I have just received the sad news of the death of one of our Obidient family members from Edo State, Comrade Benedict Inaede.
On behalf of my family and the Obidient Movement family, I sincerely condole with his immediate family and the entire Obidient family. His death is a painful and irreplaceable loss to us all.
May Almighty God, who has called him home, grant him eternal rest and grant his family and all of us the fortitude to bear this profound loss.
May we continue to remember his family in prayers for God Almighty's continued blessings. -PO
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2m package to Doha Qatar!
Rate covers flight, accommodation, daily breakfast, visa, city tours , airport transfer
May 13 to 17
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@OurFavOnlineDoc Many of them cant go to the farm!!
Knowing that someone was kidnapped and didn't make it out alive and seeing this, just makes one sad!!
Too bad!!
@OurFavOnlineDoc Many of them cant go to the farm!!
Knowing that someone was kidnapped and didn't make it out alive and seeing this, just makes one sad!!
Too bad!!
@NigeriaStories Congratulations 🎊 👏
To those that dont know what it means " The movie that has earned the most money from ticket sales worldwide in cinema history."
@NigeriaStories Congratulations 🎊 👏
To those that dont know what it means " The movie that has earned the most money from ticket sales worldwide in cinema history."
OPEN LETTER TO DAVID HUNDEYIN
@DavidHundeyin, I am saying this from a place of genuine concern. Nobody goes through the kind of pressure, fear, threats, and persecution you have experienced without it taking a serious toll. You have been moving from country to country. You have been under intense political pressure. You have been fighting heavy battles mostly alone. That level of stress changes people, whether they admit it or not.
But in recent times, the way you have been moving online does not look like someone who is coping well.
You now treat almost every event in Nigeria as if it is personally directed at you, as if you are the only one who understands what is happening. You react to disagreement as an attack. Everything is now a foreign plot even when it doesn’t point to that direction. You insult entire groups, including people you once shared the same ideology with. One moment you speak as if you alone can save Nigeria, the next moment you say the country deserves whatever happens to it.
This is not strength. This is what stress, burnout, and emotional exhaustion look like when they begin to affect how someone sees the world.
Let me also remind you of your own words. In 2023, you openly acknowledged the killings of Christians in Nigeria, and you even said that as an atheist, you were shouting louder than the church.
Now the church and the people directly affected are shouting, and suddenly they are CIA, or America is using them to destabilise Nigeria, as if Nigeria is a stable nation before, how do you destabilise an already destabilised entity. Let me ask you plainly: were you CIA in 2023 when you said you were shouting louder than the church? Was America using you to destabilise Nigeria then?
One thing I will tell you for free is this: person wey him house dey catch fire no dey ask the people rushing to help am wetin their intentions be. Them no dey care whether the people wey come help fit steal their property. They just accept help. Person wey dey drown no dey look the face of the person wey wan save am.
The truth is not that people suddenly became CIA agents. The truth is that you are tired, overwhelmed, and carrying too much on your own. When someone carries that much pain and pressure for too long, it starts to affect their judgement.
Nobody is dragging you. Nobody is mocking you. This is simply a concern. You have done important work, and you have taken risks most people cannot imagine. But right now, the stress is showing in your words, your reactions, your anger, and the way you interpret almost everything as a plot.
Before this pressure breaks you, take a step back and breathe. You do not have to fight the whole world alone. And you do not have to destroy yourself in the process of trying to save a country that has already drained you.
Seek mental health support and counsel. Everyone reaches a breaking point at some stage, especially under the kind of pressure you have lived with. Admitting you need help is not weakness. Asking for support is strength. Take your mental health seriously.
You have already blocked me. So if you like call me CIA, it would honestly be an honour. But deep down, you know this message is coming from a place of truth.
Thank you for your attention to this matter
Peace ✌️
Breaking: Report reaching me has it that a Kaduna high court has sentenced Victor Solomon popularly known as Zidane to death by hanging for murder.
Zidane was arrested by the Elrufai led government in 2018 for defending his Adara community against Fulani terrorists attacks.
He was charged for murder in two different state high courts which one of the courts acquitted him of the charge while the other now condemned him to death.
Why should same charges be filed in two different state high courts?
This is another case of self defense getting the death sentence in Nigeria.
In October 2025, I visited Zidane in Kaduna prison where he assured me that since one court had acquitted him of the same charge, the other will do the same. Zidane was wrong, he believed too much in the compromised judiciary where judges dish out sentences based on the accused faiths.
