🚨 1 Million Fake Doctors, Nurses & Engineers? India Busts Shocking Racket Selling 100K+ Counterfeit Degrees — Global Trust in Crisis
Is Your Doctor Actually a REAL Doctor?
MAJOR BUST: Kerala Police arrested 11 suspects in a massive pan-India fake degree racket. Over 100,000 counterfeit certificates seized from 22 universities — medicine, nursing & engineering — with estimates of up to 1 MILLION fake degrees in circulation worldwide.
Raids across Kerala, Tamil Nadu & Karnataka uncovered printers, fake seals, holograms & forged signatures. Degrees sold for ₹75k–1.5L each, used for jobs & visas abroad, including in the U.S.
Lives are on the line. How many “qualified” professionals slipped through?
Integrity matters.
#FakeDegrees #IndiaNews
Nigeria Green Tax Wahala: Dem Dey Tax Poor People While World Don Move On
At the time wey Nigerians dey battle serious inflation wey never happen before, naira don scatter, and basic infrastructure don almost collapse finish, Tinubu government don find new policy objective: creative extortion.
Under one thin cover wey dem call “clean transport” and “fiscal reform,” government don come for your car engine size. E for funny if the matter no serious like this; na clear example of leaders wey no connect with reality at all.
Make we talk am clear: this no be about environment. Na about government wey don run out of ideas and now dey find money from pocket of middle class wey don already suffer tire.
Global Mirage
Government dey try play international big man by copying climate policies wey don already dey fall apart for Western countries. United States wey sell more new motor in a day than dem dey sell for Nigeria in a year, cancell ALL greenhouse emission standards for vehicles. Meanwhile, under Tinubu, Nigeria dey double down on greenhouse standards, something wey no real. Na like person wey wan build mansion on top swamp. This no be policy; na imitation without capacity.
Nigeria no get working power grid. Millions of people and businesses dey depend on petrol and diesel generators just to survive. For country wey public transport no dey reliable, transportation no be choice, na survival. Yet, policymakers for Abuja decide to put 2% to 4% surcharge on imported cars wey pass 2000cc.
To make matters worse, wetin dem call “luxury” no be "luxury" at all. To Tinubu, 2000cc engine be like say na rich man level. But in reality, na the normal cars wey Nigerians dey use every day. No be Ferrari, no be private jet. Na the cars wey fit handle bad roads and long distance.
Make we break am down, these na normal cars wey plenty Nigerians dey use wey fall inside this category:
Toyota Camry (2.4L / 2.5L)
Honda Accord (2.4L / 2.0T)
Toyota RAV4 (2.5L)
Lexus RX 350 (3.5L V6)
Toyota Highlander (2.7L / 3.5L)
Honda Pilot (3.5L)
Nissan X-Trail (2.5L)
Mercedes-Benz C300 (2.0L Turbo)
BMW 3 Series (330i variants)
Toyota Venza (2.5L)
To call 2008 Camry “luxury” no make sense at all. These na tools wey middle class dey use take go work because government never provide any real alternative.
Government wey no fit provide 24-hour light no suppose dey punish people because of engine type. We no get charging infrastructure. We no get EV manufacturing capacity. We no even get stable currency to support that kind transition.
Wetin we get na government wey dey find revenue everywhere and see every car owner as ATM. This no be environmental policy; na fiscal opportunism. Rich people no go feel am, dem go just add am to cost. But average Nigerian wey already dey struggle with food price and fuel cost now dey pay extra “green tax” just to drive old Toyota for bad road or to take transport.
Good policy dey solve problems. This one dey create more problems and still charge people for the so-called solution. This no be leadership. Na extraction.
He was arrested attempting to bomb a church in Kaduna. He initially claimed to be a Muslim named Muhammad, but during interrogation, confessed to being a Christian named Samuel Nathaniel, from Southern Kaduna, hired for the task.
Do you still not know why they keep emphasizing that terrorists only chant "Allahu Akbar" before killing, not Jesus' name?
NIGERIA RECORDED A HIGHER NUMBER OF POOR PEOPLE THAN INDIA
Population:
🇮🇳India — 1.45 billion
🇳🇬Nigeria — 232.68 million
Poverty Rate (< $3/day):
🇳🇬Nigeria — 41.8%
🇮🇳India — 5.3%
Population living in poverty:
🇳🇬Nigeria — 97.26 million
🇮🇳India — 76.85 million
India's 5.3% poverty rate resulted in 76.85 million people living in poverty.
Nigeria had 97.26 million people below the $3/day mark.
Nigeria had 20.41 million more poor people than India despite India having a population 1.2 billion people larger than Nigeria's total.
