This guy was caught trying to steal garri from a market stall. Instead of beating him immediately, they served him a huge pot of soaked garri and a plate of beans. If he finishes everything on the spot, he walks free. If he can’t, they will mend him. 😭
“They are not asking for sharia law or money; they are only asking for the release of some of their men. Government should stop playing politics with our lives" — Abducted vice-principal of Oyo State school, Mrs Alamu Folawe, speaks in new video.
THE GIST ?
One of the Seriki Fulanis in our land has been arrested, Ijebu Ode to be precise.
When he was arrested, he was swearing with Allah's name that he has no connection with kidnappers and that he has never been involved in kidnapping whether directly or indirectly.
After plenty investigation, he kept saying he knew nothing about the kidnapping in Ijebu Axis.
Lol and behold, our brave and smart security officers continued their work and investigation which led them to his house and inside his house, one of the bags that was used to collect ransom from one the people they kidnapped was found inside his kitchen.
Finally, he opened up that truly he is aware that one of his sons is into kidnapping.
The said son fled but his father who is the Seriki fulani in Ijebu Ode was apprehended alongside some others.
Money recovered and some stuff.
South West Govenors are sleeping on a lot of things under the guise of politics cos some of them are thinking they will need these monnsters in the future for their political selfishness, so, they don't want to step on toes
Why is it so hard for them to come up with total banning of Open grazing in the whole of SW region but creating a RUGA settlement for any herder with cows as against roaming their cattle around ?
Create at least one RUGA settlement per senatorial district, and anyone that failed to come to register and use one of the settlements should either bundled out of our region of have him and his cow arrested.
Also, the issue of influx of Okada and human loading trailers into SW states especially Oyo, Ogun and Lagos from the North without being checkmated at SW borders before entrance is another thing they must look into and put an end to.
It is getting too much and the ways and manners at which they are kidnapping, kpaing and injuring our people is getting too much.
Don't let me even talk about how they are seizing our land from our farmers and people in rural areas.
THE NOBEL TRIBUTE
She won the Nobel Peace Prize for fighting tyranny.
Yesterday she gave the medal to the man who captured the tyrant.
He kept it.
She got a gift bag with his signature embossed in gold.
María Corina Machado walked into the White House hoping to become president of Venezuela.
She walked out carrying a red bag with “Donald J. Trump” in gold letters.
The White House confirmed hours later: Trump still believes she “doesn’t have the support or respect” to lead.
He prefers Delcy Rodríguez.
Maduro’s vice president.
The woman who served the dictator for a decade.
Twelve days ago, American special forces extracted Nicolás Maduro from his bed at 3am.
Today, Trump controls Venezuela’s oil. He completed a $500 million sale last week. The money sits in accounts in Qatar.
He declared himself “Acting President.”
When the New York Times asked what limits his global power, Trump answered:
“My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.”
He added: “I don’t need international law.”
The Norwegian Nobel Committee issued a statement.
“The prize can neither be shared nor transferred.”
Trump kept the medal anyway.
It now sits in the White House.
Not won.
Taken.
Machado invoked history as she handed it over.
“Two hundred years ago, Lafayette gave Bolívar a medal with Washington’s face. Today the people of Bolívar give back to the heir of Washington.”
But there is a difference.
Lafayette gave that medal to Bolívar after he liberated South America.
Machado gave hers to Trump after he captured her country.
In the last ten days this president has:
Seized a foreign head of state.
Sold $500 million of that nation’s oil.
Demanded territory from a NATO ally.
Sent one British soldier and two Norwegians to “defend” Greenland.
Positioned strike assets toward Iran where 2,400 protesters lie dead.
Threatened the Insurrection Act against an American state.
Told the world international law does not apply to him.
And received a Nobel Peace Prize as tribute.
The old world operated on a premise:
Power requires legitimacy.
Legitimacy requires rules.
Rules require consent.
The new world operates differently.
