I sell all types of electronics ranging from generators to cookers as long as it involves making the life of your household easier I’ve got it do well to just dm for good prices and delivery….🚚
Lokoja Judgment: An Unnecessary Serious Setback for Nigerian Democracy
Today was an exceptionally busy day. I left Lagos in the early hours for Emekuku, where I visited the School of Nursing Sciences, an institution I have consistently supported over the years. It was gratifying to inspect projects funded through my previous interventions, including the school’s computer laboratory. Such investments reaffirm my belief that education remains one of the strongest foundations for national development.
From there, I attended the 80th birthday celebration of the Emeritus Archbishop of Owerri, Most Rev. Dr Anthony Obinna, whose commitment to justice, peace, and the common good has inspired many, before proceeding to Madonna University for another engagement.
It was at Madonna University that I received the court news of the Lokoja court rulings through my brother, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso.
Every Nigerian committed to the country’s progress should be deeply concerned. This judgment represents another setback for our democracy and the institutions upon which our future depends.
It is regrettable that some who claim to champion democracy now appear determined to weaken the very institutions that sustain it. In doing so, they are undermining public confidence and endangering the future of millions of Nigerians.
The legislature and the judiciary are increasingly being drawn into this pattern of institutional decline. Democracy cannot thrive where institutions lose their independence and credibility.
Those who seek to weaken Nigeria’s democratic foundations will not ultimately prevail. When a similar situation recently affected the ADC, I condemned it without hesitation. I do so again today because my position has always been guided by principle.
My concern is not about who becomes President. My concern is that Nigeria works. Our politics must move beyond the quest for power and focus instead on building a united nation founded on justice, strong institutions, the rule of law, and equal opportunity. That is the Nigeria we owe ourselves and the one we must leave for future generations.
I therefore urge all well-meaning Nigerians to rise above partisan interests and defend our democracy. The survival of our institutions is inseparable from the survival of our nation. It's when we work together that a new Nigeria of our dream is made POssible. -PO
State Police: Commendable Step, but Disorderly Legislation Raises Concerns of Political Misuse
The recent passage of the State Police Bill by the National Assembly marks a significant legislative milestone in addressing a long-standing demand of the Nigerian people. For years, many of us, alongside security experts and regional stakeholders, have consistently argued that a highly centralised policing structure is fundamentally unsuitable for a country as vast, diverse, and complex as Nigeria. However, the legislative and constitutional implementation appears shaky and raises legitimate concerns.
The process should involve greater community participation. Policing should be more visible at the local government and community levels. The mechanism for passing the law appears highly disorganised, with no public hearing on such a sensitive issue. Indeed, the rush to enact the law without proper legislative procedures fuels suspicion among many observers about the political motives behind it.
The greatest concern does not arise from logistical issues; it stems from history. There is a widespread, justifiable fear that state police forces could become instruments in the hands of governors. The suspicion is that a state-controlled police force could be weaponised to suppress political rivals, disrupt opposition rallies, and manipulate elections.
For state policing to evolve from a risky political gamble into a genuine security solution, the law must not only permit states to establish police forces but also clearly provide for independent oversight bodies, such as a state-level Police Service Commission that is entirely free from executive influence, to ensure that policing serves the public interest rather than the interests of the ruling elite.
Going by what Nigerians have seen so far, there is no guarantee that this administration can resist the temptation to take advantage of state policing to influence the 2027 general election by proxy. In view of that possibility and the danger it poses to the polity, it is necessary to defer its implementation until after the general election.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
PVC registrations at UNIPORT ongoing….
Me wey Dey go help INEC, na me dem Dey pressure to settle who Dey give us table and chair😂💔
But no wam, anything for a NEW NIGERIA🙏🏻🙇♂️
I used to think like you years ago but in 2019 I received the shocker of my life when discussing with some politicians then I realized that a significant number of people in political positions have no clue why they are there. if the knowledgeable ones don’t join politics we will continue to cry. And the crafty politicians will overrun us all
So it is deliberate when they frustrate us so we can back out , since I understood the game , I too decided to be doctor in the day and a full “local woman “ at night because that is where majority of Nigerians are. We can only help our country if we are in the majority. I love medicine yes but if we have a greater course someone must start belling the cat.
All professionals please stop running away from politics. Our strength as a Nation is tied to who governs us QED.
I went to Mile 1 market PH, today for PVC Mobilization, Sensitization, Registration, Data Corrections, and Change of Polling Units etc.
My target was the Market Women!
I was shocked at the responses🔥❤️
Omo Market Women are more politically conscious than a lot of Social Media Youths
80% of the Women I approached already had their PVCs, I only changed polling Units for fewer than 20 Women.