#Statisense
(World Bank, 2024 & 2022)
US Congressman, Scott Perry confessed USAID funded Boko Haram under Barack Obama, which carried out terror attacks in Cameroon 🇨🇲, Nigeria 🇳🇬, Chad 🇹🇩, and Niger 🇳🇪.
My Responses to Questions & Closing Remarks at the Professor Falola Panel
In this segment, I address key issues including:
1. Allegations of Mob killings in Northern Nigeria
2. The rise of extremism in the region
3. The question of Shari'ah Law and Courts
For those asking for the full video, please find the link below.
Sarcastic Sunday: Tinubu’s Amnesty — But Who Will Pardon The President? - Part 1
October 12, 2025
By Mohammed Bello Doka
Welcome to Sarcastic Sunday with Mohammed Bello Doka, where we study Nigeria’s political gymnastics sarcastically — because doing otherwise will choke us to death.
Another Sunday, another miracle from Aso Rock. President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has opened the gates of mercy wide enough to let even the devil stroll through with a presidential handshake. In one sweeping act of compassion, he has granted amnesty to a long list of convicts — from drug traffickers to murderers — because, apparently, Nigeria has become a land where crime not only pays but also gets state-sponsored forgiveness.
Yes, it’s official: repentance is no longer the path to redemption — all you need now is a presidential signature. Some say it’s an act of grace, others call it national comedy. I call it what it truly is — "The Federal Republic of Forgiveness, Unlimited."
Among those pardoned were convicted drug offenders, financial criminals, and even a woman accused of killing her husband. Only in Nigeria can a widow-maker receive state mercy while widows are still waiting for food palliatives. Maybe it’s all part of our gender equality agenda — equal opportunities for everyone, including killers.
And let’s not pretend the irony isn’t loud enough to wake the ancestors. For a president once accused of forfeiting $460,000 to the U.S. authorities in a drug-linked investigation, pardoning drug dealers feels less like compassion and more like a class reunion of the cartel alumni association. The man was never convicted, yes, but the whispers have never faded — especially now that his government is doing everything possible to block the FBI from releasing the files.
Nigeria, oh Nigeria. We are now a country where forgiveness is selective and justice wears designer sunglasses. When a poor man steals a loaf of bread, he becomes an example; when a rich man steals the bakery, he becomes a motivational speaker.
“In Nigeria, sin is not the problem — it’s poverty that makes sin unforgivable.”
They told us it was about decongesting the prisons, but we all know that’s a lie. Our prisons were full of the wrong people anyway — the small thieves, the unlucky youths, the street hustlers who couldn’t afford lawyers. Now, the presidential broom has swept them aside to make room for a new kind of elite: the VIP ex-convicts, freshly laundered and ready for political appointments.
“Our democracy has evolved — from government of the people to government of the pardoned.”
Let’s not forget the economic theatre in which this pardon was staged. Inflation is currently hovering around 24.23%, food inflation sits at 21.79%, and the naira, our beloved national symbol, is now ₦1,600 to a dollar. That means the newly approved ₦70,000 minimum wage amounts to a majestic $43.75 per month — or roughly $1.45 per day.
Congratulations, dear Nigerian worker. You are now officially poorer than the World Bank’s global poverty line of $2.15 per day. Even your suffering has gone international.
“The naira didn’t just fall — it fainted, revived, and fainted again.”
Over 54% of Nigerians now live below the poverty line. In rural areas, it’s 75.5%, while 41.3% of urban dwellers are also broke with dignity. But don’t worry — the government insists that better days are coming. The only problem is, those days are coming by road, and bad roads don’t let progress arrive on time.
And while citizens tighten belts they no longer wear, insecurity tightens the noose. Banditry, kidnapping, and terrorism have become part of our national anthem. Every day, Nigerians are abducted faster than policy promises. Yet, in the middle of it all, the government found time to pardon criminals. Maybe they’re freeing the bandits so they can come back and register for next year’s empowerment programmes.
Tinubu’s Reckless Use of Presidential Pardon Undermines Justice and Emboldens Criminality
The recent announcement of a presidential pardon by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has, as expected, provoked outrage across the nation.
Ordinarily, the power of presidential pardon is a solemn prerogative, a moral and constitutional instrument designed to temper justice with mercy and to underscore the humanity of the state. When properly exercised, it elevates justice and strengthens public faith in governance.
Regrettably, the latest pardon issued by the Tinubu administration has done the very opposite. The decision to extend clemency to individuals convicted of grave crimes such as drug trafficking, kidnapping, murder, and corruption not only diminishes the sanctity of justice but also sends a dangerous signal to the public and the international community about the values this government upholds.
