims were riddled with fraud. That is why Jonathan instituted the Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede-led forensic audit panel to unmask the exploiters of the system, including politically connected operators. This was part of the crucial reforms Jonathan initiated to sanitise the sector.
He also moved towards privatisation and deregulation, but vested interests, politicians, opportunistic civil society groups, and profiteers sabotaged the effort. The Occupy Nigeria protests of 2012, used to frustrate deregulation, were partly funded by those who stood to lose from reform. For Femi to now feign moral superiority is disingenuous.
Zenon was among the companies spotlighted during both the Imoukhuede panel’s work and the House of Reps Ad-hoc Committee on Subsidy Payments, chaired by Hon. Farouk Lawan. Nigerians also remember the Otedola-Lawan scandal, in which Femi admitted giving marked money to Lawan, later claiming it was a sting operation. Whether this was genuine or a tactic to evade indictment remains debatable.
Given his proximity to power and central role in the subsidy ecosystem, Femi knows more about the scam than he admits. His comments, while critical of corruption, appear more as image-laundering trying to project himself as a reformer rather than the enabler and beneficiary records show him to be.
Rather than full exposure, Otedola engages in selective revelation, pointing fingers while shielding his own complicity. What he has offered is less a revelation than an inadvertent confession a glimpse into the dark underbelly of a subsidy regime he thrived in.
Any true effort to expose corruption in the petroleum sector is welcome, but it must be made in honesty, full disclosure, and historical accuracy. His attempt to cast himself as a whistleblower rings hollow against the facts of his involvement.
The public merits the whole truth, not curated narratives. If Femi truly wants to help, he should come clean, name names, and support a full independent inquiry into the subsidy regime not just under Jonathan but across all regimes, including those he profited from. He should also explain his dealings with AMCON.
Until then, his accusations amount to nothing more than a pot calling the kettle black.
@PiCoreTeam 1. I need help with my KYC; it’s been processing for over 2 years plus now.
2. I no longer use the old number I registered Pi with because I have moved back to my country.
3. Please help, I would like the number in my Pi changed to my new number.
4. What to do?
Thank you.
@PiCoreTeam Help!
1. I need help with my KYC; it’s been processing for over 2 years plus now.
2. I no longer use the old number I registered Pi with because I have moved back to my country.
3. Please help, I would like the number in my Pi changed to my new number.
4. What to do?
Thank you.
@PiCoreTeam 1. I need help with my KYC; it’s been processing for over 2 years plus now.
2. I no longer use the old number I registered Pi with because I have moved back to my country.
3. Please help, I would like the number in my Pi changed to my new number.
4. What to do?
Thank you.
@PiCoreTeam Help!
1. I need help with my KYC; it’s been processing for over 2 years plus now.
2. I no longer use the old number I registered Pi with because I have moved back to my country.
3. Please help, I would like the number in my Pi changed to my new number.
4. What to do?
Thank you.
2.
for example when there is no electricity, or when we’re not at home, or in the case of bad weather. It is time that @FCCPC be on the side of Nigerians indeed and not on the side of those who enjoy exploiting our scarce resources and meager income by stopping this menace.
1.
@FCCPC, dragging @multichoice or @DStv to court over price hike is a good move but there’s more. They should be compelled to not just reduce their tariff but also to adopt the Pay-As-You-Watch option. We cannot be made to pay for DSTv when we are not watching DSTv,