His wife, his son, his six young daughters, his son's wife and her three-month-old baby, all slaughtered in his own home after terrorists declared "you're gonna learn the hard way."
This is what the media under Tinubu has refused to show you.
I do not agree . I'll never agree.
If you're the one with money and you can't relate with your disprivileged friends as pals, you're the problem. If you are disprivileged and your "supposed friends" disrespect you, end the friendship. Dont stick around because of charity. There is no charity in friendship, just love.
“Just look at the asset forfeitures involving former Attorney General Abubakar Malami and Aisha Achimugu. What’s actually happening in this country? On December 23, 1974, Nigeria signed a long-term agreement with the World Bank while we contributing $240 million to its reserves. We were lending money then, but today we're borrowing from other countries because people have løøted the nation dry.”😢🇳🇬💔
—Rufai Oseni of Arise News got emotional on live TV as he laments the state of Nigeria's economy, comparing the country's financial strength in the 1970s with today economy.
Aisha Achimugu's source of wealth is alleged to have come from funds received from Lagos State Government contractors in the administration of current Governor Sanwoolu.
Here is a video of Governor Sanwoolu at her lavish 50th birthday party celebrated on a private island where she described the governors presence as a coincidence while other sources allege is actually privately intimate.
This is not fiction. A Nigerian pastor, a brother of mine, has 9 members of his family hunted and slaughtered by Fulani terrorists. These are the realities our Nigerian brothers and sisters are facing alone. The church is absent. International community is absent. They are being hunted and slaughtered like animals and we in the west are simply watching. I am tired. I am sick of it. I am beyond burned. Who will be the one to stand at such a time as this? I refuse to be silent, I refuse to watch. At @buildingzionorg we are rebuilding communities ravished by terrorists, restoring hope and life. In fact, we already have rebuilt communities in Reverend Ezekiel’s community. Help us, help them. They are alone in this, but I, and @buildingzionorg stand hand in hand with them.
The problem is FAAC
If you are the government of Kaduna, why would you develop your raw materials? When there is oil money flowing to your State?
Kaduna, which has an oil refinery
Dey play
Ronaldo is NOT stronger than Messi.
Are you people mad? Did you think I stuttered?
There's no portion of this clip that Cristiano wouldn't be lying down face flat to the ground.
Please dead that "Ronaldo is hardworking" talk to undermine Messi's grind. Don't annoy me.
The super eagles didn't smell any airport in the US for the world cup.
In fact, we didn't even make it past Murtala Muhammed Airport, talk less of qualifying.
But the Nigerian Government has been getting budget approval from the Senate for world cup participation until now.
Bought the kings, the reps, the senate, the judges. Bought the pastors, the imams, the native doctors, they've bought governors, the state houses and even the judges.
They are planning to buy you too. You just don't cost as much as these people. 10k at most. Pathetic!
Because that’s about the only one we can get at the expense of nothing at least..
- Quality time ? - Bills still on us
- Words of affirmation ? - Feels like we’re begging for reassurance so we’ll rather not be labelled ‘insecure’
- Receiving gifts ? - From selfish ‘people’ that only want to be gifted ?
- Acts of service ? - Y’all call it ‘sl@very’ now.
So…
I have followed with deep sorrow and mounting concern the reports surrounding the death of Miss Mary Habila, a 26-year-old Nigerian from Nok, Southern Kaduna, who died on June 27, 2026, within the private residence of the Honourable Minister of Works, Senator David Umahi, in Uburu, Ebonyi State.
First, I extend my heartfelt condolences to the Habila family. No family should have to mourn a daughter taken in the prime of her life while also fighting simply to learn the truth of how she died.
But condolences are not enough. Nigerians deserve answers, and it is on this score that the Tinubu administration has failed, comprehensively and disgracefully.
Consider the facts that are not in dispute. A young woman died in the residence of a serving Federal Minister. For nearly two weeks, neither the Minister, nor the police, nor any arm of government said a word to the Nigerian people. It took the courage of Sahara Reporters to bring this death into public view. Three weeks after her death, no autopsy has been performed. No cause of death has been established. The investigation remains domiciled in the very state where the Minister served two terms as Governor and where his influence is beyond question.
