In the true sense of the word, we don’t have BANKS in Nigeria. Systems and institutions that have undergirded the growth of other countries, exists only as shadows in my country..🇳🇬😓
A NATION HELD HOSTAGE: BOLA TINUBU, THE CIA, AND THE DELIBERATE PLUNDER OF NIGERIA
By Kio Amachree | Worldview International
#NigeriaDeservesTheTruth#TinubuMustGo#CIAAsset#AccountabilityNow#WorldviewInternational
The comments on my page tell a story that no government spokesperson can spin away. Shock. Anger. And finally, understanding — the devastating realisation among ordinary Nigerians of why they are suffering. Not from bad luck. Not from global headwinds. But from deliberate, calculated, systematic plunder conducted from the highest office in the land.
Bola Tinubu came to Nigeria not to govern. He came to loot.
Nigeria under Tinubu recorded the largest increase in acute food insecurity globally in 2024, with 31.8 million Nigerians facing high levels of acute hunger  — a figure so obscene it should constitute a crime against humanity. Over 93.7 million Nigerians are projected to be living in extreme poverty in 2025, surviving on no more than two dollars a day.  Meanwhile, the GDP growth figures the presidency celebrates with such shameless pride have not translated into improved living standards — economic growth without prosperity, as poverty remains endemic and the cost of living crushes millions who cannot afford to eat. 
This is not economic mismanagement. This is engineered despair.
But we must go further. Because the question I have been asking — and which my sources in Washington have helped me answer — is this: Who does Bola Tinubu truly serve?
A Traitor in Aso Rock
The CIA, FBI, and DEA filed a memorandum in U.S. federal court opposing the motion to disclose unredacted records related to Tinubu, with the CIA’s own filing hinting that he functions as an active intelligence asset — and that exposing the nature of his cooperation could compromise U.S. national security interests. 
Read that again. The president of Africa’s most populous nation — a man presiding over the suffering of over 200 million people — is being shielded from accountability by American intelligence agencies citing their own operational interests.
The DEA went further, effectively telling the court that while Nigerians have a right to be informed about what their government is up to, they do not have a right to know what their president is up to. 
This is the colonial arrangement in its 21st century form. A puppet enthroned, his files locked away in Langley, his crimes laundered through the respectability of elected office.
It has been three years since Aaron Greenspan filed FOIA requests to six federal agencies seeking records related to the 1990s narcotics investigation in Chicago in which Tinubu was implicated. What followed was a masterclass in institutional obstruction — the FBI promising completion by August 2025, then September, then December, then January 2026, then February 2026, producing zero documents at each stage. 
Judge Beryl Howell, the federal judge overseeing the case, has now issued a final ultimatum ordering full processing and production of records by June 1, 2026, with joint status reports every 14 days. 
That June 1 deadline is not merely a legal milestone. It is a moment of reckoning. Thirty years of concealment. Thirty years of protection. Thirty years during which a man credibly alleged to have been a narcotics asset of American intelligence has been permitted to rise through Nigerian politics to the presidency itself.
I have spoken to several of my powerful college contacts presently holding senior positions in Washington. What they have told me, without ambiguity, is that Bola Tinubu has been in the pay and protection of American intelligence for three decades. That is why he fights with such desperation to prevent those files from seeing daylight. That is why agencies of the world’s most powerful government go to federal court to argue that Nigerians have no right to know who is ruling them.
We are being governed by a traitor.
The Racism Behind the Strategy
This arrangement does not happen in a vacuum. It is entirely consistent with an American foreign policy posture — particularly under the current administration — that views Africa not as a partner but as a theatre of control. A continent to be kept weak, fractured, and dependent. And nowhere does that suit Washington’s interests more than in rendering the largest Black nation on earth ineffective, rudderless, and consumed by manufactured misery.
A president who may not even be Nigerian by birth — whose origins remain the subject of serious and unresolved questions — placed at the helm of the most consequential African state, with his records under CIA lock and key, and his government systematically dismantling what is left of the Nigerian economy. Seven million businesses shuttered. Thirty percent of Nigeria’s small and medium enterprises destroyed. Ninety-four trillion naira in losses from divestments and closures in just two years of his administration.  The naira, once a currency of dignity, now collapsed from N460 to the dollar to N1,579  on Tinubu’s watch.
This is not policy failure. This is the programme working exactly as designed.
The Last Refuge of Tribalism
And yet, a residual handful of Yoruba loyalists continue to haunt the margins of public discourse, wilfully blind to every document, every court filing, every statistic placed before them. Their defence of this man is not political conviction — it is tribalism deployed as a weapon by a drug lord who has spent decades converting criminal proceeds into political loyalty.
