Ibrahim Traore is showing the likes of Tinubu, Alassane Ouattara and all these shameless colonial puppets in Africa, what it means to lead a nation from dark to light and from bondage to freedom.
Like Libya under Gadaffi, Burkinababes will live like kings now. You will never see them telling an army of their educated youths to turn to selling akara, kuli kuli or corn to survive.
God bless the AES states 🙏
@jcokechukwu MAZI SIMON EKPA was saying this 3 years ago. They locked him up in Finland. It is time to release that young man. Joseph Okechukwu, Simon Ekpa was fighting those terrorists. All you did was criticize. Are you sure that you're not a Fulani man?
Now the coast is clear! The whole world now knows that Simon ekpa was innocent all this while. He exposed that the exDOS is working with the 3nemies and so many people called him names.
Some called him Ekperima.
Some people even said that Tinubu paid him to destrøy IPOB.
Some people said he's working with the Nigerian government to j@il Nnamdi kanu but today Nnamdi kanu has fired the E-rats (ndi underground workers)
Nnamdi kanu has shown us that truly DOS is not working for Biafra but for their own pocket.
.. Aruh!💔
Simon ekpa told them that he'll be their €nd and today it's a reality.
God bless Nnamdi kanu
God bless PM Simon ekpa
God bless biafrans all over the world 🌍
August for PM Simon Ekpa Njoku.
@ChuksEricE@Nuel0528 The woman's village people will come to visit the man. He is a weak man and will need to be slapped by the village men of the woman.
No matter wetin anybody think about Nnamdi Kanu
One thing wey every civilized society suppose agree on be say:
Justice delayed na justice denied.
Too many years don pass.
Too many court appearances.
Too many arguments.
Too many headlines.
At some point, a nation must ask itself:
Are we looking for justice?
Or are we simply extending a story that should have reached a conclusion long ago?
You fit support am.
You fit oppose am.
But fairness no suppose depend on whose side you dey.
The true strength of any democracy no be how e treat people wey agree with government.
Na how e treat people wey challenge am.
If a man get case, hear am.
If e get answer to give, make e give am.
If e get punishment to face, make e face am.
But let justice move.
Because when cases drag for years and years, everybody lose.
The individual lose.
The system lose.
The country lose.
Nigeria needs lots of healing.
Nigeria needs closure.
Nigeria needs justice wey no dey crawl.
Tinubu my bro, pls wake up and do the needful.
British citizens convicted abroad are not subject to death penalty
The Federal Government of Nigeria's recent cross-appeal seeking to elevate Mazi Nnamdi Kanu’s sentence from life imprisonment to the death penalty introduces a volatile mix of domestic law, geopolitical friction and human rights disputes.
Because Mazi Nnamdi Kanu holds dual Nigerian and British citizenship, this development creates a direct diplomatic collision course between Abuja and London.
By filing a cross-appeal to demand the death penalty, the Federal Government has demonstrated a surprising ignorance of the consequences of contemplating death penalty on a British citizen ‘convicted’ abroad.
From the diplomatic and legal standpoint, Britain has a rigid, non-negotiable foreign policy against the death penalty and vehemently opposes capital punishment in all circumstances, worldwide, as a matter of principle.
For a British citizen convicted abroad, the UK government is bound by consular and diplomatic protocols to intervene actively by escalating from standard consular monitoring to high-level diplomatic pressure and it will be intense.
And these consequences go beyond Britain, as it often triggers a wider diplomatic backlash, potentially affecting foreign aid, trade agreements and bilateral relations between Nigeria and Western nations who align with the UK's stance against the death penalty.
#AloyEjimakor.
@MaziKanuntaKanu SIMON EKPA was shouting this every day that Ejiofor was never working for us. Ejiofor works for the enemy. It is a shame. We have always known.