At a time when Nigeria continues to reel under the weight of insecurity, moral decay, and a surge in drug-related offences, it is both shocking and indefensible that the presidency would prioritize clemency for those whose actions have directly undermined national stability and social order.
Particularly worrisome is the revelation that 29.2% percent of those pardoned were convicted for drug-related crimes at a time when our youth are being destroyed by narcotics, and our nation is still struggling to cleanse its image from the global stain of drug offences.
Even more disturbing is the moral irony that this act of clemency is coming from a President whose own past remains clouded by unresolved and unexplained issues relating to the forfeiture of thousands of dollars to the United States government over drug-related investigations. It is, therefore, no surprise that this administration continues to demonstrate a worrying tolerance for individuals associated with criminal enterprise.
A presidential pardon is meant to symbolize restitution and moral reform. Instead, what we have witnessed is a mockery of the criminal justice system, an affront to victims, a demoralization of law enforcement, and a grave injury to the conscience of the nation.
Clemency must never be confused with complicity. When a government begins to absolve offenders of the very crimes it claims to be fighting, it erodes the moral authority of leadership and emboldens lawlessness.
Nigeria deserves a leadership that upholds justice, not one that trivializes it. -AA
A Message to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu (@officialABAT), politicians, and other constituted authorities — on the matter of presidential pardon, and the Islamic remedies toward building a better and more prosperous Nigeria.
Shaykh Dr. Imrān AbdulMajīd Eleha
Kindly retweet wide so others can benefit .
“Nigeria is a sovereign nation not a banana republic” — Aliyu Ibrahim Gebi
This video should be retweeted every single minute. The link to the full interview is under the thread..
Repost for awareness! Fisabilillah🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Let's fight this evil together. The fact remains: nobody denies that both Christians and Muslims are affected by insurgency in Nigeria, but Muslims are disproportionately affected. Any sensible Nigerian knows that 'Christian genocide' narratives is very dangerous national security and it is divisive.
Dangote vs NUPENG:
Not disputing that Aliko Dangote is a huge blessing to this nation and many others.
He is the biggest investor, manufacturer and entrepreneur in this part of the world. He is the biggest private employer of labour in Nigeria.
I love him and I have shown that on this page pro bono.
Just before Dangote Refinery started production, I was informed about how Dangote does not pay well his employers at the refinery.
I was properly briefed but at that time what was important to me and to all true genuine lovers of this country was to see the $19bn refinery work so that from being a major importer of refined petroleum products, we can become a major exporter of same.
And because I would be grossly misunderstood if I said what I knew at that time, I kept quiet to wait for the right time to speak.
The refinery has since started production and we give glory to God.
We have started exporting to other countries including the United States of America.
Ghana, Cameroon etc are quiuing up to buy from us but what about the welfare of those employed in the company?
Yes, it is a private business and an employer have the right to determine how his workers are paid but it is unjust to be unfairly paid when compared to other big players in the oil and gas sector. (It is a private business but when he needed our voice against the funny game by NNPCL, we we gave him. No one said it's a private business then).
It is not right to pay a certain level of staff between N300k and N500k when smaller players in the same industry in the same country pay same level of workers over N2m (for example).
I know that trade unionism have been bastardized and a good example is the formerly respectable NBA. They were fighting over souvenirs, breaking chairs in one of their recent national conferences. The last one, they gave some people who haven't practiced for 3 years prominence in their seating arrangement among other agbero conducts.
These are some things they do that make right thinking Nigerians wonder if they should be taken seriously.
However, Dangote knows the implications of allowing his workers to join the National Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG).
He knows that their salary structure and other benefits will have to be adjusted and come close to what is obtained in that golden sector and he does not want that.
That is the truth.
I was a 'boy' on the side of the management in a big company where I worked in Ibadan and because I attended meetings with the union, I know first hand the importance of trade union in big establishments.
Employers are not Father Christmas but workers should not be slaves too.
The essence of a trade union is first to protect the interest of its members against the natural tendency of the employer to want to exploit them.
A lot of people who have spoken in support of Dangote on this matter do not know how poorly his workers in the refinery are paid when compared to smaller players in that sector.
It is the Indians that are well paid, not Nigerians and that is the truth, they are paid $4k in same job that a Nigerian will be paid $300.
Dangote must realize that as he prospers and his business grows, his workers too deserve good pay and other benefits.
It is a good step that he has agreed to unionization of his workers in the refinery.
They should be well paid. I know what I am talking about.
#copied and I pray many more people will speak the truth!
Again, I love how FG is handling this fiasco!