Let me be direct: Tinubu is no Sardauna of Sokoto. He commands no moral authority. He holds no genuine philosophical legacy. His grip on Lagos was purchased — manufactured through the spending of millions to construct a fantasy warlord out of a man whose original trade was poison. Money does not buy loyalty. It buys parasites and sycophants. And that currency is running out.
I will also say this plainly. I am the product of a powerful Yoruba woman. The insults directed at me to protect a man many of us doubt is even Nigerian — credibly alleged to be an adopted child from Guinea — bounce off me entirely. And invoking Ogun to silence me only confirms the village mentality that animates Tinubu’s political machine. It will not work. It has not worked. It will not work.
The Reckoning Approaches
With the FBI and DEA now under court order to produce Tinubu’s records by June 1, 2026 , the architecture of concealment is crumbling. What has been hidden for thirty years cannot be hidden much longer.
The next administration of Nigeria will hold each and every member of this criminal enterprise to account. The officials who participated in the looting. The enablers who provided cover. The tribalists who chose ethnic solidarity over national survival. All of them.
I have no respect for Bola Tinubu. I have no fear of him. He is a man whose time is ending — a parasite that the body of Nigeria is finally preparing to expel.
Nigerians are waking up. The comments on my page prove it. The anger is not despair — it is the necessary prelude to justice.
Nigeria will be rid of this man. And when that day comes, the full accounting will begin.
Kio Amachree is President of Worldview International, a civic and accountability platform focused on Nigerian governance and diaspora engagement. He writes as an independent political commentator with no party affiliation, government contracts, or financial sponsorship.
Debt Servicing, Borrowing, and Nigeria’s Fiscal Priorities
During his recent foreign tour, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu stated that Nigeria will spend about $11.6 billion on debt servicing, a figure that should concern anyone interested in the country’s economic future and long-term development.
There is nothing inherently wrong with borrowing when it is guided by prudence and directed toward productive investment. Countries such as Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States, the United Arab Emirates, Singapore, and Indonesia are all heavily indebted, yet their borrowings are largely channelled into education, healthcare, infrastructure, and innovation - sectors that generate long-term economic returns and sustain repayment capacity. As a result, despite high debt levels, their obligations remain more manageable because they are tied to measurable productivity.
Nigeria’s situation, however, is markedly different. A huge proportion of past borrowing has been directed toward consumption, with limited visible or sustainable developmental outcomes to justify the scale of indebtedness.
It is also important to note that a huge portion of the debt currently being serviced was accumulated under the Tinubu administration itself, while borrowing has continued at a significant pace. The administration’s recent external borrowing alone includes about $6 billion (from First Abu Dhabi Bank in the UAE—$5 billion, and UK Export Finance via Citibank London—$1 billion), a further $1.25 billion under consideration from the World Bank, and an additional $516 million arranged through Deutsche Bank, bringing the latest known external loan commitments to roughly $7.8 billion. In addition, domestic borrowing through monthly bond issuances continues to add to the overall debt stock.
Against this backdrop, Nigeria’s 2026 budget shows that health is ₦2.46 trillion, education is ₦2.56 trillion, and poverty alleviation is ₦865 billion, giving a combined total of about ₦5.885 trillion for these three critical sectors. By comparison, debt servicing at about $11.6 billion (approximately ₦17–₦18 trillion, depending on exchange rate assumptions) is almost three times higher than the total allocation to health, education, and social protection combined. This imbalance highlights a troubling fiscal reality in which debt obligations increasingly crowd out investment in human capital and poverty reduction. Moreover, even within the limited allocations to these sectors, funds may not be fully released, and a significant portion of what is eventually released could be misappropriated.
Ultimately, the central issue is not borrowing itself, but whether borrowed funds are being converted into measurable productivity, inclusive growth, and improved living standards. Without this, debt servicing shifts from being a temporary fiscal obligation to a long-term structural burden that constrains development and deepens economic vulnerability.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
A private citizen gave 10X in one year more than the federal government.
Quietly running a parallel government supporting education and health across the federation.
This same private citizen keeps getting the stick from unfortunate scrapyard rats.
His only crime is simple.
IBADAN DECLARATION
Communiqué issued at the end of Opposition Political Parties National Summit held on Saturday April 25, 2026 in Ibadan, Oyo State.
Participating Opposition Parties in Nigeria, after an extensive deliberation on the collective threats that we face and the existential challenges facing our country under the stranglehold of the oppressive and anti-democratic All Progressives Congress (APC) and given the need for urgent, collective action to rescue our nation and the destiny of over 200 million compatriots, hereby resolve as follows:
1. That we shall resist all machinations by the APC to foist a one-party State on Nigeria and fight for the survival of multi-party democracy in our country.
