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#InsideOsogbo
How about you stay on point?
The call for ICC intervention was about the Baga Massacre in 2013.
By the way, you really don't want to debate Chibok because if you think well about it, you would have known that it doesn't help your argument. The governor of Borno State, who was warned about the attack on Chibok, is currently the VP, and he joined the public criticism of GEJ back then.
https://t.co/ygjKqoqH31
fix power. nah!
fix refineries. mba!
fix infrastructure. Sigh!
but, to buy rice for distribution every election cycle, and as palliative is easy-peasy.
#Nigeria
This is now their 57th Day.
57 days of toddlers, children and teachers as captives of terrorists just because they want to school. The terrorists shot a teacher point blank and beheaded another.
We cannot continue like this is normal o! We cannot!!!!
I remember reporting almost two weeks ago about Zimbabweans camped outside the Zimbabwean Consulate in Cape Town. What I do not understand is this: these people have made it clear that they want to return home. We all know they did not plan for these circumstances. They have been stripped of their livelihoods and, in many cases, no longer have the financial means to get back to Zimbabwe.
What stops the President from instructing the Minister of Finance and the relevant ministries to organise buses to transport our people from Cape Town back home?
What stops the government from allowing them to cross the border with their personal goods and belongings without charging customs duty, given that this is clearly a humanitarian crisis?
This is not a complicated policy issue. It is a basic act of leadership and compassion.
What I struggle to understand about the Zimbabwean government is that you see men in expensive suits and women in elegant dresses, yet they fail to think in such simple, practical terms.
At times like these, a government should be seen doing what governments are meant to do, protecting and assisting its citizens.
South African media have reported on the plight of these Zimbabweans almost every day. The situation is neither hidden nor unknown. Yet there has been no meaningful humanitarian response from Harare.
The government and its supporters will no doubt come up with all sorts of excuses. But this really is straightforward. Send buses. Bring your people home. Waive customs duties on their personal belongings. They have been forced into this situation by the climate of xenophobia and Afrophobia they have experienced in South Africa.
A government’s responsibility is not to make excuses. It is to act.
It’s now 54 days 💔💔💔
What they have been going through is just unimaginable
We have high hopes that they are still alive.
May God deliver Nigeria from the hands of her enemies!