@DeleFarotimi Lugard himself said this, the North and South were different in every aspect of life, he just amalgamated for the south to cover up for the losses the North brought upon the British Empire, and if we don’t change that, it’ll always be like this !! We need to decentralise power !!
I swear, it was like a horror movie. The betrayals were extreme. The one that shook me most was Ifeajuna and Maimalari.
Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna served as the Brigade Major to Brigadier Maimalari and was in charge of his security details. As his trusted "boy," Maimalari tasked Ifeajuna with his wedding dinner planning and logistics. Ifeajuna meticulously planned the wedding dinner party and hotel accommodations for Brigadier Zakariya Maimalari. Few hours after the wedding, Ifeajuna shot the same man whose wedding he had helped plan.
You know what's funny? Maimalari had managed to escape the initial attack on his home on foot. While fleeing, he encountered a vehicle driven by Ifeajuna. Thinking Ifeajuna was coming to his rescue, Maimalari waved the car down. It was when he moved close and saw Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa in the car that he realized the fear that he had just walked to his own death. Ifeajuna shot and killed him. Ọmọ! It shook me.
Croatia scored a perfectly fair goal against Portugal last minute, VAR claimed it touched someone’s head, 100 camera angles could not show it touching, but the ref said the sensor beeped.
Please I want you guys to take a second to imagine what this TL would have said if it was against Argentina, not Portugal.
Cc: @femibakre@mc_lively_
Today, Norway took a goal kick that hit the camera in the roof of the stadium and dropped back to an English player and England scored from that.
Again, please imagine if that was Argentina. This TL for don hot since.
Mbappe’s goal for France this week was assisted by a player who did hand ball, but the ref/VAR didn’t cancel the goal. No outrage from TL.
The craziest part to me is, Argentina haven’t been awarded 1 single wrong call. They haven’t scored what should have been cancelled, and haven’t had a goal cancelled that shouldn’t have been. But agenda…
The corporate media cartels are shamelessly sanitizing this monumental federal crime by treating the highly complicit Nigerian government as mere innocent, clueless "victims" of a complex fraud. The ridiculous narrative being sold to the public is that a single, rogue individual named Adeniyi Adeyemi ostensibly, single-handedly set up a fake government agency from scratch just to steal billions from the public budget.
This mainstream media narrative is not only dangerously misleading and politically convenient, but it is also a massive slap in the face to our collective intelligence. This is especially true when you consider the simple administrative fact that a legitimate Presidential Council is not a basic social media account where all you need is a working email, a cheap password, and some basic information to set up. Under the constitution, the formal process of creating, legitimizing, and funding a presidential agency in Nigeria is incredibly thorough and structurally complex.
To set up any agency in Nigeria, a legitimate government body must first be formally birthed either through an Act passed by the National Assembly, or via an official Executive Order personally signed, sealed, and delivered by the President of the Federation. Once approved, the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF) must then formally document the new entity, gazette its creation, clearly define its mandate, and process basic administrative requirements such as allocating premium office space, procuring official vehicle plates, and authorizing official state seals.
The next critical phase for this agency is the federal budgeting process, which is systematically handled by the Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning working hand-in-hand with the Budget Office of the Federation. The newly created agency is strictly required to submit its comprehensive financial estimates, payroll projections, and capital expenditure needs to these planning bodies. These requirements are then thoroughly reviewed, vetted, and integrated into the President's proposed annual Appropriation Bill before it is laid before the legislature.
This next legislative step serves as the ultimate, critical hurdle. The designated head of the agency must physically appear before the relevant, high-powered committees in both the Senate and the House of Representatives to aggressively defend their proposed budget line by line. Lawmakers are constitutionally mandated to scrutinize what the money will be used for, question the personnel costs, and debate the capital allocations before giving their final, official approval.
Once both chambers of the National Assembly formally approve the budget, the harmonized bill is sent back to the President to be signed into law. Only after the Appropriation Act has been fully signed and gazetted can the Accountant-General of the Federation and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) open official bank accounts, assign budget codes, and authorize the release of public funds to the agency's ledger.
