From today, I am leaving the Kwankwasiyya movement, God willing. I spent 17 years in it, and under Kwankwaso I received free education. The issue is not because of Sardauna; rather, I have been deeply troubled since the day Kwankwaso agreed to become Peter Obi's Vice Presidential candidate.
This is a humiliation to us and a disrespect to the political standing of Northern Nigeria—that Kwankwaso would agree to be Obi's Vice President. Who is Obi even in the South, let alone in the North? How many comrades, lawmakers, senators, and governors has he produced or mentored through his political structure in this country?
Today, I have reached my limit and can finally express what has been in my heart. Just as our leader organized scholarship programs and carried out charitable works for us, may Allah bless him and reward him with nothing but Paradise.
Dr Muhammad.
It's funny how igbos now care so much about the insecurity in Oyo State while most of them are hiding in Lagos to escape from IPOB terrorists in Southeast.
If other regions were speaking up the way southwest are doing now just maybe the insecurity would not have gotten this bad. 'Cause here we dont place a cow above a human being, emi eyan se pataki ganni
They don’t have a single meaningful person in their entire tribe to protest for them yet they are claiming big 3 😂😂
They will rather drag Yoruba artistes or elites to protest for them as they don’t have any glorious elites from their entire tribe
Bunch of nincomp😂😂ps
Dear immature Peter @PeterPsquare,
“Even a fool, when he keeps silent, is considered wise…” — Proverbs 17:28.
Sadly, some people hear that scripture and still decide to audition for public embarrassment.
“I made it in your so called Lagos” is not the powerful statement you think it is. It is actually a confession that opportunities had to be sought elsewhere because your own region is cures and could not provide the environment for your dreams and destinies to thrive. That is not an insult to the man you quoted; it is a challenge to your leaders and your priorities.
But instead of asking hard questions about development, infrastructure, investment, and security in your homeland, you people turn migration into a trophy and expect applause for it. Every serious society wants its sons and daughters to build back home too, not abandon it completely while emotionally blackmailing the places giving them opportunities.
And please, spare us the emotional gymnastics. Successful Yoruba celebrities proudly live, invest, and raise families in their ancestral land because Lagos is home to them culturally and historically. That is normal. Have your children stayed in Anambra for six months, the state you come from?. The real conversation should be: why do many wealthy businessmen from your side concentrate investments elsewhere while treating home mainly as a Christmas destination?
That is not hatred. That is a developmental question.
You cannot keepp behaving immature anytime uncomfortable truths are mentioned. If your brightest minds, biggest investors, and biggest celebrities overwhelmingly build outside their homeland, people are allowed to ask why.
And Peter, saying “I made it in your so called Lagos” is not an achievement badge against Yorubas. It is an insult to your tribe and land. Lagos has made people from every tribe successful because it is economically functional and accommodating. The better response should be gratitude and reflection, not chest-thumping and insults.
At the end of the day, a people’s greatest pride should not be how well they escaped home, but how well they transformed it.
Videos like this do not get retweeets and engagements because it isn’t bad news.
Residents of Gulbi community
In Niger state seen hailing the Nigerian Military after a total clear out of terrorists from their area.
Peace has been restored.
Nigeria no longer commands my loyalty. I released her in 2024.
My heart, my energy, and my fight now belong to the Yoruba, with Lagos as the crown jewel, and she will be protected at all costs.
This land will not be handed over to non Yorubas.
I stand on my ground.
#lagos4lagos