2. That despite the onslaughts and manoeuvrings of the ruling party, the APC to impose President Bola Tinubu as the sole Presidential candidate in 2027; we shall field candidates and contest the 2027 Presidential and other elections.
3. That we shall work towards fielding one Presidential Candidate for the 2027 elections, which shall be agreed and supported by all participating opposition parties to rescue our nation and her long suffering masses.
4. That the INEC Chairman, Prof. Joash Ojo Amupitan, having shown bias and partisanship in favour of the ruling APC, should not conduct the 2027 general elections as Nigerians across board have lost confidence in him and his capacity to guarantee the required neutrality to deliver free, fair, transparent and credible elections. His continuous stay in office is vexatious and capable of triggering wide spread crisis in our nation.
5. That the National Assembly should immediately review the Electoral Act, 2026 to remove all sections that threaten the sanctity and integrity of the elections and run counter to constitutional provisions.
6. That all leading politicians that are being detained or harassed on bailable offfences be released with immediate effect and allowed to exercise their fundamental rights of participation and inclusivity as Nigerians.
7. That we consider the recent guidelines released by the INEC as obstacles, deliberately engineered to impose conditions and deadlines on the opposition parties. We therefore demand that INEC extends the deadline for primaries till the end of July, 2026.
8. The Summit commends Nigerians for their resilience and readiness to work with Opposition Parties to free our nation from State capture.
9. The National summit of Opposition Political Parties thank the Oyo State Governor Engr. Seyi Makinde and the people of Oyo State for hosting the epochal event.
SIGNED:
Chairmen of Participating Opposition Parties.
Campaigning for His Excellency, Peter Obi during the 2023 presidential election was notably calm, structured, and message-driven. It was largely centered on governance principles, accountability, and economic discipline rather than controversy or defensive narratives.
His public service record as Governor of Anambra State is often highlighted for fiscal discipline and a focus on reducing waste in governance. His administration emphasized lean government operations, prioritization of critical sectors such as education, healthcare, and infrastructure, and improved management of state resources.
He is also widely associated with a governance philosophy that discourages excessive borrowing, promotes savings culture in public finance, and encourages long-term planning to reduce the burden on future generations.
At the end of his tenure, his financial management approach was credited with leaving behind state resources for continued development, alongside settlement of key obligations such as pensions and contractual commitments.
Overall, his approach is often studied in discussions around fiscal responsibility, public sector efficiency, and sustainable economic management in emerging economies.
THE AUDACITY OF TINUBISM: A NATION SELLING ITSELF TO A MAN NO COUNTRY WANTS
By Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International
Let me ask you a simple question, fellow Nigerians.
Can you imagine a Nigerian man — a Nigerian citizen — with a criminal conviction in England, the United States, or France being awarded that country’s second-highest national honour by President Trump, Macron, or Keir Starmer? Can you imagine that same Nigerian, investigated by the FBI for ties to a designated terrorist organisation and banned from entering America, then receiving thirteen billion dollars in government contracts and being handed a British, French, or American passport?
You cannot imagine it. Because it would never happen.
Yet here we are. And we are expected to remain silent.
What is happening in Nigeria under Bola Tinubu is not merely corruption. It is not even ordinary betrayal. What we are witnessing is something I am compelled to name precisely: Tinubism — the systematic surrender of a sovereign nation’s wealth, dignity, and future to foreign interests, executed by a man who is, at best, a CIA asset whose cover has now been blown, and at worst, a willing instrument of neo-colonial plunder dressed in the agbada of democratic legitimacy.
I am a Nigerian nationalist. I have fought Apartheid. I have fought racism and neo-colonialism across this continent, including in South Africa. I have spent my life standing for African dignity and African sovereignty. So understand that when I write these words, I write them not in anger alone — I write them in grief, and in fury, and in an unbreakable sense of duty to my people.
Because in my senior years, a Nigerian president is handing thirteen billion dollars of our money — the money of 250 million suffering, hungry, medically abandoned Nigerians — to a Lebanese man who cannot set foot in his own country because Israel has bombed it into rubble and is seizing its land to build Greater Israel. A man with a Swiss money-laundering conviction for washing Abacha’s stolen loot. A man the FBI formally investigated for financing Hezbollah. A man whose sons sit on the boards of the very companies receiving those contracts without a single competitive tender.
Let that sink in.
