Peter Obi in one of those "Platform" videos I have watched, stated clearly as follows..
"You know we have too many big men in Anambra state. As a Governor, sometimes they will come and tell me "your excellency, Chief wants to visit you". Then I will tell them, tell him not to worry, I will come to his house to visit him.
That way, he will be the one to kill cow and cook all the delicious food and bring expensive wines. The government house is not a restaurant. I do not own a house in Abuja, if you see any house in the name of Peter Obi, confiscate it. Bala Mohammed under the GEJ administration offered me a plot and I rejected it."
This to me is not the man you want to host you if anything. Not because he can't buy the entire Transcorp Hotel if he wanted to, but because it attracts to him unnecesary distractions.
Insecurity: Nigeria Cannot Continue Like This
I received with deep shock and sadness the tragic death of retired Major General Rabe Abubakar, who reportedly died while in the custody of kidnappers. Earlier, before this heartbreaking news, I also received disturbing reports of renewed bandit attacks in Sokoto and Kwara States.
The armed bandits reportedly blocked a market route in Sokoto and abducted traders, while terrorists invaded communities in Kwara State, kidnapping scores of citizens and killing innocent people, are heartbreaking and alarming. These incidents are not isolated tragedies; they are clear manifestations of the deepening security crisis confronting our nation.
But particularly painful is the reported death of Major General Rabe Abubakar, a distinguished military officer who dedicated a significant part of his life to defending Nigeria and protecting its citizens. It is tragic that a man who served his fatherland with honour, rose through the ranks of the Nigerian Armed Forces, and retired after years of meritorious service, would meet such a heartbreaking end at the hands of criminal elements. His death is a national tragedy and a sobering indictment of the insecurity that has engulfed our country.
When traders can no longer travel safely to markets, farmers cannot access their farms, communities live under constant fear, and even retired senior military officers are not spared from the menace of kidnapping and violent crime, it becomes evident that our nation is facing a grave security emergency.
Security remains the foremost responsibility of any government. Every life lost, every citizen abducted, and every community displaced represent a painful failure of our collective duty to protect the Nigerian people. The recurring attacks in Sokoto, Kwara, and many other parts of the country demonstrate that insecurity is not only persisting but spreading in both scope and intensity.
I once again urge the Federal Government and our security agencies to move beyond rhetoric and adopt a more proactive, intelligence-driven, technology-based, and coordinated approach to tackling insecurity. We must strengthen our security architecture, improve intelligence gathering, secure our borders, equip and motivate our security personnel, and ensure that those responsible for these heinous crimes are apprehended and brought to justice.
A nation where citizens live in fear cannot prosper. A nation where economic activities are disrupted daily by criminal elements cannot attract investment, create jobs, or guarantee a better future for its people. We must urgently reclaim every part of our country from terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, and all criminal gangs threatening our collective existence.
My heartfelt condolences go to the family of Major General Rabe Abubakar, his former colleagues in the Armed Forces, and all Nigerians who have lost loved ones to insecurity. I also sympathise with the families of those killed, those abducted, and the affected communities in Sokoto, Kwara, and across the nation.
The recurring tragedies and embarrassing security failures we continue to witness make the quest for a New Nigeria not only necessary but inevitable. We must build a nation where every citizen can live, work, travel, and pursue legitimate economic activities without fear.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
Nnamdi Kanu is a convicted terrorist.
Nobody, especially @PeterObi who wants to be President should be defending or exonerating him.
He was convicted in Nigeria just like Simon Ekpa was convicted in Finland.
If Nigeria got it wrong, did Finland also get it wrong?
Say no to IPOB. Stop defending terrorists and terrorism!
Bola, a leader's success, is heard of from the mouths of the people he leads. The vast majority of Nigerians believe you have done extremely poorly and therefore do not deserve a second opportunity.
For what do you want a second opportunity for? To inflict more hardship? Superintend over more kidnaps? Supervise more wanton killing and mishap?
