BREAKING 🇿🇦⚠️: Fresh Xenophobic Sentiment Targets Nigerians as New Warning Circulates
"We have given others till June 30th to leave South Africa, but after a meeting yesterday, we agreed that Nigerians must leave on June 24th. Any Nigerian business that opens after that date, we will take over the shops."
In honor of the Nigerian government’s lobby firm’s attacks on me and other missionaries and men of God, let’s share Bawa’s testimony far and wide.
This is what they are desperate to hide.
Rev.12:11 And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony, and they did not love their lives to the death.
Imagine a Yoruba man from far west telling you from you from Asaba, Ibusa,(Igbuzo),Ogwashi Uku,Issele Uku,Issele,Azagba,Issele,Mkpitime,Okpanam,Ubulu Uku,Ubulu Unor,Ubulu,Okiti,Agbor,Owa,Kingdom (Owa Alero, Owa Oyibu, etc.), Umunede, Abavo, Onicha ,Ukwuani, Ndokwa etc from Delta State, that you're not Igbo and some of you accept them. Chai! It's very sad.
⚠️ WARNING: An Iranian who survived Sharia prison in Iran warns the West: the Islamification always begins with the Left uniting with Islamists.
He escaped tyranny for Canada’s freedom, only to watch the same deadly alliance of appeasement and betrayal unfold across the West.
Weakness invites conquest, and they will never stop.
There is No Reason to Detain Nnamdi Kanu. He Did Nothing Wrong — Peter Obi
Former Labour Party presidential candidate, Peter Obi, has reiterated his opposition to the continued detention of Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) leader, Nnamdi Kanu, insisting that no one should be arrested simply for expressing their views.
Speaking in Washington, Obi said he sees no justification for Kanu’s detention and urged authorities to embrace dialogue rather than repression when dealing with agitators.
“I have said this repeatedly, there is no reason for detaining Mazi Nnamdi Kanu. You cannot arrest somebody just because the person is speaking on radio,” Obi stated.
Drawing from his own experience in politics, the former Anambra State governor argued that criticism and name-calling are not criminal offences.
“I am a politician, people have been calling me names, it’s not an offence,” he said.
Obi extended his position to all separatist and political agitators across the country, saying engagement remains the most effective way to address grievances and preserve national unity.
“Even all agitators; if I was in government today, I will discuss with them and engage with them, I will consult them. Because I believe if they have a reason for whatever they want to do, it’s only by engaging them we will learn and see how we can resolve this,” he added.
The former presidential candidate, however, acknowledged that he currently holds no government office and therefore lacks the authority to act on such proposals.
“But I am not in position to do anything today,” Obi said.
How Mazi Nnamdi Kanu was frustrated from mounting his defense
By ALOY EJIMAKOR
The trial of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu commenced before Justice Omotosho in March 2025. As in all criminal trials, it is the prosecution that must first present its case before the defense can present its own. This is how it proceeded until June 2025 when the prosecution concluded its case after calling five witnesses.
Following the dismissal of Kanu’s subsequent no-case submission, the court proceeded to establish a strict 6-day window for the defense to present its case. So soon thereafter, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu debriefed his lawyers and indicated a desire to represent himself.
So, when he sought a 90-day timeframe to prepare his defense, including calling 25 witnesses, the court refused it but later reconsidered by giving him a few extra days. In the backdrop of this strict timeframe, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu was effectively frustrated from mounting any meaningful defense.
In the interim, Mazi Nnamdi Kanu had filed a written objection to the jurisdiction of the court to subject him to trial, raising several constitutional and statutory grounds. But instead of ruling on this objection, the court arbitrarily foreclosed him from presenting his defense, simply because he was insisting that his objections to the jurisdiction of the court be resolved first. And there is more.
First, the bedrock of a valid criminal trial in Nigeria is enshrined in Section 36(6)(b) of the Constitution, which mandates that every person charged with a criminal offense is entitled to be given adequate time and facilities for the preparation of his defense. This provision was breached when the prosecution was permitted several months (March to June) to call five witnesses but Mazi Nnamdi Kanu was rigidly restricted to a six-day window to call 25 witnesses (plus the more in the offing). This severe disparity violates the principle of "equality of arms," an essential component of a fair trial.
Second, the shocking failure of Justice Omotosho to safeguard the rights of an unrepresented defendant will forever live in judicial infamy. It is a given that the moment a defendant debriefs his legal team and expresses an intention to defend himself, the trial court owes an elevated and sacred duty of guidance to ensure the lay litigant is not blindsided by technical rules. Thus, forcing an unrepresented defendant, facing capital charges, to compress the testimonies of 25 witnesses into a handful of days is a constructive denial of the right to be heard.
Third, Justice Omotosho’s arbitrary foreclosure of Mazi Nnamdi Kanu from defending himself is an impermissible assault on the primacy of jurisdictional objections. It is settled law across decades of Nigerian jurisprudence that jurisdiction is the lifeblood of adjudication.
So, where a trial court grants the state a wide window to build its case, but traps a self-represented defendant in a chronological straightjacket, refuses to resolve threshold jurisdictional objections and abruptly forecloses the defense, the trial (and any conviction emanating therefrom) becomes a perversive non-event that will ultimately fail appellate muster.
Adaka Boro thought that Igbos were his problem, those he fought Igbos with k¡lled him. Ken Saro Wiwa thought Igbos were his problem, those he fought Igbos executed him. Gowon thought Igbos were his problem, today those he faught Igbos with are kpaing his people like chickens.
Been studying the writings of Usman dan Fodio. According to him, neither infidels nor apostates are "innocent." They are in a state requiring subjugation, conversion, emigration pressure, or combat under Sharia rules. He was not vague bout this.
-- For primary texts, see translations of Bayan Wujub al-Hijra (F.H. el-Masri) or Wathiqat Ahl al-Sudan.
So when the Sultan of Sokoto -- his descendant, who grew up on his teachings and sits on his throne -- says it's a sin to kill "the innocent" it is a calculated media statement to appear "peaceful" while intentionally saying NOTHING that will STOP the ongoing massacre, rape, enslavement and displacement in his kingdom.
Why not say "STOP KILLING PEOPLE, PERIOD"?
Why not speak against the industrialized looting of minerals in his domain -- could be as much as $180 Billion during his reign? Does he perhaps collect jizya from the Chinese who are doing the looting?
MR. SULTAN, YOUR SILENCE IS EVIDENCE.
@sultan_ofsokoto
#EarthShaker
During the genocide against Ndigbo,
was
Byears old, The federal troops started k!lling
my community people. Our parents started
telling us to make sure we deny being Igbo
wherever we go if we must stay alive. That
was how we started to denying being Igbo.
~ Senator Ned Nwoko
The Profile of Nigerian Politician:
Kids — UK, USA, Canada
Pilgrimage — Saudi
Shopping — Paris, Milan
Houses — Abuja, Lagos, Dubai, London
Bank — Switzerland
Hospital — London, India
Holidays — UAE or USA
Fornication —Maldives, Mykonos
Checkups — “Routine” trips abroad
Constituency — Seen only during elections or primaries
Promises — “We are working on it”
Scandals — “Politically motivated"
Light — 24/7 generator (NEPA is for vibes)
Security — More guards than a bank vault
Side hustle — Government contracts
Cars — Bulletproof convoy, sirens screaming
Country — Managed remotely.
They d!e abroad and are brought back home for burial, Nigeria —Their cemetery
But when it’s time to campaign:
“My people… I feel your pain.” 🙂
If you like use your head this coming election or they use it for you as usual 🫵.