Look at what young military officers in Burkina Faso, Niger, and Chad are doing. Say what you will about the method — these men stood up. They said: no more. They are casting off the shackles of colonial exploitation and making their people proud. Even the so-called puppet in Côte d’Ivoire would not dare what Tinubu has done. No other African leader — not one — has sold out their country with this particular brand of shamelessness.
This is worse than treason. It has its own category. It is Tinubism.
Now — to those who have had the audacity to come onto my Facebook page and publicly defend Gilbert Chagoury and Bola Tinubu: I see you. I have your names. The evidence against this man is not rumour, it is not allegation, it is documentation — court convictions, FBI affidavits, DEA files, a federal judge’s order for disclosure. And yet you come to my platform, insult my father’s memory, insult my mother’s honour, and demand that I be silent.
You will not silence me. Tinubu will not be president again. He will not win 2027. An intelligence asset whose cover has been publicly destroyed is no longer of use to his handlers — and his handlers know it.
As for you, his defenders and his digital soldiers: you disgust me. With 250 million Nigerians suffering — unable to eat, unable to access medicine, watching their naira evaporate — you choose to protect a Lebanese billionaire sitting on thirteen billion dollars of our national treasury. That money, properly deployed, could transform Nigeria. Instead it lines the pockets of a man whose own homeland is being erased from the map.
I swear on the memory of my ancestors: history will judge every one of you.
Nigeria will be free. It will not happen through silence. It will not happen through cowardice. It will happen because Nigerians — true Nigerians — refuse to bow.
Kio Amachree | Stockholm, Sweden | President, Worldview International
#KioAmachree #WorldviewInternational #TheKioSolution #NigeriaDecides2027 #GodfreyAmachree #Tinubism #EndCorruption #NigeriaFirst #Chagoury #AccountabilityNow #2027IsOurs
Bola Tinubu has handed 10 more million people into Buhari's own poverty. 'Insecurity was much more rooted in the Northeast; he [Tinubu] has expanded it to the Northwest, North Central, and everywhere,' says former presidential adviser Professor Udenta Udenta.
Tinubu’s records cannot win an election in 2027, he added.
#SundayPolitics
If we had a NASS I would suggest laws that would checkmate the squandering of Hormuz windfall. But the Akpabio Assembly does not exist. In Cost Benefit terms the 10th Assembly is all costs no benefit to the Nigerian people
NBC was quiet when a politician threatened to to shoot a Presenter
NBC was quiet when a minister called me a small boy
NBC has lost it
We will not be silenced and NBC knows that
Who will save a failing state, with so many ungoverned spaces shielding terrorists who kill and maim our citizens, while all manner of vested interests protect the killers more than the killed? Inside the shrinking space of normality, the state is raped daily for funds to bribe systems and citizens to acquire or hold on to power. Governance that will secure the state is in abeyance. Politics that will win power over the shrunk space is job #1. To save Nigeria and secure its territory will require a match of capacity and iron will that does not yet exist in the firmament of its leadership. Interests and incentives must first align.
Nigeria Is Bleeding From Within
It is deeply troubling to read recent World Bank reports indicating that, while Nigeria’s Federation Revenue surged to ₦84 trillion in just three years, a staggering 41% —amounting to ₦34.44 trillion —never reached the Federation Account. This sum exceeds the combined ₦34 trillion earmarked for capital projects in the 2024 and 2025 Appropriation Bills, a comparison that underscores the gravity of the situation and signals that something is fundamentally wrong.
This is not a mere oversight; it points to institutionalised corruption on a massive scale. In 1994, when the Okigbo Panel reported about $12.4 billion from the Gulf War oil windfall as unaccounted for, Nigerians were outraged and the nation shook with indignation. Today, an even more troubling situation appears to be unfolding, yet it is met with a disquietening silence.
We are trapped in a lethal paradox: Earning more as a nation, yet having less to invest in healthcare, education, and infrastructure. From 2025, systemic “deductions” have allowed agencies to capture more resources than entire states and even critical ministries.
These leakages explain why countries with fewer resources are out-performing us across key development indices. With such a broken system, how can we fix power, strengthen our schools, build resilient healthcare, or develop critical infrastructure?
Nigeria has no business being poor. We must stop these leakages through disciplined, transparent leadership driven by character. It is time to redirect our hijacked resources back to the people and move Nigeria into the league of developed nations.
With our collective resolve to change this corruption-infested system, a New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
“Most of Nigerian politicians’ children are not Nigerians. They are citizens of other countries. They only see Nigeria as a looting ground. You are the one who is a Nigerian and you need to fight for your country”
Everything he said here is totally true.