Enough is enough, Bola. Nigerians have had enough.
Over 50 children and their teachers in Oyo state continue to suffer untold horror in the den of deadly kidnappers who you rehabilitate and unleash back into the society after gallant men of our armed forces have captured them
No part of Nigeria is safe under your watch. Insecurity has more than quadrupled in the last 3 years. Blood of innocent Nigerians has been shed recklessly while you and your family and cronies gallivant around the world on our commonwealth.
Bola, you are a pathetic excuse for a president.
What makes it worse is that Nigerians did not ask for this. You were roundly rejected at the 2023 polls, but you connived with your fellow bloodsucking elites to force yourself on a nation crying out for purposeful leadership.
As if that is not enough, you and your cronies lie in our faces at every turn, and also send out your terrorists with the pen to write boldfaced lies about the situation of the country.
The only place these houses exist is in your head
And if if they do exist, what use is housing units when everyone who's meant to live in them is dead?
Your primary duty is to secure the lives and property of Nigerians. You have failed in this. All over the country, families cry out over one avoidable mishap or the other, while you and your family and cronies live large off our rapidly depleting commonwealth.
Enough is enough, Bola.
Our mother's have cried one tear too many over the loss of their children.
Our fathers have shed one fruitless sweat too many, toiling under your intentionally imposed hardship, trying to provide for their family.
Our children have had one missed opportunity too many at a chance at a decent future.
Many people say that you're grossly incompetent. I say otherwise. You are indeed competent; competent at your lifelong goal of enriching your family and cronies at the expense of the Nigerian youth.
Come next year's election, Bola, you will lose; and one thing I want to make very clear to you is that any attempt to elongate your supervision of this untold hardship a minute longer than the 29th of May, 2027, will be met with the stiffest resistance you could possibly ever imagine. This, we promise you.
God bless the Federal Republic of Nigeria. God punish Bola Ahmed Tinubu the despot.
No entiendo cómo puede ser. Vi a Michael Jackson morir, a Maradona morir, a Pelé morir, a la reina Isabel morir; vi pasar a tres papas. Sobreviví a una pandemia, vi el comienzo de internet. Vi el CD cambiar a Spotify, vi cambiar el DVD a Netflix, vi pasar del teléfono fijo a un iPhone. Y estoy viendo el surgimiento de la IA. Y solo tengo 30 años.
Building a Healthier Nigeria Through Stronger Healthcare Systems
As part of our desire and commitment to building a healthier Nigeria, I met with some healthcare professionals and experts in the United States on Friday, June 5, 2026. The meeting was essentially to deepen my understanding of how successful health insurance systems deliver improved healthcare, especially in the areas of primary and emergency care.
One of our key health objectives remains unchanged: to expand health insurance coverage, strengthen primary healthcare across our electoral wards, train more healthcare workers, and make quality healthcare accessible and affordable for all Nigerians.
A New Nigeria must be a healthier Nigeria.
A New Nigeria is possible. -PO
I made a video about the people who are dropping account details from giveaways from bandits and some people are defending it, citing poverty. If poverty can push you into doing that, then, that poverty can surely push you into killing people or becoming a bandit yourself. The poverty can push you into harbouring criminals for a few coins or even giving out information to kidnappers.
There has to be a limit one cannot cross for money, no matter how poor they are.
I just learned something that has shattered me.💔💔
A 23-year-old girl barely a girl, still full of dreams was kidnapped by bandits. They demanded 50 million naira. Her family begged, pleaded, and cried for mercy. The bandits refused to reduce a single kobo.
For two weeks, her father fought like a lion. He borrowed, sold, and bled dry to raise every kobo. Finally, he had 50 million. He called them, desperate to hear his daughter’s voice one more time before paying.
She came on the phone.
And instead of begging to be saved, she told her father: “Don’t pay. I will kill myself if they release me.”
