I am a civil engineer , I design and as well construct any civil structure be it building , road pavement ,bridge etc . market analyst.๐๐ CEO Apex graphics
In 2014, Peter Obi gave 160 First Class students N1 million each to reward them for their performance.
8 years later, one of the students who is currently studying for his PhD in the United States of America met Obi in the Vatican City and was full of praisesโค๏ธ
[OPINION]: Peter Obi, the Nigeria Democratic Congress presidential candidate, has called for President Bola Tinubuโs resignation, saying Nigeria is in its โworst possible condition.โ
Read more: https://t.co/mnOZuiji2w
We welcome the mostly peaceful conduct of the Ekiti State election and congratulate Gov Oyebanji on his re-election.
We note concerns of accessibility for voters with disabilities, instances of vote trading & of technical issues with BVAS at some polling units.
Statement below๐
Former Labour Party presidential candidate Peter Obi has called on President Bola Tinubu to resign over what he described as a โmonumental failure in governance", citing worsening economic hardship, insecurity, and declining living conditions across the country.
Obi made the call in a statement posted on his X handle on Monday after reflecting on the resignation announcement by the British Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, which he said underscored the importance of accountability in public office.
https://t.co/4N2XUXEmJ7
Presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC), Peter Obi, has called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to resign over what he described as failures in governance, citing the resignation announcement of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer as an example of political accountability.
https://t.co/V3dDpbCXFp
It's already 37 days since these children was kidnapped and your here writing junk on how your principal has clamp down insecurity in Nigeria. Shame on you old fool
STATEHOUSE STATEMENT
Obiโs call for President Tinubuโs resignation childish and an unwarranted distraction
Peter Obiโs latest comments calling for President Bola Tinubuโs resignation, based on a comparison with the British prime minister's voluntary exit, are not only misplaced but also reflect a selective and distorted view of Nigeriaโs realities since 2023.ย
His view is also simplistic, as is often the case anytime he opens his mouth. Obi forgets our country does not run a parliamentary system of government like the UK. We run a presidential system, with the president elected to a fixed 4-year term. The people of Ekiti State and the senatorial constituents in Nasarawa, Enugu, Ondo, and Rivers have just delivered a resounding victory for President Tinubu and his party. The election results, some early referendum of sorts, show that President Tinubu and his party are popular with Nigerians. This should be more concerning for Peter Obi and his new Special Purpose Vehicle, NDC, as we move towards the January 2027 election. Obi should wait until the presidential election to know what the people think of Tinubuโs government. Moving to use X to harangue the President out of office is off the mark and anti-democratic.
It is important to note that President Tinubu did not inherit a country in perfect shape. The security challenges we face today are longstanding and deeply rooted. Yet under President Tinubuโs leadership, Nigeria has made significant, measurable progress. Hundreds of people have been rescued from captivity, including high-profile operations in Borno and the Northwest. Our gallant troops have neutralised terrorist kingpins, sometimes with the help of our foreign allies. Over 15,000 terrorists have been taken off the streets and forests, and security operations have intensified nationwide. President Tinubu has not only sustained but also expanded investments in security by deploying advanced technologies and drones, and by appointing a Special Adviser on Homeland Security to ensure a holistic approach. These actions demonstrate commitment, not failure. It is laughable that Obi, who, as governor, was a colossal failure, unable to secure lives and property in his small state of Anambra, as documented by his successor, Willie Obiano, is now the one calling for President Tinubuโs resignation over security breaches in some parts of the country.