So, it is clear beyond any shadow of a reasonable, logical doubt that this certain Prince Adeniyi Adeyemi is absolutely not a "lone wolf", and that there is mathematically no way on earth that this agency could have been fully integrated into the state without the active backing, complicity, and signatures of several high-ranking government parastatals. Furthermore, the ridiculous narrative Nigerians are commanded to swallow is that the Federal Government officially discovered the agency was a fraud on October 17, 2025, arrested its self-proclaimed Director-General, Adeyemi, on October 27, 2025, and had him locked in a police cell. This begs the screaming, obvious question: how on earth did this supposedly non-existent, fake "ghost agency" successfully secure a whopping ₦1.3 billion budget allocation in the signed 2026 Appropriation Act? If Adeyemi was arrested on October 27 and held in cold police detention for 23 days(covering almost the entire month of November when the budget was being actively processed) who in the hell defended the PFIPC budget? To secure a massive ₦1.3 billion allocation the head of the agency must "physically appear" before the relevant appropriation committees of both the Senate and the House of Representatives. This means one of two highly embarrassing, scandalous things must have happened behind the scenes:
1. The National Assembly appropriation committees passed a massive ₦1.3 billion budget for an agency that never even physically showed up for its defense. This means the lawmakers themselves, likely in direct collusion, conspiracy, and partnership with highly placed executive insiders, intentionally inserted this money as a hidden slush fund, padded the budget, and quietly passed it.
2. Someone else highly placed within the government, either from the Presidency, the Office of the Chief of Staff, or the Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning, stood in and personally defended the ₦1.3 billion allocation on behalf of this "fake" council, knowing full well that the supposed Director-General was currently sitting inside a cold police cell.
Now, even if we foolishly pretend that the budget miraculously passed without the legally mandated defense proceedings demanded by the constitution, physically disbursing the funds is an even stricter, tighter, and highly automated process because Nigeria operates under the Treasury Single Account (TSA) system.
To pull a single kobo out of the federal treasury, an agency must be officially onboarded onto the Government Integrated Financial Management Information System (GIFMIS). This requires the mandatory, physical, and biometric capture of the agency's certified Accounting Officer and Director of Finance. Next, warrants for capital releases must be formally signed, approved, and routed through the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation. A man who has been publicly flagged by the Chief of Staff, investigated by the DSS, and arrested by the Inspector-General of Police cannot simply, magically log into the highly secure federal financial system and authorize the release of ₦1.3 billion.
This clearly, undeniably demonstrates that this Adeyemi guy currently being paraded in the news as a brilliant "impostor" who single-handedly defrauded the entire state is either just a convenient middleman, a disposable fall guy, or merely an agent of powerful executive insiders who committed this monumental fraud. But again, this is absolutely nothing new. Budget padding, phantom agencies, and slush-fund creations are absolutely not unique to the Tinubu Administration, and they certainly will not end with the Tinubu Administration. The corrupt government cartels commit the crime, while the corporate media cartels immediately step in to sanitize the mess, distract the public, and pin the entire multi-billion Naira bankroll on a single, isolated individual. This is exactly how the media complicitly helps the state stay clean: they scream in their headlines that a single, lone politician stole ₦90 billion in cash, and the gullible public never stops to reason the absolute absurdity of such accusations. You will spend your energy condemning a politician who is merely an errand boy, while the highly organized corporate cartels, systemic loopholes, and financial pipelines facilitating the massive economic plunder of Nigeria remain completely, comfortably intact.
@DeleFarotimi Lugard himself said this, the North and South were different in every aspect of life, he just amalgamated for the south to cover up for the losses the North brought upon the British Empire, and if we don’t change that, it’ll always be like this !! We need to decentralise power !!
You are a thinker, I say this on the evidence of your replies. However, you’ve been caught up by the chicken and egg analogy that I have employed. A crime undergirds the creation of Nigeria, the sovereign will of the victims was discounted, and this is why the rulers are useless
I read through.
They said they did not pay to get the students released, neither did they fight/kill any of the terrorist that abducted them.
Rather they arrested some of their links which forced them to release the students unconditionally.
Do I Believe the Nigeria Army? Of course No
Am I glad the children are back? Resounding YES!!!