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Back To June 12th💥💥💥💥💥
@elrufai Spends 116 Days In Captivity & Still Counting
A regime that is persecuting @elrufai for demanding accountability and using the highly compromised judiciary to deny him bail can’t be talking of DEMOCRACY
General Sani Abacha was a better Democrat
#ReleaseElrufaiNow
#ReleaseElrufaiNow
#ReleaseElrufaiNow
Gaskiya manyan Arewa sun ba ni kunya.
El Rufai has been in detention for over 100 days. In that period he lost his mother, was only allowed a few days to bury her and even spent Eid under detention amma not one elder in the North can find their voice to speak up? The same people who can rush to the Villa when contracts are involved, who can arrange meetings when money or political interests are at stake suddenly cannot come together to tell the President the obvious, that some things should not be allowed to get this far.
What exactly happened to Northern leadership? What happened to courage? What happened to standing up for your own when they are being treated unfairly?Whether you agree with El Rufai politically or not, watching a man go through this level of humiliation while everyone looks away is painfu, pitif and a disgrace.
And this is what worries me. If influential people can be isolated and everyone stays quiet, what happens tomorrow when bigger issues come? What happens if God forbid Tinubu tries to amend the constitution to allow stay in power beyond 2031? We are all seeing certain patterns emerge amma muna acting as if nothing is happening.
I just just hope we do not wake up one day regretting this collective silence because by then it may be too late.
PETITION AGAINST THE ALLEGED POLITICIZATION OF STATE INSTITUTIONS AND THE EROSION OF DEMOCRATIC VALUES IN NIGERIA
To Whom It May Concern,
We, concerned citizens of Nigeria, wish to express our deep concern over what many perceive as the growing use of state institutions to intimidate, harass, and silence political opponents.
The recent treatment of Mallam Nasir @elrufai has raised serious questions about the state of democracy, fairness, and political tolerance in our country. Many Nigerians cannot ignore the irony that a man who was among the most vocal and influential supporters of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu's presidential ambition now finds himself at the center of relentless political battles and legal troubles.
Whether one agrees with El-Rufai's politics or not, justice must never be selective. The law must never become a weapon reserved for critics, dissenters, or former allies who have fallen out of favor with those in power.
A democracy cannot survive when citizens begin to suspect that government agencies are being deployed to settle political scores. A judiciary cannot maintain public confidence if its decisions are perceived as serving political interests rather than the cause of justice.
The Nigerian people deserve institutions that are independent, fearless, and guided solely by the Constitution. They deserve courts that are respected because they are impartial, not because they are powerful. They deserve law enforcement agencies that pursue criminals with the same energy they pursue political figures.
History teaches us that governments often become most dangerous when they confuse criticism with opposition and opposition with criminality.
President Tinubu's administration should remember that power is temporary, but the precedents it sets may endure for generations. Every action that appears vindictive weakens public trust. Every perceived act of political persecution deepens division and cynicism among citizens.
We therefore call for transparency, due process, equal treatment under the law, and the protection of democratic freedoms for all Nigerians, regardless of political affiliation.
Nigeria belongs to all of us, not to any political party, government, or individual.
Justice must be blind.
The law must be impartial.
Democracy must be protected.
Signed,
Concerned Citizens of Nigeria
This was during his tenure as Governor of Kaduna State when his convoy ran into a siege laid by bandits on Abuja - Kaduna road.
Commuters were stranded and vehicles parked. Fear reigned supreme.
Governor Nasir El-Rufai did not order his convoy to blow the siren and speed pass. No. He stopped his convoy, alighted from his vehicle and alongside his security team went on foot towards the source of the danger, even as the stranded and fear stricken onlookers were shouting at him to ''come back Mallam"! "come back Mallam"! He continued.
This is not an AI generated video neither was the video shot by his media aides or 2k data boys.
This is the same @elrufai who some idiots say is a bandit sponsor.
This is the same El-Rufai who they say paid bandits as Governor and some clowns believe.
This is the same El-Rufai who they killed Southern Kaduna people and persecuted and killed Christians.
This is the same El-Rufai that some losers love to hate.
I have since come to verifiably realise and to conclude that the only people who hate Nasir El-Rufai are ethnic and/or religious bigots, betrayal, bush and urban bandits and their sponsors.
All those suffering from El-Rufai Derangement Syndrome (EDS) should tell us who their own fathers and Governors were/are and what they did and are doing during their own time.
