Awolowo said he doesn't want the children of his cooks or drivers to turn out to be cooks and drivers themselves, reason he made sure free and qualitative education was available to all in the Western region.
People dey defend frying Akara as economic empowerment in 2026
President Trump's statement over the weekend declaring that the United States has "largely ended the slaughter of great Christian populations" in Nigeria is alarming. It is dangerous. And it is patently false.
The strikes were real. Credit where it's due — no president before Trump hit Nigeria's jihadists at all. The Christmas Day strike on Sokoto and the May 16 strike that killed the world's number-two ISIS commander were real blows.
But the group doing most of the genocidal killing was never touched.
The Fulani militias — the armed networks that have burned more than 20,000 churches, slaughtered families in the night, and driven twelve million people from their ancestral land — have not been struck. They are forces operating under the protection of the Caliphate structure, loyal to the same ruling elite that has been running this jihad since 1804. They are fully intact, still in the field. And by every visible measure, the situation has not improved — it has gotten worse.
Not just the killing. The government deception. The incompetence, corruption and complicity. The government that denies the existence of millions of displaced people. The Islamic supremacist now rewriting the national school curriculum for fifty million children in what he calls “intellectual jihad.” The Fulani militia commanders who have never faced a courtroom, a drone, or a consequence of any kind.
Now look at the timing.
A ginned-up diaspora "gala" in Washington last week -- days before Trump's disturbing pivot -- became a de-facto Tinubu campaign rally. His people worked the room, the “cooperation” between the US and Nigerian governments was celebrated. Contrary voices were silenced. People wined and dined and gave each other awards to celebrate who-knows-what in the middle of an ongoing genocide. Tinubu's own spokesman was hailed as an “honored guest” and closed the evening at the microphone with an extended infomercial for the corrupt administration.
Days later, President Trump announced the genocide is largely over.
That is not a coincidence. That is a play.
Tinubu just learned he faces no backlash for backing off. Trump learned that the self-appointed voice of the diaspora celebrates his partnership with Tinubu and their “accomplishments.” That is a green light — the movement strategically silenced at the exact time to ensure Washington filed Nigeria under “problem solved.”
It worked. And if it sticks, the results will be catastrophic.
I believe there is still hope to bring this back into the spotlight, to compel Trump to act, but there’s not much time.
Look at what moved Trump the first time: In September, Bill Maher raised the issue of the Nigerian Christian Genocide on national television. Ted Cruz loudly made it a Senate matter. And then days later Trump threatened Country of Particular Concern designation.
Next, my October 14 press conference in Abuja generated billions of impressions and triggered an emergency Senate session. The resulting outcry moved the needle. Days later, Trump promised to come “guns-a-blazin.”
Now the voices have gone soft, become complicit, absorbed into DCI’s swamp -- and immediately Trump talks as if he’s turning away.
These are not coincidences. It’s loud public outcry that forced the issue and compelled action.
We need that outcry again right now, louder than ever.
If President Trump has "accomplished" his mission in Nigeria, then his mission was never about stopping the genocide or saving Christians.
We know better. He can do better. But only if we get loud enough that he has to. Right now.
#EarthShaker
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The #FULANI_CHRISTIANS Sunday Service!
Many of us are passionate about telling the #Fulani people about Christ Jesus.
This work is not just a task; it's something we are meant to do, even when there are dangers involved.
Keep us in your prayers, brethren!
To those Fulani threatening me or claiming that I was sponsored by Christians, Jews, Berom, or Kataf, you should know that it was Fulani who killed my brother, Jamilu Tanimu, and Karima. It was Fulani who kidnapped my brother's two daughters, Naja'atu and Aisha. It was Fulani who shot my grandfather, Musa Imam, leaving him crippled. It was Fulani who killed my intimate classmate and seatmate, Badamasi Ibrahim. It was Fulani who kidnapped many of my siblings and friends, displaced my village for a long time, and made my village poorer than ever before.
It was not Christians, Berom, Kataf, or Jews. It was Fulani who caused these problems for my family and for many Hausa people in general.
I will never love those who committed these acts of terrorism against my family. Even now, if I step into my mother's room, I will see Asmau, the daughter of my younger brother, Jamilu, who was killed by Fulani terrorists.
This is my true life story. These are my views and my opinions. I can't love my enemies and Fulani are my true enemies
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Reaching Souls, Caring For Lives!
As Fulani Evangelists, we preach the Gospel and care for the well-being of our people.
We are not called to preach the Gospel alone, but to show the love of Christ through care and compassion. We are committed to both the spiritual and physical well-being of our people. Sharing hope, healing, and the love of Jesus one community at a time.
Preaching the Gospel is our mission, but caring for the health of our people is also part of the calling and we believe the love of Christ must be seen not only in words, but also in action.
Keep praying for us brethren!
United we stand.
Just finished a powerful briefing. The live stream didn’t work, will be uploading video later today. Stay tuned.
#EarthShaker@Alex_Barbir
Mum, on your special day, I want you to know just how deeply you are loved and cherished. You have been my safe haven, my comfort, and my guiding star through every twist and turn in life. Your strength amazes me, your kindness inspires me, and your love fills my heart in ways I can never fully express. I am so happy I became the star you prayed for, shining bright because of your love and faith in me. I am so grateful for every sacrifice you’ve made and every smile you’ve shared to make my world brighter. Today, I celebrate not just your birthday but the incredible woman you are. May this year bring you endless happiness, good health, and all the love you so richly deserve. Happy Birthday, Mum. You mean everything to me.