JUSTICE FOR 13-YEAR OLD MASTER TIMOTHY DANIEL MONDAY MURDERED ON NEW YEAR’S DAY BY A SOLDIER ATTACHED TO STERLING GLOBAL
My heart has been heavy since last Friday when the sister of this young boy reached out to me to inform me about the gruesome murder or his brother.
Master Timothy Daniel Monday, a 13-year old JSS 2 student of Bensona International School, King Jaja Street, Borokiri, Port Harcourt, was murdered by a trigger-happy Army personnel on Thursday, 1st January, 2026.
The sister, Miss Miracle Daniel Monday, who is an eye witness to the tragedy, informed me that she and her family members attended a Cross Over Service at Mount Zion Church, Ette, in Ikot Abasi Local Government Area of Akwa Ibom State.
During the course of the service, Miracle stepped out with her siblings to urinate and were accosted by soldiers deployed to protect Sterling Oil Exploration & Energy Production Company Ltd. (popularly known as Sterling Global), a major Nigerian indigenous oil & gas firm involved in exploration and production (E&P).
According to Miracle, she told the soldiers to hold on for her to finish urinating, but her innocuous comment infuriated one of the soldiers who felt challenged.
The soldier then pushed her to the ground.
When she asked him why he pushed her, the soldier became more infuriated and then slapped her, and also assaulted her sister.
Another soldier later intervened, apologized to the two sisters and asked them to leave.
As they were leaving, they heard gunshots.
It turn out that the same soldier who had assaulted them had opened fire and killed Master Timothy instantly. The photos shared with me are too graphic for me to share. His brain was completely shattered.
The family reported the case to the Nigerian Army Cantonment 6 Battalion Wellington Basi Barracks, Ibagwa, Abak Local Government Area.
The case was also reported to the police.
I called Miracle this morning, she confirmed to me that till this moment, Sterling Global has not deemed it fit to contact or visit the grieving family.
I am calling on the Minister of Defence, the Chief of Army Staff, the General Officer Commanding (G.O.C.) of the 6 Battalion, Ibagwa, and the Akwa Ibom State Government to swiftly intervene in this case, ensure that the culprit is court-martialed for murder, and the family adequately compensated.
The nonchalant attitude of Sterling Global to this case, like in many other cases, is despicable and unacceptable.
No Nigerian should be killed in this manner by those who are supposed to protect them. The pain that this family has been subjected to is unimaginable. They live in Port Harcourt, and only went home for the holidays.
Section 33 of the Nigerian Constitution guarantees the right to life. No one should be deprived of this scared right, except in strict compliance with the manner set by the Constitution.
Prosperity cannot come by taxing Poverty
As I travel the world and meet leaders who have transformed their nations, one lesson is clear: lasting economic and social progress begins with national consensus. Transformative leaders—those who successfully unite their people around a shared vision—share a defining quality: honesty. Government must be transparent and truthful because citizens deserve nothing less from those who lead them. True leaders do not exploit their people to enrich themselves and a few cronies; they build trust, unity, and shared purpose - the foundation of sustainable progress.
It is against this standard of honest leadership that Nigeria’s current approach to taxation must be measured. If taxation is to function as a genuine social contract, it must be rooted in sincerity, fairness, and concern for the welfare of the people. Every tax policy should be clearly explained, including its impact on incomes and its expected contribution to national development. Without this transparency, taxation becomes a tool of confusion and burden rather than a mechanism for growth and development.
Nigeria must rethink taxation if it is serious about economic growth, national unity, and shared prosperity. The purpose of sound fiscal policy is not merely to raise revenue; it is to make the people wealthier so that the nation itself becomes stronger. Yet today, Nigerians are asked to pay taxes without clarity, explanation, or visible benefit.
The solution begins with empowering small and medium-sized enterprises in every community. When small businesses thrive, jobs are created, incomes rise, and the tax base expands naturally. You cannot tax your way out of poverty - you must produce your way out of it.
This makes the ongoing tax fraud saga particularly alarming. For the first time in Nigeria’s history, a tax law has reportedly been forged. The National Assembly itself has admitted that the version gazetted is not what was passed into law. Yet citizens are being asked to pay higher taxes under this manipulated framework—without transparency, without explanation, and without corresponding benefits.
There is no virtue in celebrating increased government revenue while the people grow poorer. Taxing poverty does not create wealth; it deepens hardship. Any tax system that makes citizens poorer violates the fundamental principles of good governance and sound fiscal policy.
Nigeria needs a fair, lawful, and people-centred tax system—one that supports production, rewards enterprise, protects the vulnerable, and restores trust between government and citizens. Only then can taxation become a true tool for unity, growth, and shared prosperity. -PO