#GlovesOff
BREAKING: ‼️🚨🚨‼️‼️
Mallam @elrufai Has Now Spent 100 Days In Regime Custody & Still Counting 💥💥💥💥💥💥
One of the last fearless, very bold and intellectually gifted Northern leaders who helped bring this regime to power has now been in regime custody for 100 days
His bail applications has been rejected multiple times or given extremely impossible bail condition never seen in the history of Nigerian judiciary since independence
🔥He spent the entire Ramadan fasting in detention
🔥Performed the Eid el Fitr in @icpcnigeria captivity
🔥Temporary released to bury his mother and recaptured
🔥Today mark his 100 days in captivity and he is spending his Eid al Adha there denied the opportunity of performing the Eid prayers
Whether this will break the man known for his resilience and strong mental prowess is left to be seen
But one thing is clear, @elrufai is the last man standing from the North that has used facts and figures to expose the regime
I join millions of Nigerians in wishing his excellency @elrufai Eid Mubarak and demand his immediate release, respect for his constitutionally guaranteed rights and rule of law
#ReleaseElrufaiNow
#ReleaseElrufaiNow
#ReleaseElrufaiNow
Injustice shd always be condemned.
I did intense litigation in #Nigeria under #militaryrule. Even then, everyone knew that applications for the liberty of citizens had to have priority.
An application for bail falls into that category.
My views on the #VileLittleMan, @elrufai, are well advertised. But I care about justice more.
There is absolutely no excuse for Rilwan Aikawa, the judge at his arraignment at @FederalHigh in Kaduna, to take 2 weeks to rule on a bail application.
That is not administration of justice; it is not even administration of law.
Let's call it by its name: #JudicialMalpractice. And that is not the 1st time it is happening in this case.
https://t.co/y5jgWqZrvQ
Across Nigerian social media, there’s a massive wave of reinforced derogatory “Aboki” stereotypes mostly reducing northerners in skits as dangerous.
The disturbing trend isn’t only misleading, it betrays the fact that northerners are primary, majority victims of killer bandits
This video broke my heart 💔
Dear Nigerians,
It’s been over a week since the Association of Resident Doctors embarked on a nationwide strike, calling on the government to address their dire working conditions particularly the long shifts that have cost many lives.
Yet, many of us have shown little concern, perhaps because we believe we are safe in our “private hospitals.” But let’s pause and reflect: are these not the same resident doctors who also work in those private facilities we run to?
And even if you think you’ll never need them, what about your relatives? Or worse still, what if you’re faced with an emergency and the nearest place to save your life is a public hospital you’ve long abandoned, believing it will never be you? What will you do then?
Just weeks ago, we witnessed the tragic death of a colleague who was rushed to a public hospital after jumping from the top floor. Unfortunately she didn’t make it. That could be any of us.
As Nigerians, we must choose to end this cycle of injustice by standing together and declaring with one voice: enough is enough!
Hillary Clinton admitted that the U.S. helped fuel terrorism by backing the so-called ‘Mujahideen’ by importing their Wahhabi brand of Islam.
Crazy crazy!!
They Lied About Yugoslavia. They Lied About Iraq. They Lied About Libya. They Lied About Syria. They Lied About Afghanistan. They Lied About Sudan. They Lied About Somalia. They Lied About Lebanon. They Lied About Ukraine. They Lied About Russia. They Lied About Palestine. They Lied About Iran.
This is how it will play out if these clowns actually follow through with the threat.
They will fly in and continuously carpet bomb everywhere identified as a terrorist hideout, not distinguishing between innocent and criminals, or Christian from Muslim.
Like Gaza, they will level major cities in the North into rubble. This will create a swarm of refugees that will overwhelm governance systems - assuming any national government infrastructure still exists.
The ripple effects of these will spread across West Africa and even Southern Nigeria will become overwhelmed by an influx of people.
After the bombing stops and the Americans move on, the real terrorists who would have hidden in the Sahel countries throughout will come back into what remains of Northern Nigeria and form strongholds and local governments. In a short time, the US govt will unofficially recognise these Muslim warlords as legitimate govts and start collaborating with them for mining and other local resource rights. And the rest of the world will forget all these started with saving Christians and move on.
For decades, the script was simple:
Africa drills the oil,
the West refines it,
and Africa buys it back at triple the price, with gratitude. Imagine that!
Now Dangote came with a 650,000-barrel-per-day “plot twist.”
-The first migraine hit when U.S. fuel export numbers started twitching. West Africa, that loyal customer, suddenly said, “No thanks, we’ll refine it at home.” Imagine selling umbrellas in a desert, that’s how America feels right now in the diesel market.
-Then came the second headache, the petrodollar sneeze. If Nigeria starts trading refined products in naira, yuan, or even “AfriPay,” that’s a direct jab at Uncle Sam’s global ATM. The dollar doesn’t like competition; it catches inflation fever when others sneeze independence.
-Third pain: The geopolitical thermometer just went up. Africa’s biggest refinery means fewer oil tankers from Texas, and more from Lagos to Lome, under African control. That’s not energy trade; that’s energy freedom. And freedom, apparently, is bad for business.
