Little children are in the kidnappers den in the forest, 1st Lady, Remi Tinubu is sharing campaign vehicles on TV for her husband’s relection?
A soulless family.
As a survivor of kidnapping and banditry, I can tell you that these criminals believe that no matter how much they take from you, you will eventually work and earn it back after your release.
Let me use myself as an example. After my family paid the ₦15 million ransom they demanded, along with other items worth over ₦600,000, they still weren't satisfied. They continued demanding more money and eventually asked for ₦55 million. They even told my mother to sell her house and car to raise the money.
Because my family rented a vehicle to deliver the ransom and other requested items, the kidnappers assumed we owned the car and were wealthy. They kept insisting that we sell all our properties and hand over the proceeds to them.
Omo, it was a terrible ordeal. The fear, pressure, and emotional torture were overwhelming. Watching my family struggle to meet their endless demands was heartbreaking.
One painful reality is that they often target ordinary and struggling people like us because we are easier to capture than the elites, who usually have better security and protection.
This is why we cannot continue to stay silent. Kidnapping and banditry have destroyed countless lives, families, and dreams across Nigeria. We need to raise our voices, stand together as a nation, and demand urgent action against insecurity.
Today it may be someone else's family. Tomorrow it could be yours. Enough is enough. 💔🇳🇬🙏🏽
A WARNING TO THE PRESIDENT @officialABAT , GOVERNMENT @NigeriaGov , @nassnigeria@NGRSenate@HouseNGR Governors’ Forum @NGFSecretariat and State Houses of Assembly AND THE NIGERIAN POLITICAL CLASS OF NIGERIA AT LARGE:
DO NOT DARE WISH OUR CHILDREN “HAPPY CHILDREN’S DAY” TODAY .
To the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Vice President, the Governors of the 36 States, the Federal Executive Council, the Members of the National Assembly, the State Houses of Assembly, and the entire political class that has captured and destroyed the Nigeria State:
Do not dare.
Do not dare open your mouths on May 27 to wish Nigerian children a “Happy Children’s Day.” Do not dare release the recycled, ghost-written platitudes your media handlers have already drafted. Do not dare stand in front of cameras, surrounded by carefully arranged children in matching uniforms, to perform a tenderness you have never extended to the millions of Nigerian children you have abandoned, betrayed, and condemned to lives of suffering.
You have no moral standing to wish anything to Nigerian children. None.
Consider what you are dishonorably wishing them.
You are wishing “Happy Children’s Day” to the 39 students and 7 teachers seized only days ago, on 15 May 2026, from a secondary school and two primary schools in Ahoro Esinele community in Oriire district of Oyo State- children aged between two and sixteen , snatched from the southwest in a chilling expansion of a terror that you swore would be confined to the north.
You are wishing “Happy Children’s Day” to the 25 schoolgirls of the Government Girls Comprehensive Secondary School in Maga, Wasagu/Danko, Kebbi State, taken from their hostel at dawn on 18 November 2025, after gunmen killed the vice principal and most of whom are still missing as I write.
You are wishing “Happy Children’s Day” to the 303 students and 12 teachers of St. Mary’s Catholic Primary and Secondary School in Papiri, Niger State, seized on 21 November 2025 - children aged 10 to 18, boys and girls- whose abduction forced more than 20,000 Nigerian schools to close indefinitely .
You are wishing “Happy Children’s Day” to the 287 students of the Government Secondary School in Kuriga, Kaduna State, taken by gunmen on motorcycles on 7 March 2024 in broad daylight while you and your political colleagues posed for swearing-in photographs.
You are wishing “Happy Children’s Day” to the 15 children of Gidan Bakuso, Sokoto State, seized from their boarding school on 9 March 2024 as they slept.
You are wishing to the Chibok girls- over 90 of whom are still missing, twelve years after April 14, 2014, while you have moved on, and for your repugnant luxury, speedily rebuilt and redecorated Aso Villa, bought opulent hideous cars, and rotated power among yourselves as if those girls never existed. But their parents who gave birth to them continue to grieve and daily rain curses on the evil leaders that have shown no empathy towards them and their abducted daughters.
You are wishing “Happy Children’s Day” to the children of Dapchi, Kankara, Kagara, Jangebe, Afaka, Greenfield, Bethel Baptist, Tegina - and to the many whose abductions never made the headlines because Nigeria had run out of capacity to grieve.
You are wishing “Happy Children’s Day” to the at least 1,799 students seized in a dozen of the largest abductions since Chibok , and to the 670 children affected by at least 10 school kidnappings in less than two years - a litany of horror compiled not by your security agencies, but by international human rights organisations doing the work your government refuses to do.
Part One ………..
All he wanted in that moment was one chance, just one, to say a proper goodbye.