And through all of this, silence from the Presidency. Silence from the Federal Executive Council. Silence from the Inspector-General of Police. Silence from the National Assembly. Not one word. Not one directive. Not one gesture to assure Nigerians that the life of Mary Habila matters to this government.
Instead, the Minister has been permitted to manage the narrative of a death that occurred under his own roof: issuing statements through his personal aides, deploying his private lawyers to correspond with the police, and continuing his official duties as though nothing has happened, while civil society groups, youth organisations, and the family’s own community cry out for an independent inquiry.
Let me be clear: I make no pronouncement on anyone’s guilt or innocence. That is precisely the point. Only a credible, independent, and transparent investigation can establish the truth, and it is the refusal of the Federal Government to guarantee such an investigation that constitutes the scandal before us.
A government’s first duty is the protection of life. Where a life is lost in circumstances touching a high official of state, the burden on government to act transparently is at its heaviest.
President Tinubu’s administration has instead treated this tragedy as an inconvenience to be waited out. If the death of a young Nigerian woman in a Minister’s residence cannot stir this government to act, then Nigerians must ask: whose life, exactly, does this government value?
I therefore demand the following: One, President Bola Tinubu must direct the Honourable Minister of Works to step aside immediately, pending the conclusion of investigations. This is not a punishment; it is the minimum standard of public accountability in any serious democracy. No official under this cloud should preside over a federal ministry as though it were business as usual.
Two, the Inspector-General of Police must immediately transfer the investigation from the Ebonyi State Command to Force Headquarters, with the involvement of independent forensic experts. No investigation conducted in the shadow of the Minister’s home-state influence can command public confidence.
Three, a full, independent, and internationally credible autopsy must be conducted without further delay, with the findings made public. The stalemate over the post-mortem, three weeks after this young woman’s death is an indictment of every institution involved.
Four, the family of Mary Habila must be protected from any pressure, inducement, or intimidation, and must be guaranteed unfettered access to the facts of their daughter’s death.
Hi @jidesanwoolu, @hanneymusawa
I'm deeply disappointed in your @lirs_govng team hounding Selar in the name of claiming creator royalty taxes. I turn 30 in Oct and I've spent the last 10 years building Selar, so this is what the youth mean by policies being created to crush growing businesses. We are the pioneering and largest creator company in Nigeria (Africa actually), and instead of being supported by the government, the LIRS team is keen on trying to scapegoat us to set a precident.
Beyond the huge numbers seen in the headlines, we are still a young company just trying to make our mark for the creator economy in a country where we've never been supported once, we're literally a bootstrapped company. In 2025 alone, we've fulfilled our tax obligation in almost 9 figures and we've never missed out on any of our tax obligation over the years. You can check the records.
We are a software company, we make our ecommerce software available to our thousands of creators in not just Nigeria but 13 other African countries and for that, we earn a small commission of 4%, most of which goes to our payment provider. This is the same business as shopify, teachable, e.t.c There is no reason LIRS is hounding us for a backdated 5% royalty fee on all sales when we've clearly explained our line of business to them and shared everything to prove we are not a royalty based business.
What they're asking us to do is raise our pricing to extort these funds from our creators which is odd considering our creators still pay taxes on their income. No creator company in the world charges as high as even 5%.
Also, less payment gateway charges we get 1-3% max, so where do we pay backdated 5% fees from?
The government would have to decide if it wants the Nigerian creative economy to grow or not.
This conversation is important to me because we pioneered this industry of monetizing digital products online in Nigeria and today we host over 400k creators selling using our platform.
This is an opportunity for the government to show it's committment to making Nigeria work for young Nigerians especially in the creator economy.
Time and money we should be spending investing into our business and it's growth for the GDP of this nation is being spent in long back and forth.
We can't catch up with the west if this is what we're facing at home. Above everything else, disputes like this are distracting from the real work.
If anything, for all our CSR contributions to the education system in the country with our Smart Hustle Anti fraud initiative and our other efforts, we should be getting tax rebates, but we're not even asking for anything but to be left alone to build our business.
Thank you.