Power creates legitimacy.
Rules follow force.
Consent is optional.
That is what María Corina Machado understood when she entered the Oval Office.
She did not come to share a prize.
She came to kneel.
And she received exactly what tribute earns in the new order:
A gift bag.
With his name on it.
In gold.
Look at Trump’s face in that photograph.
The smile.
Innocent.
Almost child-like.
Like someone who waited his whole life for this moment.
Not to win the prize.
To receive it as offering.
The Nobel Peace Prize now belongs to a man who says the only thing limiting his global power is his own mind.
The woman who earned it for fighting dictatorship left with a souvenir.
And somewhere in Caracas, Delcy Rodríguez is preparing for her call with Washington.
She served Maduro faithfully for ten years.
Now she serves someone else.
This is not about Venezuela.
This is about what comes next.
Greenland.
Panama.
Iran.
Canada.
The template is set.
Capture. Control. Accept tribute.
The Nobel Peace Prize was the proof of concept.
The rest is execution.
THE NOBEL TRIBUTE
She won the Nobel Peace Prize for fighting tyranny.
Yesterday she gave the medal to the man who captured the tyrant.
He kept it.
She got a gift bag with his signature embossed in gold.
María Corina Machado walked into the White House hoping to become president of Venezuela.
She walked out carrying a red bag with “Donald J. Trump” in gold letters.
The White House confirmed hours later: Trump still believes she “doesn’t have the support or respect” to lead.
He prefers Delcy Rodríguez.
Maduro’s vice president.
The woman who served the dictator for a decade.
Twelve days ago, American special forces extracted Nicolás Maduro from his bed at 3am.
Today, Trump controls Venezuela’s oil. He completed a $500 million sale last week. The money sits in accounts in Qatar.
He declared himself “Acting President.”
When the New York Times asked what limits his global power, Trump answered:
“My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.”
He added: “I don’t need international law.”
The Norwegian Nobel Committee issued a statement.
“The prize can neither be shared nor transferred.”
Trump kept the medal anyway.
It now sits in the White House.
Not won.
Taken.
Machado invoked history as she handed it over.
“Two hundred years ago, Lafayette gave Bolívar a medal with Washington’s face. Today the people of Bolívar give back to the heir of Washington.”
But there is a difference.
Lafayette gave that medal to Bolívar after he liberated South America.
Machado gave hers to Trump after he captured her country.
In the last ten days this president has:
Seized a foreign head of state.
Sold $500 million of that nation’s oil.
Demanded territory from a NATO ally.
Sent one British soldier and two Norwegians to “defend” Greenland.
Positioned strike assets toward Iran where 2,400 protesters lie dead.
Threatened the Insurrection Act against an American state.
Told the world international law does not apply to him.
And received a Nobel Peace Prize as tribute.
The old world operated on a premise:
Power requires legitimacy.
Legitimacy requires rules.
Rules require consent.
The new world operates differently.
Power creates legitimacy.
Rules follow force.
Consent is optional.
That is what María Corina Machado understood when she entered the Oval Office.
She did not come to share a prize.
She came to kneel.
And she received exactly what tribute earns in the new order:
A gift bag.
With his name on it.
In gold.
Look at Trump’s face in that photograph.
The smile.
Innocent.
Almost child-like.
Like someone who waited his whole life for this moment.
Not to win the prize.
To receive it as offering.
The Nobel Peace Prize now belongs to a man who says the only thing limiting his global power is his own mind.
The woman who earned it for fighting dictatorship left with a souvenir.
And somewhere in Caracas, Delcy Rodríguez is preparing for her call with Washington.
She served Maduro faithfully for ten years.
Now she serves someone else.
This is not about Venezuela.
This is about what comes next.
Greenland.
Panama.
Iran.
Canada.
The template is set.
Capture. Control. Accept tribute.
The Nobel Peace Prize was the proof of concept.
The rest is execution.