And their Opinions about Nigeria & Tinubu?😂💀
Make Nobody whine you, TINUBU has been CANCELED❌
Don't be deceived!
Rigging an election is not EASY⚠️‼️
It is our collective weakness and nonchalance that's giving Politicians the space to RIG‼️
If we mount our collective Polling Units, LGA, & State Collation centers, they can't DO SHIT✌️
Hi @PoliceNG_CRU,
We made real progress today.
One of the notorious trigger-happy police officers was apprehended this evening.
He disguised himself as a concerned prosecutor right inside Akinpelu Police Station in the Oshodi Arena area, but my staff quickly recognized him. They caught him secretly taking pictures of me and forwarding them to his cartel members while simultaneously asking me to provide my home address, office address, and phone number.
We did not want to take the law into our own hands, but the DCO immediately ordered his men to detain him, seize his phone, delete all the pictures of me that he had secretly taken, and have him remanded.
His cartel members are still at large, including those who pointed an AK-47 at my head.
I will not rest until they are all brought to justice.
Thank you for your swift coordination and response to this matter.
"If you can find any instance where I stole or misappropriated one kobo of state funds come to me and I will stop campaigning."
~ Peter Gregory Obi 2022 & 2026
It's been more than 4 years now since He left office and BOLDLY made this claim yet “ICPC, EFCC, DSS, NPF, NA, NAVY, CIVIL DEFENSE, AIR FORCE, NCC, APC, PDP, LP, ADC” and all his haters haven't been able to point to one instance. Just one!
@PeterObi thank you very much your excellency for making it easy to stan, Re-stan & support you.
Thank you for being a worthy role model. ✅✌🏾
FIVE THINGS AKIN GOT WRONG ABOUT TINUBU'S "WINS"
Akin means well. But meaning well and being right are two different things.
Let's go point by point.
1. "Fiscal reforms freed up resources."
Freed them up for whom, Akin? FAAC distributions jumped 79% in 2024. States got more. Yet over 129 million Nigerians now live below the poverty line, an increase of 25 million. Are these Nigerians imagining the hunger in their stomachs? A 2024 Afrobarometer survey found 62% of Nigerians say the subsidy removal worsened their living conditions, while only 18% think the savings are being used effectively. More money to governments. Less prosperity to people. That is not a win. That is a transfer.
2. "GDP growth of 3.89%. Economic stabilization."
The number is real. The framing is fantasy. For civil servants, teachers, and small business owners, the 3.89% growth has minimal impact on personal finances. The daily cost of a healthy diet doubled over 12 months. Poverty is now estimated at 56%. Posting GDP without posting poverty and inflation figures is a half-truth, which is another word for a lie.
3. "1.5 million students gaining access via NELFUND."
The actual figure as of March 2026 is 1.16 million, not 1.5 million. Akin's 1.5 million figure is not supported by NELFUND's own confirmed disbursement data as of March 2026. Beyond the numbers: irregular payments, weak communication, poor transparency, inconsistent disbursement and administrative inefficiencies. The ICPC investigated reports that of N100 billion released for the scheme, only N28.8 billion, less than 29 kobo of every naira, reached students. The monthly upkeep is N20,000. In this economy. This is not education reform. It is a press release dressed as policy.
4. "Reserves at $50 billion+, a 17-year peak."
The $50 billion headline is real. What Akin is not telling you is that gross reserves and net reserves are not the same thing. Net foreign exchange reserves, the actual unencumbered buffer after deducting short-term liabilities, stood at $34.80 billion at end-2025. The difference is over $15 billion in obligations already spoken for.
Beyond that, the IMF warned that rapid reserve accumulation may be slowing the naira's adjustment toward fair value, with the naira still undervalued by about 25.6%. Strong reserves built on a structurally weak currency is not stability. It is a managed illusion. You can celebrate the trend, but audit the headline.
5. "Infrastructure: roads, rail, dams, aviation."
Activity is not outcomes. The real question is: who is getting the contracts, how, and at what cost?
Under Tinubu, Chagoury has become Nigeria's infrastructure landlord. The $11 billion Lagos-Calabar Highway, awarded without competitive bidding. The N1.1 trillion Tin Can and Apapa ports contract, awarded despite no seaport construction experience. A 45-year Snake Island Port concession. Three mega-contracts. One man. No open bidding. Meanwhile, the President's son Seyi sits on the board of a Chagoury Group subsidiary, then goes on television to say his father is not enriching himself or his friends. That is not infrastructure. That is a billing arrangement dressed as nation-building.
Akin, you promised five things they haven't gotten right tomorrow. We will be watching. Nigerians deserve analysis that treats them as adults, not talking points that treat them as an audience.