The bandits that stepped their unfortunate foot on Yorubaland have begun to retreat mentally. They will regret, together with their sponsors and SW traitors associated with them! THIS IS YORUBALAND, land of PEACE where we donโt look for troubles but it if you look for our troubles, you will not survive it. Terror sponsors should tell their pikins to immediately free the Yoruba people they held in captivity in our forest and then, they should run away back to Sambisa!
SAY NO TO TERRORISM
It's sign of low IQ.
Screenshotting chat to prove that men are in your DM means you're classless.
Men will always be in women's DM. It's left to you to either ignore or accept.
Besides what were they expecting when they're busy entertaining the men with their thirst traps?
I have been trying to make an academic comeback in this faculty. I have honestly put in a lot of effort and tried repeatedly, but it seems to be in vain. Nothing motivates me to study vigorously anymore except my professional exams.
Let me educate this thing that calls himself a lawyer again.
I don't know when you were born, but I was born in the early 80s, and I grew up in Northern Nigeria, a relatively more peaceful place than majority of the southern states. You can ask your elders at home to verify this. This all changed, thanks to the failure of leadership and the prevalence of injustice, not just in Northern Nigeria, but the entire country. The fact that there are more educationally disadvantaged people, and there are more populations in the northern states only made the process worse.
I know a lot of you are being fed with beer parlour gists, and hardly make research to make your lives informed. But a simple research can save a lot of you from your idiocy, of course except the one that is inherent in you.
Contrary to the stupidity a lot of you spread, that such social evils of terrorism are driven only by poverty or lack of education, facts on ground have shown otherwise. For instance, a report by the International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR) has shown entirely a different scenario., especially if you also care to understand what radicalisation does. Find time to educate your embattled soul. It will help you a lot.
https://t.co/hw1SEN978xโฆ
A psychologist involved in deradicalization programs described some of them as "well-adjusted," educated youths from wealthy households whose parents were often shocked by their involvement.
A lot of academic works, published by Nigerians have explained in details why a lot of such things happen; including: Search for meaning and identities, ideological convictions, social networks and peer influence, alienation and grievances, physiological and existential factors, and so on.
I know that some of you are born to be daft & nurture rancor against Hausa and northerners, but when you do that, remember there are people that will always knock on your empty skulls to remind you how foolish you always are. The failure of the govt, the leadership & even parenting has produced differential social vices in the north, just as it has produced same in the south, where we have violent cultism that kill each other and even innocent people daily, armed robbery, kidnappings, prostitution, drug addictions, yahoo, ritualists and so on. So, instead of focusing always on the problems which we know the north has, also remember that immediately you step out from your house, you begin to meet similar and even deadlier vices right there where you are.
This video is a call for help.
My mum is battling with stroke, and it is slowly taking her life. She needs urgent medical funds to stay alive, and I cannot do this alone anymore. Please, if you have it in your heart to help or retweet this to someone who can, I beg of you ๐คฒ๐ป๐
PRESS RELEASE
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NIGERIA POLICE FORCE CONFIRMS SAFE RESCUE OF ABDUCTED WOMAN AND HER TWIN SONS
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The Nigeria Police Force announces the successful rescue of Mrs. Olaide Busayo Adegoke John-Paul and her 12-year-old twin sons, Peter and Paul, who were abducted on June 3, 2026, in Ibadan, Oyo State.
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The hostages were rescued during a coordinated operation by the Force Intelligence Department Intelligence Response Team (FID-IRT) in Ibadan at approximately 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 6, 2026. Mrs. Adegoke and her children were abducted while she was driving them to school at about 7:30 a.m. on June 3, 2026.
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The rescue was achieved through sustained intelligence gathering, surveillance, and tactical operations. These efforts enabled investigators to track the kidnappersโ movements, resulting in a confrontation with FID-IRT operatives.
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During the confrontation, two suspected kidnappers were fatally wounded and two rifles were recovered. The victims were rescued unharmed and are now in safe custody, receiving medical care and support.
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The Inspector-General of Police commends the courage, professionalism, and effectiveness of the FID-IRT operatives and all officers involved. Their resilience and commitment were instrumental in the safe rescue of the hostages.
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Security operatives have intensified efforts in the area to apprehend fleeing members of the kidnapping syndicate. Preliminary intelligence indicates that some suspects escaped with gunshot injuries. Operations are ongoing to track, arrest, and bring all involved to justice.
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The Nigeria Police Force appreciates the publicโs support, cooperation, and patience during the operation. We remain committed to combating violent crime, protecting lives and property, and ensuring the safety of all citizens.
DCP ANTHONY OKON PLACID, psc (+), mnipr, mni
Force Public Relations Officer
Force Headquarters, Abuja
6th June,2026
๐๐๐ ๐ ๐ฝ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐พ๐๐๐๐
There is a particular kind of pressure that comes not from your enemies, but from history itself.
