@EsosaIyawe I guess they forge your signature as well?
You wanted to test the waters, and you were clearly rejected by Oredo constituents you betrayed.
@masurge7 This is a young man who met PO by chance in Abuja, rode on PO's popularity to HofR betrayed the movement, now that APC have denied him ticket he has jumped through the window to @NigeriaNDCHQ to picket Oredo Federal constituency ticket, @EsosaIyawe is a failed betrayal
How Unverified Claims From Onitsha Screwdriver Seller Influenced Trump’s Claims On Christian Genocide, US Airstrikes In Nigeria | Sahara Reporters https://t.co/9W0ph3wBNJ
New York Times: How a screwdriver trader in Onitsha influenced Trump's missile strike in Nigeria
The United States relied on information and reports from Emeka Umeagbalasi, a screwdriver trader in Onitsha, Anambra state, to launch air strikes in Nigeria, according to a report by the New York Times.
In October, US President Donald Trump redesignated Nigeria as a “country of particular concern” in response to allegations of a Christian genocide in the country.
“Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. Thousands of Christians are being killed,” Trump said, blaming radical Islamists for the “mass slaughter”.
A month later, he threatened that the US department of war would invade Nigeria “guns-a-blazing”, to completely wipe out the Islamic terrorists if the Nigerian government did nothing to curtail the alleged genocide.
On December 26, the US launched air strikes on ISIS terrorists in north-western Sokoto state “at the request of Nigerian authorities”.
According to the report, Umeagbalasi, founder of the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law, otherwise called Intersociety, is “an unlikely source of research that U.S. Republican lawmakers have used to promote the misleading idea that Christians are being singled out for slaughter” in Nigeria.
Umeagbalasi, alongside his wife, run the non-governmental organisation from his home.
https://t.co/PTy1lym76a
BREAKING:
The UAE announces it will cuts funds for citizens who want to study in the UK out of fear of Emirati students being radicalized by Muslim Brotherhood Islamists on British campuses.
An Arab state now views a European state as a dangerous Islamist radicalization hotspot