“INEC, we came here to warn you. If you know you are prepared to be used to rig the 2027 election, it’s better you write your will now.”
— Concerned Nigerians have spoken.
President Trump just brought tears to millions
“I am PROUD to join Christians around the world to celebrate Jesus Christ’s resurrection.”
God is Good! 🙏
@dammiedammie35 This woman not get sense.. they are chasing criminals in their country and you as a foreigner you are angry ? Anyone holding you from leaving?
God bless the President of the great United States 🇺🇸.. God bless America . Without President Donald J Trump, Homosexual , transsexual lGBT would have been forced upon all men and women .
This is how the fascist orange man @realdonaldtrump keeps his base intoxicated by waving Jesus Christ like a campaign prop.
He knows the oldest scam in politics is to claim godliness loudly enough, and people stop thinking.
It’s not faith, it’s fraud. And it takes a wicked man to practice it.
ERA OF FINANCIAL RECKLESSNESS
Financial recklessness is increasingly becoming normalized in our country. Just last week, it was alarmingly reported that the President approved the write-off of ₦5.57 trillion and $1.42 billion—approximately ₦8 trillion—in debts owed by NNPC, a company that recently announced profits and claimed it had turned a new leaf.
This is the same agency currently facing serious audit inquiries for failing to account for ₦210 trillion, an amount that far exceeds the combined Federal budgets of Nigeria from 2023 to 2026. For context, the Federal Government’s budgets for these years were approximately: ₦21.83 trillion for 2023, ₦43.56 trillion for 2024, ₦54.99 trillion for 2025, and an estimated ₦58.18 trillion for 2026. The total budget for these four years amounts to roughly ₦178.56 trillion.
Nigerians are still waiting for the outcome of the National Assembly investigation into the missing trillions. This company is also under scrutiny for trillions spent on non-functional refineries. Yet, the President, who also serves as the Minister in charge, has approved the write-off of about ₦8 trillion in NNPC debts.
Nigerians, already enduring severe hardships due to the removal of petroleum and electricity subsidies—with no tangible improvements in their lives—are now confronted with this unexplained debt forgiveness. The nearly ₦8 trillion write-off will effectively replace revenue that the government is currently seeking through unfair taxation.
It is imperative that the government provides a clear and transparent justification for the write-off, given the immense impact such a large amount of resources could have on national development.
This almost ₦8 trillion write-off could have generated the revenue the government now seeks through these unfair taxes. The amount exceeds the 2025 combined Federal budget allocations for education, health, and agriculture, which total ₦7.1 trillion. In practical terms, this money alone could fully fund critical areas of development, lifting millions of Nigerians out of poverty and significantly reducing the over 130 million people currently living in poverty in the country.
The write-off sum of ₦8 trillion is nearly twice the 2025 Federal Security budget of ₦4.9 trillion, even as insecurity continues to devastate communities across the nation.
Such resources could empower 8 million youths—10% of the 80 million unemployed—creating approximately 1,000 jobs for each of the 8,809 wards, thus substantially reducing the 130 million impoverished individuals in the country.
The President, who is also the Minister, owes the Nigerian people clear answers. The citizens deserve honesty, fiscal discipline, and governance that protects their interests—not the interests of mismanaged corporations or political elites.
This betrayal of the people must be stopped.
A New Nigeria is POssible. -PO
@USinNigeria The United States shud support Nigeria in restoring safety by helping to combat terrorism thru intelligence sharing ,training, and security cooperation. At d same time, Nigerian govt must know that gud roads ,quality edu,and strong health care services are essential for ....
WHAT YOU MAY HAVE MISSED IN NIGERIA (LAST 72 HOURS)
While global attention has shifted to Iran and Venezuela, mass violence continues in Nigeria with little international attention.
Over the past three days:
• At least 30 civilians were killed in a coordinated attack on the village of Kasuwan-Daji in Niger State.
• Armed attackers arrived on motorcycles, burned homes and markets, abducted civilians, and operated for hours without effective security response.
• Survivors report indiscriminate firing and targeted destruction of civilian infrastructure.
At the same time:
• Nigerian authorities confirmed U.S.-backed airstrikes against Islamist-linked militant camps in northern Nigeria, warning civilians to avoid unexploded ordnance.
• The strikes highlight the scale of the extremist threat and the limits of local containment.
Civil society response:
• The Christian Association of Nigeria and Plateau-based youth coalitions publicly warned that ongoing attacks amount to a systematic campaign against Christian communities, citing repeated village massacres, church burnings, and mass displacement.
• They are calling for urgent international attention and protection.
The dispute:
• Nigerian officials and some international analysts argue the violence is driven by banditry, jihadist insurgency, land disputes, and state collapse, not a legally defined genocide.
• Others point to patterns of targeting, geography, and victims and say the refusal to name it delays accountability.
The reality:
Regardless of terminology, civilians are being slaughtered, kidnapped, and displaced, entire communities are being erased, and the crisis continues largely unnoticed by the global media cycle.
Silence does not make this disappear. It only guarantees it continues. So please share.
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I honestly don’t understand the kind of politics that would push someone to disrespect their own country publicly. No matter our differences or frustrations, Nigeria is not a failed state to be spoken of with such contempt. The plain truth is that Nigeria is not Venezuela.
After Venezuela, maybe Nigeria will be next, because we are also being ruled by cartels, from state governments to the federal level. Nigerians are being held hostage and are currently helpless.
You are right, Nigeria is not Venezuela--it is worse than Venezuela. Venezuela had a drug lord President. Nigeria has a drug lord President, and a Boko Haram Vice President.
Nigerians need to make this video go viral and push it everywhere. The raw passion in his voice, the anger, the hunger, the desperation feels like a nation speaking through one man. I’ve rarely seen any content creator confront Tinubu this directly, without fear or soft language.