His eyes carried the weight of everything he never got to fix.
He begged.
Not with pride, but with a broken, heavy heart.
He wept and called out to them the way only a father can:
“My children, please. We are victims too.”
Nobody answered.
They moved closer.
A knife found his throat.
A camera was already rolling.
He asked himself quietly, is this real?, and for a second, maybe he hoped it wasn’t.
But the blade didn’t lie.
The pain told him everything.
They didn’t stop.
Not until it was over.
Maybe he wasn’t your father.
Maybe he wasn’t from your tribe or your side of the country.
But death doesn’t check your ID or your region before it knocks.
If it could happen to him, it can happen to yours.
2027 is on the table.
And the choice sitting in front of you is simple, choose the money, choose the stomach infrastructure, choose the temporary, and we will bleed like this for another eight years.
The blood is already on the ballot.
Choose wisely.
@fisayoranking@AirtelNigeria I keep turning it off and on… I even change locations… whenever it rains or it windy just forget about the WiFi for like 24-48 hours after
This month subscription on @AirtelNigeria WiFi that expires tonight was a waste of my 30k… I can swear the network was good for only 10days in total out of 30days
Even as we speak I’m browsing with my my data 💔
I think enough time has passed and I can talk about this now
Do you guys remember the young man that was trending some months ago for unaliving a girl and putting her body into bags?
The one that they found with the head of the girl on a motorcycle?
That guy was my neighbour.
I am not just saying we live around the same area o.
I am saying that their gate is directly opposite my family house. Thats how close they lived to us.
Anytime i passed by him back when i lived at home i felt a knot in the pit of my stomach. I couldn’t place it because just by looking at him, nothing was out of the ordinary. He looked regular. Infact sometimes you would hear him singing gospel songs on the top of his lungs .
I remember one time he stopped my younger sister and was asking for her number. Claimed he heard her singing and because he sings too he wanted to be friends.
Per usual my sister came and told all of us in the house. I remember my mum being so on edge she went to their house and told him to never contact her daughter again. This was weird because my sister is not a baby. And it was not like my mum to go and tell young men talking to her daughter to leave her alone.
She did this because of how unsettled she was in her spirit and what I shared with her about how I perceived the guy too.
Imagine my shock when I started seeing videos flying around of this neighbour of ours holding the severed head of a girl. And how the rest of her was found in his room
That was when I understood the knot in my stomach. We were living just beside an expert dissector of young girls
I’m sharing this to say,
As you enter 2026, don’t just live a carnal life. Don’t go about oblivious.
Pay attention to your spirit .
If you have th Holyghost, that is one of your biggest advantages in this life
There are cruel and unreasonable people everywhere. Some of them are closer to you than you think.
This world we live in is a dark place
Make sure, your light burns bright.
See you in 2026.
Blessings!
Is Nigeria cursed, or are we the curse?
The past 10 days in Nigeria have witnessed unprecedented negative news, a level of chaos, insecurity, and institutional decay that should trouble the conscience of all the leaders.
Our country is now going through troubling times, not by fate, but by our collective leadership failures that allow insecurity, lawlessness, and institutional decay to thrive. Each day confronts us with a new tragedy and a new reminder that our beloved country is drifting amid a clear absence of competent, compassionate, responsive and responsible leadership.
We have all watched a nation blessed with people of strength and resilience drift into avoidable disorder. We should be asking ourselves: Are we cursed, or are we the curse?
The past 10 Days in Nigeria
1.11/11/25 – 6 senior directors from the Ministry of Defence were kidnapped along the Kogi axis, reminding us that even those tasked with securing our nation are no longer safe.
2.15/11/25 – A senior military officer, a Brigadier General, was brutally executed, a grave signal of the danger engulfing both civilians and security personnel.
3.16/11/25 – 64 civilians, including women and children, were abducted in Zamfara, with innocent lives also lost in the attack.
4. 17/11/25 – 25 schoolgirls, young children with dreams and innocence, were abducted in Kebbi and their Vice Principal was killed, adding to the heartbreaking list of attacks on our nation’s future.
5. 18/11/25 – Worshippers praying peacefully in a church in Kwara State were violently disrupted, with some killed and about 38 abducted. A place of worship, meant to be a sanctuary, became a scene of fear.
6. 18/11/25 – A disturbing crisis unfolded at the PDP Wadata Plaza headquarters. Instead of de-escalation, elements within the security agencies worsened the situation and further instigated it. Rather than focusing on protecting citizens, the government watched with amusement, encouraging the destruction of political parties and the weakening of our democracy.
