The abduction of the Chibok girls in 2014 triggered a global movement. One school abduction was enough to unite Nigerians, attract international attention, and place enormous pressure on the government through the #BringBackOurGirls campaign.
Yet, what has happened since then should trouble every Nigerian.
Under President Buhari's eight years in office, Nigeria witnessed about ten school abductions. Under President Tinubu's administration, in just three years, we have already recorded over ten school abductions.
Despite these repeated tragedies, there has been neither sustained national outrage nor significant international attention comparable to what followed Chibok.
This raises an important question: have we become so accustomed to insecurity that what once shocked our national conscience is now treated as normal?
At a time when millions of Nigerians are grappling with insecurity, poverty, and hardship, it is deeply troubling that those in power appear more focused on political calculations and preparations for the next election than on addressing the urgent challenges confronting our people.
It is, therefore, no surprise that some observers have labelled us a "Now Disgraced Nation". While we do not agree with any attempt to define our great country by its present difficulties, we must acknowledge that persistent insecurity, economic hardship, and leadership failure have damaged our reputation and standing among nations.
The answer is not denial, propaganda, or political distraction. The answer is leadership that is competent, compassionate, accountable, and genuinely committed to the welfare and security of the Nigerian people.
The Nigerian youth must not become indifferent. We must all refuse to normalise failure.
Young Nigerians - Take back your country!
A New Nigeria is Possible. -PO
@idfwsm@realpillnuke@TohPahz@chinexlo Nobody has time to be going back and forth with you. Engaging you is pure waste of time. Mr Nigeria. You are looking for Elon payout, sorry we don’t do that here
@idfwsm@realpillnuke@TohPahz@chinexlo You are in every ones comment crying. You love Nigeria more than even the people that created it. Only your people love Nigeria, any other person from other parts of Nigeria hate Nigeria. Mr Nigeria
@onibuna@Olubusuyi6@OmoGbajaBiamila Usually I don’t reply to post like this, but go through my page, I don’t have time for back and forth. My state has bad places and also needs to be fixed. I don’t know why you guys always think about defending when someone points something out.
@Daffodil61_@RLouis1397@iky_fwjett Well it also depends. If you sign a birth certificate believing the child is yours and then find out that child isn’t, that’s deception. You can fight it on that ground.
@BOGbadams I used to listen to brymo. The way I promoted yellow album, till today, some of my friends still mock me for it. But after his rubbish in the last election, God will take me before I play any brymo song. If you don’t stand for the truth, you don’t stand for anything
@thekenndubisi It's not that there's no materialism in Canada, it's just that it's not the way it is in Nigeria. Things like regular cars, phones, shoes and cloths are not seen as materialism in Canada while it's a big deal in Nigeria. The materialism in Canada is very different.
@GeneralSnow_ As someone that lived in aba from 2015-2000, Abia state was one of the reasons I left Nigeria. If you didn’t live in old Abia state, you can never understand what people went through. Abia is liberated, God saved Abia
@NigeriaStories@sir_presh Apart from the clear face lies, they are always quick to compare expenses and never income. What is the ratio of the cost of flight to income for Americans? Minimum wage is 70k but flight is 125k in his own words. How does that make sense?
@ChigozieOffical@General_Somto Because an average Nigerian wants to make money so they can blow siren and intimidate others. That’s their own understanding of riches, so his humility confuses them, they can’t grasp it