Don’t say anything, just retweet and drop laughing emojis. Let’s laugh at Real Madrid fans who wasted their night only to watch their team lose. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
As long as Barcelona have Lamine Yamal, they can beat anyone.
Even on an average day by his standards, he still wouldn’t let us lose — pulled out two assists from nowhere.
@nysc360 Regarding this issue, my graduation date is correct but the "from year... to year... '' is not correct. Am i suppose to contact my school SAO?
President Bola Tinubu should speak up about the brutal killing of 16 hunters in Edo State. He should outline his administration’s plans to stop the killings, bring the culprits to book and conpensate the victims’ families.
Similar killings, targeting North-bound freight drivers and their passengers, have become a reccuring pattern. And whenever the truck drivers plan a boycott, government will persuade them to continue plying the Road to Golgotha.
In early March, the National Union of Road Transport Workers (Heavy Truck), Plateau State chapter, staged a protest over incessant killings of their members in the South.
According to them, "Between January and December 2024 alone, more than 20 drivers were brutally killed, and their trucks were either burnt or damaged in the communities of Ehobey, Okigwe, Isoche and Ehobey local government areas of Imo state."
But after expressing their grievances and calling on Nigerian authorities to intervene, the SSS harrassed not only their members, but the Daily Trust journalists who covered the protest!
Why are we good at suppressing peaceful protests, but poor at stopping the killings? And why is the president loquacious at responding to Atikus, but taciturn at responding to killings of innocent lives?
Please, let’s make this person famous — let’s make him go viral by retweeting this tweet.
He is one of the many suspects involved in the k!lling of 16 Northern Hausa Muslims.
Keep retweeting until the security agencies catch him!
The brutal and unjust killing of 16 innocent Hausa travelers in Edo State is a horrifying tragedy that demands an immediate and resolute response. The fact that such a heinous act could unfold so viciously, based solely on false accusations, exposes the deep-rooted dangers of mob justice and the urgent need for accountability. It is deeply troubling that such a crime could occur, leaving families shattered, lives destroyed, and a community scarred, yet the nation remains largely silent.
If this atrocity had taken place in Kano or any part of Northern Nigeria, the uproar would be deafening. Media platforms would be filled with condemnations, and leaders from every corner of the nation would be calling for swift justice.
The lives of these 16 travelers mattered. They were fathers, brothers, sons ordinary people who found themselves mercilessly killed over baseless accusations. Their only crime was carrying hunting guns, a common tool in the North, which were misconstrued as weapons of kidnapping. The mob acted as judge, jury, and executioner, robbing these men of their right to a fair trial and any chance to prove their innocence. This blatant disregard for the rule of law must not be tolerated.
The authorities must act swiftly to ensure justice is served. Arrests must be thorough, and prosecution must be decisive. The culprits those who participated, incited, or stood by must be held accountable to the full extent of the law. Anything less would set a dangerous precedent, emboldening more acts of mob violence and deepening societal divisions.
This tragedy should serve as a wake-up call for all Nigerians. We must reject mob justice, condemn all forms of extrajudicial killings, and demand a nation where justice is blind to ethnicity, religion, or region. The silence in the face of such brutality is deafening and unacceptable. The memory of these innocent travelers demands more than whispers of sympathy it demands loud, unrelenting calls for justice. We cannot let their deaths be in vain.
Mob Justice in Edo: 16 Innocent Northern Travelers Killed Over False Accusations 💔
In a harrowing display of mob injustice, 16 innocent travelers from Northern Nigeria lost their lives in the Udune Efandion community of Uromi, Edo State, after being falsely accused of kidnapping. This unfathomable tragedy unfolded on Thursday, as an irate mob took the law into their own hands, fueled by false claims and sheer ignorance.
Intelligence sources told Zagazola Makama that the victims, primarily Hausa hunters, were en route from Port Harcourt to Kano for the Sallah festivities when they were intercepted around 1:30 p.m. by members of the Edo State Security Corps and local vigilantes.
The sight of their hunting guns. Dane guns commonly used in the North was misinterpreted as a threat. Instead of contacting the police, or other security agencies, local vigilantes raised a false alarm, which ignited a wave of chaos and violence.
The reaction was swift and brutal. Local youths, incited by the unfounded accusations, viciously attacked the travelers, resulting in the tragic loss of 16 lives on the spot. In a grotesque act of barbarism, the mob set the truck ablaze, leaving some bodies trapped inside the vehicle. While some people were taken out on wheelbarrow and thrown inside fire. This gruesome scene only point to the sickening reality of mob justice that has taken root in certain communities.
Responsive action from security operatives came too late for the victims. By the time they arrived on the scene following a distress call, the damage had been done. Four survivors were rescued and rushed to His Grace Hospital in Uromi for urgent medical treatment. Meanwhile, authorities have confirmed the arrest of five suspects, but is this enough? A mere handful of arrests cannot bring back those lost, nor can it alleviate the trauma inflicted on the surviving families.
The Hausa community in Uromi held an emergency peace meeting to address the situation and aims to prevent any further reprisals, yet questions linger. Will justice truly be served?
The police, responsible for maintaining law and order, have vowed that "the law must take its course" and that those responsible for these heinous acts will be brought to justice. But how can trust be restored when justice is often delayed or never served?
Public outrage at this incident is palpable, with cries for accountability ringing out across the nation. Many have called for urgent legal action against those involved, as well as heightened public awareness regarding the dangers of mob violence. The specter of extrajudicial killings looms large, threatening national unity and stoking the flames of ethnic tension.
Observers and community leaders implore the authorities to enhance law enforcement and improve intelligence sharing among security agencies to prevent such a horrific tragedy from happening again. When will this cycle of violence end? It is high time that justice is prioritized, and those who resort to mob action are held accountable for their barbarity.
In this dark chapter of Nigerian history, the need for a collective commitment to justice and peace has never been more urgent. The lives lost demand justice, and the survivors deserve the assurance that they can live without fear of becoming victims of false accusations and mob brutality.
Justice for the 16! “Let this tragedy serve as a wake-up call to all enough is enough”.
Zagazola Makama is a Counter Insurgency Expert and Security Analyst in the Lake Chad Region
16
Innocent Muslims 🥲
Innocent Northerners 🥲
Innocent Hausas💔
Was killed in cold blood, their only offense is being Hausa and Northerners😭
The Federal Government must do everything possible to end this madness, Nigerians lives must be protected in any cost and in any part of this country.
16 Innocent Hausa Travelers Killed Over False Accusations in Edo.💔😭RT pls
Zagazola; The Hausa hunters, were en route to Kano for Sallah festival when they were intercepted & gruesomely killed by members of Edo State Security Corps and local vigilantes; https://t.co/gTLOYOpRXZ