On the economic front, Obiโs depiction of decline and his verdict that โWe are in the worst possible conditionโ ignore verifiable data and global plaudits for President Tinubuโs economic and social policies. President Tinubu inherited what another successor of Peter Obi described as โa dead horse economyโ. When he came on board in May 2023, President Tinubu introduced bold, courageous policies that his predecessors had shied away from. Since then,ย the Nigerian economy has posted positive GDP growth every quarter, surpassing the global average. Trade surpluses have been recorded consistently, and foreign reserves have hit new highsโover $50 billion. Oil production has risen from less than one million barrels per day to about 1.8 million, reversing years of decline. Federation revenue is projected to hit over N30 trillion this year, far above the 2022 level of N7.7 trillion. By May this year, N15.7 trillion has already been collected, more than twice the entire revenue collected in 2022. State governments now have more resources to pursue development projects in education, infrastructure, health care, housing, and so on. The stock market has soared, with the All-Share Index rising from 50,000 to over 250,000, creating wealth for about 6 million Nigerian investors. The Naira-to-dollar exchange rate has been stable. Foreign Direct and Portfolio Investments are at record highs, reflecting renewed investor confidence, especially in the oil and gas sector.ย
President Tinubu has also set records in infrastructure delivery, building concrete roads that will last 100 years or more across all the country's geopolitical zones and actualising the Lagos-Calabar and Sokoto-Badagry superhighways, roads dreamt of for decades.ย
Unlike leaders before him, President Tinubu has proven not only to be a reform-minded and courageous leader but also an innovator, for instance, replacing expensive petrol and diesel with CNG and offering close to two million Nigerian tertiary students interest-free loans to pursue their education. Are conditions worsening in our country when, in three years of Tinubuโs leadership, we have recorded no disruption of the academic calendar by trade unions such as ASUU or NASU? That is one of President Tinubuโs campaign promises to our students: a four-year programme will be a four-year programme. It has been a promise well kept, which Obi, in his penchant for bad news, has never sung about and will never acknowledge.
Concerning President Tinubuโs campaign promises on power supply, it is misleading for Peter Obi to parrot the claim that candidate Tinubu guaranteed 24-hour electricity for all. What he actually said on that occasion in Lagos and which Obi and his followers have consistently misquoted, for the sake of mischief, was:ย โWhichever way, by all means necessary, you will have electricity, and you will not pay for estimated bills anymore. A promise made will be a promise kept. If I donโt keep the promise and I come for a second term, donโt vote for meโunless I give you adequate reasons why I couldnโt deliver.โย
The first policy President Tinubu implemented upon taking office was to sign the Electricity Act, which enables states to generate, transmit, and distribute electricity independently of the centralised grid system. To end the fraudulent estimated billing, his administration has rolled out millions of prepaid meters and plans to install seven million more. Power generation is increasing. The government has intensified its provision of off-grid solar power to schools, hospitals, and markets in many parts of the country. The real challenge remains transmission infrastructure and sustainable pricing, which are now being addressed, to attract fresh investment into the sector.
No one denies that Nigeria has challenges, especially regarding the high cost of living. But any honest politician will agree this is a global problem resulting from the tensions in the Middle East.ย Just recently, as inflation was receding in Nigeria, a disruption to the global economy occurred when America and Israel attacked Iran, and Iran responded by closing the Strait of Hormuz, creating disruption in the global supply system and high prices of many commodities, including crude oil.ย
Peter Obiโs call for President Tinubuโs resignation is childish and hollow. It is not a call to hold the leader accountable. It is merely a political grandstand and an unworthy distraction just hours after President Tinubu's party recorded resounding victories in the weekend polls.ย
Leadership is about determination to confront the challenges facing our country and the economy. President Tinubu focuses on solutions, not rhetoricโinvesting in reforms, stabilising the economy, improving security, and laying the groundwork for a more prosperous Nigeria. He is not waiting to learn from Bangladesh, Rwanda or Egypt. He has a team of thinkers and doers. And Nigeria, under him, has been an exemplar for other nations to copy.
True leadership means staying the course, learning, adapting, and delivering results. President Tinubu has shown he is up to the task, and Nigeria is on the path to progress.ย
With his puerile tweet on X, we are now convinced that Peter Obi lives in his self-constructed echo chambers, where he reels off lie after lie to himself and believes his self-created reality about the situation in Nigeria. We sympathise with him. That reality he fantasises about is mostly a figment of his imagination.
Bayo Onanuga ย
Special Adviser to the President ย
(Information & Strategy)
June 22, 2026
Fatherโs Day: A Time for Reflection
Today is Fatherโs Day. After attending church service and in my routine reflection, I find myself once again asking a difficult question: Are we cursed, or are we the cause?
