In 2006, the then EFCC Chairman Nuhu Ribadu came before the Nigerian Senate and listed 5 most corrupt governors.
They include:
1. Orji Kalu, Abia State
2. Ahmed Bola Tinubu, Lagos State
3. Ahmed Sani yerima, Zamfara State
4 . God'swill Akpabio of Akwa Ibom State On EFCC watch list
5. George Akume, Benue State
6. Chimaroke Nnamani, Enugu State
Today, in 2026, 20 years after.
1. Bola Ahmed Tinubu = President
2. Orji Kalu = Senator
3. Ahmed Sani Yerima = Senator
4. George Akume = Senator now Appointed by Tinubu as SGF.
5. God'swill Akpabio now Senate President*
6. Chimaroke = Senator
7. The then EFCC Chairman Nuhu Ribadu, who made the list, is now Tinubu's National Security Adviser with those he alleged as worst criminals
Same people, Same circle.
Youths are still leaders of tomorrow
—if they explain Nigeria to you and you understand, then your own brain needs to be under studies.
🚨 El ministro de Educación afgano ha anunciado que las mujeres tendrán prohibido asistir permanentemente a las escuelas.
ONU Mujeres no ha dicho ni una palabra.
FLASHBACK: We Brought In Fulani Terrorists From Mali, Sierra Leone, Others For 2015 Election After We Won They Refused To Go Back — Pioneer APC Secretary Baraje https://t.co/3Dm4cFaEzn
I like how the guy is evangelizing! He didn’t mention any name or tell you who to vote for, but he still dropped the real talk: Use your sense and vote wisely!
NIGERIANS ARE TIRED OF TINUBU AND THATS ON A PERIOD
Moderate Muslims: What those terrorists are practicing is not Islam
Terrorists: kidnaps people and convert them to Islam
Every Muslim: Islam is the fastest growing religion
Their faces are everywhere. They make open calls, run TikTok accounts, and flaunt their weapons.
Confirmed Fulani terrorists killing Nigerians daily, yet untraceable.
But the government easily tracks anyone demanding an end to insecurity. Make it make sense! 😡
fuel is no longer subsidized. even federal universities, which are supposed to be affordable, are now expensive. we're paying a fortune for gas. housing is out of reach for many people. security is non-existent.
so what exactly is the government doing for us?
I went to greet one Baba Adugbo, and he asked me for money. I opened my banking app to transfer him ₦5,000 (he didn’t know how much I intended to send), but his bank network was poor, so I told him I would send someone to give him the cash instead.
The next day, I sent my area aunt with the ₦5,000. Not long after, she called me to say he had returned the money because it was too small. I told her to keep the money and that I would send my account number so she could return it to me.
I forgot to send my account number that day, so first thing the following morning, she called again and said he had sent someone to collect the money. She wanted to know whether she should give it to him or if I still wanted my money back. I immediately sent her my account number and told her I wanted my money returned.
She then started preaching to me about how he was an elderly man and that sometimes you just have to respect elders and accept them for who they are. But I won’t tolerate that kind of rubbish, especially when it’s money I worked hard for, and from someone who hasn’t done anything for me in his life.
She later said he was shocked when she told him that she had returned the money and that I collected it back.
E no go shock ke? 🤣
A lot of people I truly respected have come out to defend the price increase, citing the dollar exchange rate. But in a country where you understand people's real financial situation, it feels like they aren't even living in the same reality. Dear DSTV, keep raising. Smh.
The Fall of DSTV
DSTV raised its subscription prices three times in two years.
Then it lost 1.4 million Nigerian subscribers in those same two years.
Then it slashed its decoder price by 50% to beg those subscribers to come back.
Some people will call it business strategy but this is a company eating itself alive and wondering why it is hungry.
The numbers are brutal.
MultiChoice lost 2.8 million active subscribers across Africa over two financial years. 1.2 million in 2025 alone. An 8% year on year decline. 
Nigeria accounted for 77% of subscriber losses across all of MultiChoice’s African operations outside South Africa. The Rest of Africa base collapsed from 9.3 million in 2023 to 7.5 million in 2025. 
Nigeria did not just leave DSTV, they buried it and the content is leaving with the subscribers.
BET Africa and MTV Base shut down January 2026. CBS Reality and CBS Justice went December 2025. CNN International, Discovery Channel, Cartoon Network, TNT Africa, Food Network and several others were all at risk of removal. 
A platform charging premium prices while removing the channels people subscribed for is not a product anymore but a subscription to disappointment.
DSTV built its Nigerian dominance on a monopoly with no serious competition for decades. So it did what every monopoly does when it feels untouchable. It raised prices whenever it wanted, reduced value whenever it could, and treated Nigerian subscribers like they had no alternative.
Then Netflix arrived. Then YouTube got faster. Then data became more accessible. Then the naira collapsed and Nigerians had to choose between DSTV and eating.
Omo we chose eating.
MultiChoice responded by cutting decoder prices from N20,000 to N10,000 and launching a promotional campaign called “We Got You”.
“We Got You” from the same company that raised your subscription three times in 24 months, removed your favourite channels, and treated your complaints like background noise.
They did not get you, they lost you and now they are running after you with a discount like an ex who only calls when they realise you moved on.
DSTV is not falling because of Netflix or the economy.
It is falling because it spent twenty years treating Nigerian consumers with contempt and assumed loyalty was the same thing as having no choice.
Nigerians finally got a choice but not MultiChoice