Two ladies went to visit Mr David Umahi for God knows what. Many says it’s for mekwa.
One of the ladies died naked and Umahi didn’t tell the police immediately, instead an ambulance was brought in to carry the dead body out.
He kept it secret.
It took Sahara Reporters to blow the horny cover open and when Umahi responded, he said they are medical physiotherapists deployed to SERVICE HIM SPECIFICALLY. What kind of service that’s special to him when he has no medical needs that demands physio?
The Umahi Teaching Hospital that he claimed deployed them to him has no business doing such. Umahi has lots of questions to answer.
If a girl dies in the house of a poor man, he will be in police custody by now. Umahi should be in one. That’s the only debate he should be having right now and not with Peter Obi.
Who killed the girl?
Who sucked her breasts when it was opened?
Who stripped her naked?
Do doctors now carry out physio work naked?
Umahi is a culprit
The second that went for the adventurous journey must not be killed and not also be bribed, as she’s the only eye witness alive. We know that what dollars cannot do in this kind of case does not exist.
When Tracy accused him of being a horny goat, he denied it even though no Nigerian believed him. Two months after, one proof seems to be coming out. This cannot be swept under the carpet.
Umahi must not go scot free in this.
This 15-year-old boy, Bassey Stephen Etim, won today's Sterling Bank Online National Mathematics Quiz.
He is currently an SS2 student at Dority International Secondary School, Aba, Abia State.
He outperformed every other student who participated from across the country.
Another star has been discovered.
For Arteta and Chelsea, football rivalry ends on the pitch as it should be. Arteta does not witch hunt Chelsea to get undue advantage…if he does, he’s subject to an independent umpire ….thats more of a democratic setting than what you people do here.
Arsenal and spurs are rivals but Arsenal players visited Xavi Simmons at the hospital. That’s respect. This your analogy doesn’t work in the Nigerian context.
Dumbass, opposition is not supposed to be your enemy in a multi-party democracy. They are more like your team players in developing the country. You just don't share the same methods or ideology. You weaken them; you weaken your country.
Stick to animal nomenclature, maybe.
The Role of the Diaspora African in Sustainable Development
On Friday, July 10, 2026, I had the honour of delivering the keynote address at Mandela Hall, African Union Permanent Observer Mission to the United Nations in New York, on _The Role of the Diaspora African in Sustainable Development across Africa.
Africa is a continent of immense riches. Indeed, it is the richest continent in the world, not only because of its vast mineral resources but also because of its greatest asset, its people. It is the second largest continent by landmass, after Asia, covering more than 30 million square kilometres. It is also the second most populous continent, with over 1.5 billion people. Significantly, more than one billion of these are young people in their productive years, making Africa home to the largest youthful workforce in the world.
When this demographic advantage is combined with nearly one billion hectares of arable land, about 60% of which remains uncultivated, it becomes clear that Africa possesses everything required not only to feed itself but also to become the food capital of the world.
Regrettably, despite this enormous potential, Africa remains home to the largest concentration of the world’s poorest people. Of the approximately 800 million people living in extreme poverty globally, nearly 60% are in Africa. That is about 480 million people, with Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo among the countries most affected. In other words, nearly one in every three Africans lives in extreme poverty. Likewise, in multidimensional poverty, Africa continues to bear the greatest burden.
The question, therefore, is simple. With all these advantages, why has Africa not been able to lift its people out of poverty?
It means there is a missing link. That missing link is Competent Leadership with Capacity, Compassion, Character, and Commitment to good governance.
What Africa needs is leadership that will rise to the challenge and drive the continent in the right direction. This means competent leadership with character, capacity, compassion and commitment to begin turning the continent around. When we get leadership right, everything else begins to change. We start realising our true potential.
So, what is the role of the Diaspora African in this journey?
You have an enormous role to play.
Because you live in societies where institutions largely work, where democracy is strengthened by accountability and where systems function more effectively, you have both an opportunity and a responsibility to help build Africa. It is time to become stronger advocates for good governance. Even where you cannot vote, your voices matter. They should be heard both at home and abroad whenever things are going wrong on our continent. Stand firmly for what is right. Speak truth to the leaders who visit you. Let them know where they are getting it wrong. That is what some of us have continued to do.
The contribution of the African diaspora extends far beyond advocacy. History teaches us that many of the world’s great economic transformations were driven, in part, by their diaspora communities.
Japan offers one example. Following the Meiji Restoration of 1868, the country embraced modernisation and benefited immensely from Japanese scholars, professionals and citizens who studied and worked abroad, especially in Germany, before returning home to drive the technological transformation for which Japan is admired today.
China presents another remarkable example. It was under Deng Xiaoping’s reforms, beginning in 1978, that China embraced education, innovation and global engagement. These reforms created opportunities for the Chinese diaspora to contribute significantly to the country’s extraordinary economic transformation. In 1980, China had more people living in poverty than Africa. Today, China has reduced extreme poverty dramatically, while Africa continues to struggle with the challenge.
You see what Bellingham and Mbappe are doing is exactly the kind of football that made us call players from older generations GOATs. The difference is the era they’re playing in.
If they were producing these performances in Older generations, their legacy as all-time greats would already be almost untouchable. But because they’re playing in the post-Messi and Ronaldo era, the bar has been raised to a ridiculous level.
Bellingham is 22 and already controls games with the maturity of a veteran. He dictates tempo, wins duels, scores decisive goals, creates chances, and always seems to show up when the stakes are highest. Mbappe has been deciding the biggest matches in football for years with numbers and performances that would define an entire career for most players.
The standards have simply changed. Being world-class isn’t enough anymore. Fans expect sustained dominance for 15-20 years, Ballon d’Ors, Champions Leagues, World Cups, and ridiculous consistency before they even enter the GOAT conversation.
That’s how much Messi and Ronaldo changed football. They didn’t just set records, they redefined what greatness looks like. Now every new superstar has to climb a mountain that barely existed before.
🚨🎙️ Iker Casillas on Sanne Lammens’ costly mistake for Belgium:
🗣️ “This one will hurt, it really would. You have to feel for him. It’s your debut, it’s the World Cup, a tournament that only comes around every four years, and within a few minutes it feels like you’ve let everything slip away.”
🗣️ “But this is how many great goalkeepers are made. If you ask the best in the world, almost every one of them will tell you they’ve had a moment like this. The difference is what you do after it.”
🗣️ “Only the people who want to criticize will remember the mistake. The people who truly believe in you will stay behind you, because they know one moment doesn’t define a goalkeeper.”
🗣️ “I promise you, this experience will stay with you for the rest of your career. It will hurt, it won’t let you sleep for a while, but sometimes those are the moments that push you to become a better player.”
🗣️ “Keep your head up. Don’t run away from this moment—learn from it. One day you’ll look back and realise this disappointment was the beginning of your growth, not the end of your story.” 🧤❤️