New Research Topic — Beyond the Economics: Energy Justice and the Non-Economic Dimensions of Renewable Energy Transitions
Experts in renewable energy, energy justice and policy, please consider submitting a manuscript to join the conversation!
https://t.co/Vv7oeiCQCc
New Research Topic — Beyond the Economics: Energy Justice and the Non-Economic Dimensions of Renewable Energy Transitions
Experts in renewable energy, energy justice and policy, please consider submitting a manuscript to join the conversation!
https://t.co/Vv7oeiCQCc
Today, the kidnappers used his phone, took this picture and uploaded it on his Facebook page.
Please you people should beg @officialABAT to call them, like he called them personally for the release of others.
What kinda Godforsaken excuse of a country is this!!!
This is another hideout that they have setup in Ajebo. There are thousands of these across Nigeria and more of these are springing up in the South. All communications will be tracked in real time to keep my people safe. The security agencies are told not to intervene and some of them who take action get dismissed from service. It’s a war that many have not woken up to. Igbo land must and will survive. I’m not sure about the rest.
On November 5th, 2025, I publicly warned that the verdict in Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s case had already been decided by the Bola Ahmed Tinubu regime. Today, they executed that script word for word.
For the avoidance of doubt, and based on credible information I received directly from individuals within the regime, this was my submission at the time:
**“For the avoidance of doubt and to alert the public, it has become clear that a secret decision has long been reached within the @officialABAT regime regarding the fate of @MaziNnamdiKanu. The plan, devised through a high-level political conspiracy, is to either sentence him to death or condemn him to life imprisonment. This outcome, predetermined far in advance, is now being dressed up in the guise of judicial procedure.
Justice James Omotosho is expected to conclude Kanu’s trial by declaring that his refusal to open his defence amounts to an admission of guilt—a convenient interpretation designed to seal a verdict already agreed upon behind closed doors.
The ruling is anticipated this November, a month that bears a haunting historical precedent. It was in November 1995 that the military tribunal of General Sani Abacha sentenced Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni activists to death, a sentence carried out with ruthless precision.
Today, three decades later, Nigeria stands at the same moral crossroads. Only the year has changed; this is 2025, not 1995, but the machinery of repression grinds on.
The trial of Nnamdi Kanu has ceased to be about justice; it is now a test of conscience for the Nigerian state and its citizens alike.”**
What we witnessed today was not justice, it was the execution of a political decision already taken long before the court sat, long before arguments were heard, and long before any evidence was considered.
Nigeria must decide what kind of nation it wants to be.
#FreeNnamdiKanuNow
We’re closer than ever to stopping polio and saving millions more from diseases like HIV, TB, and malaria. But that progress is under threat. That's why I added my name to a petition urging @Keir_Starmer to show some leadership. Join me! >> https://t.co/wLeklOEprU
🇬🇧 UK Aid Must Lead, Not Lag! 🌍
This week, we reignited Mandela’s call to end poverty at the #Mandela20 Mass Lobby of Parliament—pressuring MPs to restore 0.7% GNI to ODA, and increase aid for climate, social, and energy justice.
📢 Next Steps:
With Gavi & Global Fund replenishments ahead, we demand:
✅ A 10% increase in UK funding for Gavi to protect more children from preventable diseases.
✅ A stronger UK commitment to the Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB, and malaria.