Because for fourteen days, fourteen unthinkable, merciless days, those monsters had been raping her. Over and over. Daily. Hourly. Destroying her soul while she was still alive,
When the bandits heard what she said, they put a bullet in her head. Then, they sent her family the video and pictures of her final moment.
That girl didn’t die. She was murdered—after being tortured in ways no human being should ever suffer.
Today, someone is asking me to support Tinubu.
I am sick to my stomach.
This is not about politics anymore. This is about our humanity. This is about mothers who will never hold their daughters again. Fathers who gather ransom only to receive a corpse. Young girls who go to sleep are terrified that tonight might be their turn.
So let me say this plainly:
May it never be well with any city boy and girl who turns their eyes away from this. May peace never find the heart that excuses evil for power. May every tear shed by these families rise as a fire against those who enable this madness—whether in government, in silence, or in blind political loyalty.
We are not voting for a leader anymore. We are begging for our lives.
If this story does not move you to demand change—then grief will never leave your own door. And may the pain you ignore today find you a million times over tomorrow.
No, this is not “just politics.” This is a nation bleeding to death. And we are the ones who must stop the bleeding.
(A heartbroken Nigerian)
Living abroad (Brooklyn, New York) and supporting a microphone licking mannequin and thief that has plunged your country into the most terrorized in the world has to be because a genetic disorder you inherited from your oluwole and generational slave ancestors.
Wale, what PO said in that video is above your IQ level and those of your followers from your part of Nigeria who support the forger and thief Tinubu.
Oloriburukuoshi.
Are you always this foolish or just a terrible human being? This classism in Nigeria is why we can't move forward.
In your high mindedness and desperate brownnosing to your colleague, you actually thinks she does him a favour giving him N1k tip for sending him on errands. It is not his duty to get her lunch. She can as well get up and go get the lunch herself. Why would you expect a security guy to use his money to buy your drink? That N1k is not a favour. It is payment for service rendered. If you actually had respect people regardless of their position, you won't be spilling this nonsense.
If your colleague is foolish, must you be foolish too? Abi all of you are stupid in your organization? Your responses all over the comments gets more annoying and embarrassing as if you dropped your brain somewhere. You are an extremely very terrible human being.
I do not think many Gen Z Africans have seen an African leader this confident, articulate, and eloquent on the world stage.
Imagine, just imagine for a second, that it was Bola Tinubu, Yoweri Museveni, Cyril Ramaphosa, Paul Biya, Teodoro Obiang, Denis Sassou Nguesso, Emmerson Mnangagwa, or Alassane Ouattara sitting there. The shame I felt while even writing this paragraph 🙈
Just look at the admiration on the faces of the parliament members. Look at how they listened to him. You need to see the respect in that room and how confidently they asked him questions because they knew he could answer clearly and intelligently.
This is what happens when competent leaders are given a chance.
Peter Obi is not just the man Nigeria needs. He represents the kind of leadership Africa desperately needs if we are ever going to regain respect on the global stage.
A leader who can speak clearly, think clearly, answer questions without embarrassing himself, and represent his people without making the continent look like a retirement home for tired politicians.
This is why most career African politicians do not want him to succeed. His presence alone exposes them. His clarity exposes their emptiness. His competence exposes their mediocrity.
Peter Obi is the standard they are afraid of.
The abduction of the Chibok girls in 2014 triggered a global movement. One school abduction was enough to unite Nigerians, attract international attention, and place enormous pressure on the government through the #BringBackOurGirls campaign.
Yet, what has happened since then should trouble every Nigerian.
Under President Buhari's eight years in office, Nigeria witnessed about ten school abductions. Under President Tinubu's administration, in just three years, we have already recorded over ten school abductions.
Despite these repeated tragedies, there has been neither sustained national outrage nor significant international attention comparable to what followed Chibok.
This raises an important question: have we become so accustomed to insecurity that what once shocked our national conscience is now treated as normal?