7. 18/11/25 – During the All Nigeria Judges’ Conference, judges who should embody neutrality and integrity were seen standing as the APC partisan song “On Your Mandate We Shall Stand” played ahead of the President’s address. This troubling moment further eroded public trust in institutions expected to protect the rule of law.
8. 19/11/25 – Soldiers heading to rescue the Kebbi State abducted schoolgirls were ambushed, showing once again how undersupported our security forces have become.
9. 21/11/25 – Nigerians awoke to the devastating news that over 300 schoolchildren and 12 teachers were abducted from a Catholic school in Niger State.
10.22/11/25 – Bandits opened fire on farmers in Kaduna killing one of them.
23/11/25- Terrorists Ambush, Gun Down 5 Police Officers, Injure 2 in Sabon Sara, Darazo LGA, Bauchi State
November 23, 2025
And just as I was speaking about this, I received yet another devastating report about the abduction of 13 female farmers in Askira-Uba LGA of Borno State today by suspected Boko Haram/ISWAP Terrorists.
No serious nation survives on excuses, indifference, or absentee leadership. What we are witnessing is not inevitable, it is the direct consequence of we the leaders not valuing human life. Nigeria is bleeding because those elected to protect the nation have chosen comfort over courage, politics over people, and power over purpose.
We the leaders must remember that governance is not a title, it is a duty to protect every child, every community, and every citizen. We need competence, compassion, and a government that shows up when it matters the most.
To every Nigerian shaken in these past 10 days, my heart is with you.
You deserve safety, you deserve peace.
We deserve a government that values our lives above politics.
Nigeria must rise again.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
As we go to Church today in the North, some of us will not return home alive.
Some Churches in the North today will be set ablaze and the media won't report it.
As we carry our Bible and walk down the street to Church, our neighbors will murmur, "INFIDELS" wishing us death.
In some Churches today, in the North, gunmen will enter and fire bullets on people and the media won't report it.
On almost every wall and overhead bridge in the North, you'll see the inscription, "FREE PALESTINE, DEATH TO ZIONIST."
Of course, we are not scared of losing our lives again, since we are used to it and have laid it down at HIS feet.
Many people can't remember the last time they went to church in the North, because they are either scared or they have been victims of extremists.
Some of us have lost loved ones in their hands.
To the Elects in the South, please pray for us. Pray for our safety. Pray for our freedom. Pray for help to locate us from Zion.
PRAY FOR THE NORTHERN CHURCH.
DON'T CEASE TO MENTION US IN YOUR PRAYER.
We are being massacred for our faith. We are hated for saying Jesus is the son of God. We are burnt for calling ourselves children of God.
We are kllled for saying JESUS IS GOD—that's our only crime.
PRAY FOR THE NORTHERN CHURCH.
Where I schooled in the North, Christians are not allowed to be course reps, except you don't want peace and orderliness in that class.
Things as simple as departmental election is based on religious sentiment.
I could remember the only time a Christian guy was on his way to victory in one departmental election as the president, a young guy from the other faith snatched the ballot box, walked away with it and soaked everything in a gutter.
Nobody could stand up to him because it'll turn to riot and only one set of people would be expelled.
The HOD declared the election null and void, and made appointment for that session. Guess the people that occupied the positions of his appointment —yes, you guessed right.
Another SUG election, a Christian won as the president for the first time. The school was turned upside-down through protest.
The school election was declared null and void, that it was marred with v!0lent. A post election v!olent that was caused by the losing side.
The same loser was appointed as the SUG president for that session.
The politics you see at the national level bagan from the bottom—classroom.
In Nigeria, certain people are deprived certain rights, basic rights as simple as freedom of worship, Christians don't have in Northern institutions.
Christian sisters wear hijabs to class to avoid harassment from lecturers.
Nobody, regardless of their religion or tribe should be deprived their basic rights.
Either you are from/in the North, East, West or South, you shouldn't be stigmatized or denied certain things because of the God you bow to.
I think it's high time we started speaking out because it's getting worse day by day. If we are one Nigeria, then nobody should be treated better than the other, regardless the region or state, especially in a Federal Government Institution.
SOMETHING MUST BE DONE!
There is a man who needs our help.
He’s a farmer who got attacked by armed terrorist herdsmen that wanted to kill him and take over his farm. In self defence, he killed one of them.
He (not the terrorists) got arrested, jailed and has been sentenced to death by hanging in Nigeria.
His name is Sunday Jackson.
Please lend your voice. You may not have money or power or connection. But you have a voice.
Help #FreeSundayJackson
Let the world hear of this evil injustice.
Say you live in Plateau. You’re 25.
And for the past 10 years (just for example) you have seen communities big and small, get attacked by people screaming “Allahu Akbar” & speaking Hausa & Fula.
These communities get WIPED out. At best, driven off their land.
You see pastors