Sunday Igbogho threatened to KILL Fulanis in SW over the kidnap of Yorubas.
Yorubas are hailing him for "protecting SW".
NIGERIAN GOVT IS QUIET.
But when Nnamdi Kanu and ESN chased Fulanis out of SE, it was classed as "terrorism".
NIGERIA MUST DIVIDE‼️
Only a matter of time!
Owning Up to Leadership Failures and Political Responsibility
This morning, I listened to the British Prime Minister’s speech announcing his planned resignation in July. As a keen observer of global politics, my primary interest lies in examining what successful nations do right and the structural factors that cause others to lag or struggle with governance and development.
The Prime Minister’s planned resignation comes amid mounting public frustration over a stagnant economy, a worsening cost-of-living crisis, and a perceived failure to honour key campaign pledges.
Looking inward in our dear country, we can recall our own situation. Before 2015, our President on several occasions championed the call for the then President Goodluck Jonathan to resign over economic hardship and insecurity affecting Nigerians. During the Chibok school kidnapping incident, he demanded the immediate resignation of President Jonathan, arguing that the government had failed in its most fundamental duty of protecting lives.
During the 2023 election campaign, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu made several promises, including improved electricity supply. He also challenged the electorate not to vote for him for a second term if he failed to deliver on those commitments—particularly in providing stable power, fighting corruption, and improving the welfare of Nigerians.
At present, however, these conditions have worsened. Electricity supply remains unreliable, insecurity has intensified in many areas, including kidnappings, and economic hardship has deepened rather than eased. Similar concerns are reflected across other critical sectors such as security, infrastructure, transportation, and anti-corruption efforts, all of which have regressed. We are in the worst possible condition.
I, therefore, join Nigerians of goodwill in calling for the resignation of the President over monumental failure in governance. Such a gesture would help enthrone a political culture rooted in accountability and responsibility, rather than further entrenching impunity. It would also send a powerful message that public office is a sacred trust, not an entitlement, and help build a society in which future leaders understand that failure carries consequences. Only by ending the culture of impunity can we secure a better future for the society our children will inherit in a New Nigeria that is possible. -PO
Those kids remained in captivity with their caregivers!!!!! Let that sink in. It’s an attack on our collective humanity. Terrorist are saying to us “We have power over you”… Whatever the motive is (Political/religious/ethnic) does not count now… The only thing that we should all agree on is “FREE THOSE KIDS AND THEIR CARERS AND JUSTICE SHOULD BE SERVED ON THE TERRORIST”
🟥 Inter's Jones Valuation Is Absurd
There are two Curtis Jones debates happening at once, and too many people are muddling them up.
The first is whether Liverpool should sell him this summer. The answer is probably yes. The contract situation has drifted to a point where the player and the club appear to see his future through entirely different lenses. Jones believes he is a starting midfielder deserving of wages that reflect that status. Liverpool appear to view him as a valuable squad player. Even with a new manager coming in, that gap rarely closes once it has widened this far.
After watching Liverpool lose valuable assets for little or nothing in recent years, it would be difficult to argue against exploring a sale.
The second debate is about what Curtis Jones is actually worth.
That is where Inter are taking the piss.
You don't have to believe Jones is Liverpool's future captain. You don't have to believe he is world-class. I certainly don't. The truth sits somewhere between the extremes. He's neither a Championship player nor the second coming of Andrea Pirlo.
He is a 25-year-old, homegrown midfielder with more than 200 Liverpool appearances, Premier League titles, European experience, versatility across multiple positions and years of top-level coaching behind him.
That player is not worth £21.7 million in today's market.
Liverpool should not be bullied into accepting a fee that would barely cover the cost of finding a lesser replacement. Homegrown players carry a premium. Academy-developed players carry a premium. Premier League clubs understand that better than anyone.
If Liverpool can find a buyer willing to pay a sensible fee, sell. If £21.7 million is genuinely the ceiling of the market, keep him for another year and let the contract run down.
I dislike seeing Liverpool lose players for free.
I dislike the idea of giving them away at insulting valuations even more.