-Fourth dose: The U.S. isn’t happy seeing Nigeria shaking hands with China and India on refinery deals. It’s like watching your ex build a mansion with your rival. The refinery runs on Chinese funding and Indian technology, two things America used to monopolize.
-And finally, the fifth and deadliest headache, the symbolism.
Dangote didn’t just build a refinery; he built a mirror, showing Africa what it could’ve been decades ago if it stopped outsourcing its future.
Now Washington can’t just send “economic advisers” and “development loans” with fancy conditions anymore. Africa might soon say, “Thanks, but we’ve got this.”
So Dangote’s refinery isn’t just refining oil, it’s refining pride, power, and perspective.
And for the first time, the biggest gas leak in the room isn’t from Nigeria, it’s from America’s nerves.
_____
MAB✍️
May Nigeria Succeed
God bless Africa
God bless the black race
The CPC Hustle: How a Fake Genocide Became Capitol Hill’s Favorite ATM
Washington, D.C. – It’s 2025, and the hottest ticket on the Hill isn’t a bipartisan infrastructure bill or a TikTok ban. It’s the Nigerian Genocide Narrative™, freshly dusted off, repackaged, and ready for prime-time grift. The pitch is simple: scream “genocide,” wave a blurry video of bandits on motorbikes, and watch the dollars rain down like manna from a Pentagon budget line nobody reads.
The man with the megaphone? Donald Trump, who on October 31 redesignated Nigeria a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) for religious freedom, claiming Christians face “mass slaughter” at the hands of “radical Islamists.” The man with the motive? Not in the Oval Office. He’s in a Georgetown townhouse, sipping overpriced coffee with a Rolodex.
In 2020, Trump’s first CPC tag stuck for a hot minute. Aid got frozen. Headlines blazed. Then Biden took office, read the actual State Department reports, and quietly lifted the designation. Why? Because the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) couldn’t find the genocide with a GPS and a prayer chain. Violence in Nigeria’s north? Real. Targeted extermination of Christians? Not in the data. Bandits kill farmers. Farmers fight back. Muslims die. Christians die. Traditionalists die. The only pattern is poverty, not prophecy.
The hustlers panicked. Their “humanitarian” NGOs registered in Delaware, operated from WhatsApp saw funding dry up. One consultant reportedly sold his Range Rover. Another had to fly economy to Abuja. Tragedy.
Enter 2025. Trump’s back. Truth Social is popping. And suddenly, the genocide is existential again. The same grainy clips from 2018 resurface, now with dramatic music.
Behind the scenes, the hustle is surgical.
Step 1: Leak a “report” to friendly think tanks. Cite “thousands killed” without dates, locations, or names.
Step 2: Book a fact-finding trip. Five-star hotels. Per diem. Instagram selfies with “survivors” who are actually the hotel concierge.
Step 3: Trigger the Religious Freedom Industrial Complex. Evangelicals donate. Congress allocates. The money flows to “security training,” “awareness campaigns,” and “administrative costs” (read: a condo in Dubai).
The Numbers Don’t Lie (But the Hustlers Do)
Nigeria’s population: ~50% Muslim, ~50% Christian.
Annual violence deaths: ~8,000–10,000 (UN estimates).
Victims by religion: Roughly proportional to population.
CPC funding pipeline (2020–2021): $47 million in “religious freedom” grants.
Amount reaching actual victims: [redacted for comedic effect].
The Nigerian government that is flawed, chaotic, but not stupid responds with a diplomatic middle finger. “This is banditry, not blasphemy,” says the Foreign Ministry. “We’ve neutralized 3,000 terrorists this year. Half were Muslim. Where’s their CPC?”
Let’s be clear: Nigeria has problems. Boko Haram is evil. Herder-farmer clashes are deadly. Corruption eats aid. But turning a national crisis into a sectarian cash cow helps no one except the middlemen with American passports and Nigerian accents.
The irony? The loudest voices screaming “genocide” have never buried a cousin in Maiduguri. They’re too busy burying the truth under donor decks. Their real religion isn’t Christianity or Islam—it’s capitalism. And their holy sacrament? The earmark.
1. Demand data. Not vibes. Not viral videos. Actual body counts, verified by the UN or African Union.
2. Follow the money. Every “NGO” getting CPC cash should publish receipts. Down to the last bottle of Evian.
Until then, the CPC hustle rolls on. Same script. New season. Same losers: the dead, the displaced, and anyone who still believes Washington cares about Africa for any reason other than leverage, lithium, or lobbyists.
Call it what it is: not genocide. Just good old-fashioned greed, dressed up in a dashiki and a cross.
No faith required. Just facts.