At a time when millions of Nigerians are grappling with insecurity, poverty, and hardship, it is deeply troubling that those in power appear more focused on political calculations and preparations for the next election than on addressing the urgent challenges confronting our people.
It is, therefore, no surprise that some observers have labelled us a "Now Disgraced Nation". While we do not agree with any attempt to define our great country by its present difficulties, we must acknowledge that persistent insecurity, economic hardship, and leadership failure have damaged our reputation and standing among nations.
The answer is not denial, propaganda, or political distraction. The answer is leadership that is competent, compassionate, accountable, and genuinely committed to the welfare and security of the Nigerian people.
The Nigerian youth must not become indifferent. We must all refuse to normalise failure.
Young Nigerians - Take back your country!
A New Nigeria is Possible. -PO
Imagine for a second having a President who executes perfectly such as this; frankly speaking, watching this gave me goosebumps:
-Great communication skills
-Clarity of thoughts
-Precise understanding of the issues
- Facts, figures, the whole enchilada!
What more can you ask for in a global leader? It’s about time!
-A new Nigeria is POssible
#OK2027
I am trying very hard to remain civil. Still, I genuinely struggle to understand why, particularly among many men of the pulpit, discussions about Peter Obi so often focus on what you believe he lacks or where you think he falls short.
Rarely do I hear emphasis placed on the qualities that are actually worth emulating: a man who won his party's primaries fairly, who is widely regarded for his integrity, consistency, discipline, and enduring principles. These are virtues that closely mirror the kind of character Christians should aspire to cultivate.
Yet, instead of highlighting those qualities, the conversation often gravitates toward political calculations and traits that appear uncomfortably close to the godfatherism and morally ambiguous actions many of us claim to oppose.
I fully acknowledge that everyone, including pastors, has the right to their political preferences and convictions. However, I would respectfully ask that we recognize what is at stake. Our collective future is on the line, and the standards we choose to celebrate or dismiss today will shape the kind of society we leave behind tomorrow.
THE MAN PETER OBI.
Whenever Peter Obi is in the media, before the press, or on social media, he talks mainly about current national issues bedevilling the nation, and how to rescue Nigeria. But whenever members of the ruling APC or other opposition parties are in the media, they often talk more about Peter Obi, without recourse to current issues affecting Nigeria as a nation.
So again i ask, Who is really incharge of this nation? Why on earth will the APC government in power and all strong opposition parties in Nigeria take on one man as their common threat and common enemy. A man who is also in the opposition. A man whom they claimed came 3rd in the 2023 presidential election. Why the coordinated attacks against him?
There must be something special about Peter Obi that they are seeing, that is scaring the shit out of their lives. Something unique that will reset Nigeria and return it back to her past glory, which they don't want to happen because it will be a goodbye to their wealth without enterprise. Unnecessary wastages, lootings, stealing, and their century old structures of criminality.
Fellow Nigerians, whenever a group or groups of persons start attacking one man without showing any evidence of his wrong doing, know that it is because of envy, hatred, fear of his personality, capability, and integrity.
Such a man is the man for the job. Bad people are always scared of things they stand to lose if good people come to power. So they can do anything including blackmail to scuttle that.
Vote Peter Gregory Obi and Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso (OK) for the 2027 presidential election. Vote for NDC.
If you vote and defend your votes, we shall kick Tinubu and his evil APC out of power in 2027. We shall stop other crimal elements from smelling, testing or coming close to power.
A new Nigeria is possible. NDC ✌️
Teachers in northeastern Nigeria march in Maiduguri demanding the release of 42 abducted schoolchildren in Borno State and stronger school protection.
Al Jazeera’s Felix Nyawara reports.
You have a right to be foolish, I wouldn’t judge you for that. I have been foolish long enough to learn not to condemn the fool. But you have no right to be evil, and to support a continuation of Nigeria in its current form, is to be complicit in the evil that it is..