Your Daughter DABELEM ESTHER GEORGEWILL 🫂
The Islamic regime is about to hang a wife and husband together for wanting freedom.
Bita Hemmati and Mohammadreza Majidi-Asl (34) were arrested together, tortured into forced confessions, and sentenced to death.
Chanting against the mullahs and throwing stones during the January uprising.
Bita would be the first woman executed from these protests.
This is how the Islamic Republic stays in power: by destroying families at the gallows.
More than 125,000 Christians have been killed in Nigeria since 2009. Often left off the page is the other number: 60,000 Muslims, killed in the same years by the same forces, for the same reason — they are considered impure by the caliphate.
I run a free school in Abuja for hundreds of displaced Muslim children, and I have called for monuments to the Muslim men and women murdered for refusing the jihad. I am on the Christian side of this fight, and I am telling you it is not a war between Christians and Muslims. It is one power structure waging war on everyone who stands in its way.
The method shows it. As documented at a terrorist checkpoint in the Middle Belt, passengers were sorted — first by faith, then by sex. Christian men were executed on the spot. Muslim men were told to join or die with them. Many chose death. The women, Christian and Muslim, were taken as slaves. That is not sectarian chaos. It is a procedure, run village by village at national scale, and it names both the enemy and the victims.
"Christian versus Muslim" is not just wrong. It misnames the enemy, drives off the allies we need, and hands the caliphate the recruiting line it wants most.
The enemy is the ruling elite of the Sokoto Caliphate — a power structure, not a faith. When Usman dan Fodio founded it in 1804, his Fulani jihad conquered the Hausa, fellow Muslims, whose rulers he judged impure; he seized their land and bent their clerics to his authority. The project paused under British rule and resumed at independence. Its heirs — the Sultanate, the Miyetti Allah networks, the political machine in Abuja — hold two centuries of consolidated power over everyone else: Christians, Igbo, Middle Belt farmers, and Hausa Muslims alike.
The Hausa are among the most brutalized people in the north, ruled by an elite they never chose. They are not the caliphate. They are its subjects, and they should be our allies.
Muslims die in this war because of the doctrine the caliphate still teaches. Dan Fodio held that anyone who helps an unbeliever is himself an unbeliever, and that a Muslim who mixes Islam with unbelief — the apostate, the one who cooperates with Christians, embrace Western education, or refuses the jihad — is a lawful target. Dan Fodio’s teachings are core curriculum in almajiri schools across the north, where millions of boys are taken from their families and raised on it with no other voice in their ears.
It is why the Sultan's condemnations of violence are not what they sound like. In Dan Fodio’s clear and revered worldview, the Christian and non-jihad Muslim are not "innocent." When he says it is “a sin to kill the innocent,” he is not telling his followers to stop killing peaceful civilians. He is telling the jihadis not to fight each other — because by this doctrine they are the only “innocent” ones. For everyone else, it’s open season.
Dan Fodio’s overarching mission -- why he founded the caliphate, the core of his teachings -- is to prepare the ground for the coming of the Mahdi. Everyone who is not “innocent” by his standards must be cleared from the land -- killed, sold into slavery, displaced, “converted,” or fully dominated. This has been the pattern there for 222 years and it has not stopped.
The enemy is not Islam, and not the Muslims who reject this wholesale. It is the ruling elite of the Sokoto Caliphate — the Sultan, his clerics, his Miyetti Allah militias, the Boko Haram and ISWAP networks built on the same doctrine, the security commanders documented arming those militias with federal weapons, and the nine-million-dollar Washington lobby that buries it under "farmer-herder conflict" and "climate change." Naming it is not Islamophobia. Refusing to name it is cowardice, and it costs lives.
The wrong name has a price. It tells 60,000 dead Muslims their lives did not count. It casts the Hausa majority — the people with the most reason to want the caliphate gone — as the enemy. It hands every wavering young man in the north the caliphate's favorite claim, that the West is at war with Islam. And it files a national security emergency under “religious freedom” — a lane of reports and démarches — when the threat carries a 222-year command structure, Chinese money in its conflict zones, and a terror pipeline that has reached American soil.
To my brothers and sisters across Nigeria — every tribe, every faith: do not let them tell you this is your neighbor's fault. The Christian shot in Benue and the Muslim shot beside him for refusing to join the killers died at the same hand. The ruling elite of the Sokoto Caliphate has spent two centuries setting you against each other, because divided you are governable and united you are unstoppable. Name the enemy correctly. Refuse the lie that this is faith against faith. Stand with the displaced until they are home, and stand with one another until the killing ends.
It is time to rise.
#EarthShaker
I know most of you already saw this film years ago please rewatch for Alexx!
All proceeds from First Lady goes to his family. Now showing on @Omonioboli TV
ATTENTION 🚨🚨🚨
Someone brought this to my attention today. I'd like to know if it's true so we can act swiftly.
This is Muhammed Zainab from Zamfara state, according to the information, she's currently facing trial at Zamfara state high court for converting from Islam to Christianity.
Many people are facing Xenophobic attacks everyday from North and it remained hidden from the public.
Many Muslims particularly from North are afraid to leave darkness into light because of fear of what will happen to them, Muhammed Zainab, God of Paul and Silas will be your God, he will be your lawyer and judge.
You will not be put to Shame, my prayers are with you .
credit : Evangelist Aminu A Ango