2 years ago, when I made the decision to contest for the office of President of the Great Ife Students' Union, I did not walk into a vacuum. I walked into a pattern; a quiet, stubborn pattern that had defined every clinical sciences student who had dared to sit in that seat before me.
Before me, only three students from the Faculty of Clinical Sciences had ever become President of the Great Ife Students' Union. While each of them served courageously and fought passionately for students' interests, their tenures came with significant sacrifices. They faced administrative and academic challenges that prevented them from graduating with their original sets, and the Union itself was eventually proscribed during their administrations.
I was going to be the fourth.
The first 3; each of them brilliant, each of them driven, had all encountered the same fate. Administrative turbulence. Academic delays. Inability to graduate with their original sets. And under each of them, the Union had been proscribed. Let me be clear: history does not record them as failures. History records them as fighters; students who pushed hard against a system that pushed back harder. Their struggles were the cost of their courage. But the statistics were what they were, and statistics have a way of speaking before you even open your mouth.
The Provost of Health Sciences was the one who held up that mirror to my face. I visited him early in the process when I was considering to contest for the office, and with the kind of candor that only comes from genuine concern, he looked at me and asked โ half-laughing, entirely serious โ whether I was mentally okay. He walked me through the numbers. The workload demands of Medicine and Surgery. The disconnection between clinical faculty activities and union governance. The history. He even suggested I consider contesting for the presidency of IFUMSA instead โ a respected office, a sensible path. We laughed. We talked. And I want to be fair to him here: he was not trying to stop me. He was trying to protect me. His concerns were valid. They were, in fact, the same concerns that students across campus would echo throughout my campaign: "๐๐ค๐ฌ ๐๐ค ๐ฎ๐ค๐ช ๐๐ฃ๐ฉ๐๐ฃ๐ ๐ฉ๐ค ๐๐ค๐ข๐๐๐ฃ๐ ๐๐๐๐ฃ๐ ๐๐ง๐๐จ๐๐๐๐ฃ๐ฉ ๐ฌ๐๐ฉ๐ ๐ฉ๐๐ ๐๐๐ข๐๐ฃ๐๐จ ๐ค๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ฃ๐?"
I didn't have a clean answer. I had a conviction.
After that meeting, after days of deep thought and multiple consultations, I made my decision. I would contest. And I would win.
And I did โ against all the odds, against all the permutations working against me, I won. The students chose me. But winning, I quickly learnt, was only the beginning of the story.
The moment I assumed office and began to experience the weight of the responsibilities, I understood firsthand why it had been so difficult for my predecessors from Clinical Sciences. The balancing act was unlike anything I had ever experienced. The weight of that office is not theoretical. It is daily, relentless, and entirely unimpressed by your academic calendar. There were moments when the road was rough and even tilted. There were moments when the trajectory began to look familiar, when I could feel the gravitational pull of that old pattern trying to reassert itself. When it seemed like history might just repeat.
But it didn't.
The Dean of Student Affairs and several other university officials expressed concern about how I intended to combine the demands of the presidency with the rigorous academic requirements of Medicine and Surgery.
At the end of it all, I climbed the mountain โ and I came back down. I graduated in record time with my original set. I ensured a direct succession, handing the administration to my successor without a break. I became the first President of the Great Ife Students' Union from the Faculty of Clinical Sciences to do both.
Imagine if all only,
Lateef are to marry Lateefah
Kabir & Kabirah
Azeez & Azeezah
Faiz & Faizah
Halim & Halimah
Will you find a partner ?๐
Dating someone like that is like bringing in Sir Alex Ferguson as your coach. He's studied every angle of the pitch from the sidelines and the film room but would never play.
The only weird thing would be discarding talent just because they haven't played in the league before.
I spent a significant part of today in discussions with the Vice-Chancellor of LAUTECH, during which we reached a mutual understanding that the affected students will file an appeal against the decision, and that the Senate will convene on Monday to review its resolution.
In view of this development, I earnestly appeal to all comrades to sheath their swords and allow the Senate to carry out a proper review and reversal, so as not to further complicate the matter, and to ensure that the affected students are able to resume their academic activities in due course.
Furthermore, I wish to appreciate and commend the Dean of Students Affairs for his proactiveness and fatherly disposition.
Going forward, as I have always maintained, I wish to reiterate that protest must always remain our last resort. The guiding principles of Aluta, consultation, consolidation, and confrontation must be strictly observed. Before we resort to confrontation in any struggle, we must have exhaustively explored and exhausted the first two Cs.
That said, as your President, you can trust that I will never compromise on our collective interest and the welfare of Nigerian students.
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
BABTEE
NANS President