I grew up in a Nigeria that was more united and peaceful. In my primary, secondary school and university days, students related freely without divisions of religion, ethnicity, or region. We simply saw ourselves as Nigerians.
After university, I entered business in an environment where partnerships were built on trust and competence, not tribe or religion. I also lived in Nigeria, where the naira commanded respect, and Nigerians enjoyed dignity abroad, with easier global mobility and much respect for our passports.
I lived in Nigeria, where I travelled across the countryโfrom Onitsha to Lagos, Maiduguri, and Calabarโwithout fear. Roads connected people, and life was more secure. Nigeriaโs Armed Forces and the Police were also widely respected for their role in global peacekeeping and international stability.
Beyond security and unity, there was also a stronger sense of public trust in institutions, with greater confidence in elections, a clearer culture of accountability in governance, more stable universities that served as centres of intellectual excellence and national pride, a more functional and accessible healthcare system, and relatively better-performing basic infrastructure such as electricity, roads, and public utilities, whichโthough imperfectโwere far less chaotic than what we experience today.
Today, as a father reflecting on Nigeria, I am pained that much of this has changed. Insecurity has grown, national unity has weakened, and many citizens no longer feel safe. Opportunities have also diminished for the younger generation compared to what we once had.
It is also worrisome that Nigeriaโs influence in global affairs appears reduced, as seen in recent international gatherings such as the just-concluded G7 meeting, where African countries like Egypt and Kenya were invited, while Nigeria was absent. Whether symbolic or not, it reflects a decline in standing we cannot ignore.
As fathers, we must not only lament. We must not bequeath this reality to our children. We owe them a better Nigeria built on security, opportunity, fairness, and national pride.
A key part of achieving this is active civic participation. We must obtain our Permanent Voter Cards (PVCs), vote responsibly, and remain committed to protecting the integrity of our votes. Change will not come from complaints alone but from citizens who choose and defend accountable leadership.
With responsibility, unity, and determination, we can together build the new Nigeria that is POssible. -PO
DAVIDO IS THE GREATEST MUSICIAN IN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD๐โค๏ธ
DAVIDO IS THE GREATEST MUSICIAN IN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD๐โค๏ธ
DAVIDO IS THE GREATEST MUSICIAN IN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD๐โค๏ธ
DAVIDO IS THE GREATEST MUSICIAN IN THE WHOLE WIDE WORLD๐โค๏ธ
Have a friend like Peter for Nigeria.
Such a good sport
He followed me everywhere I had to do consultation while still having his own election to worry about.
I wonโt forget.
After Donating โฆ10 Million to Damaged Enugu Hospital, Peter Obi Donates โฆ25 Million to Shanahan University in Anambra State https://t.co/e5QevwFekY
Dear Nigerians,
Thank you plastering Peter Gregory Obiโs achievements in office โ while he was the governor of Anambra state. Thatโs the best way to silence naysayers. You guys even dug up his records before politics. One thing remains clear, โpolitics made the man poorer.โ
ANNOUNCING OUR INAUGURAL๐ OBIDIENT OF THE WEEK
Dear Obidients,
We heard you loud and clear!
Due to overwhelming popular demand, our inaugural #ObidientofTheWeek is PO's MainChic @D_goodybag!
This honour is in recognition of her outstanding commitment to voter registration mobilisation, grassroots engagement, and civic participation.
Through her tireless efforts to encourage Nigerians to obtain their PVCs and take ownership of the democratic process, she has demonstrated the spirit of service, sacrifice, and active citizenship that defines the Obidient Movement.
Movements are built by people who do the work, and few have been as consistent and impactful in this regard.
Congratulations, PO's MainChic! Thank you for all you do in advancing the cause of a New Nigeria.
A New Nigeria is POssible. ๐ณ๐ฌ
#ObidientOfTheWeek #ObidientMovement #ANewNigeriaIsPOssible
P.S: Special shoutout to @IfinwaJ@Shouldincase@ChukwuVictorOb1@ezydoesit69@kruzyluv and @OkoliStephenIz3 for dropping their thoughts yesterday.
cc: @PeterObi@YunusaTanko@ammielv@onyeka_real@ObiDientTvHQ@SheikhAnalo@AishaYesufu