Fun fact:
If Peter Obi makes sense to you, Tinubu will never make sense to you.
If Tinubu makes sense to you, Peter Obi cannot make sense to you.
These gentlemen operate on totally different IQ levels. If after watching Tinubu's outing yesterday, you still find it hard to understand him and you are clapping for "Mr I will run for a single term to bring stability", it speaks more about your IQ than anything else.
As a travel consultant, I will NEVER advise a young man to bring his girlfriend to UK from Nigeria or any other African country.
Most of the time, it doesn’t end well.
He did visa for her, but she turned him to punching bags in the UK.
Fathers don’t post 50 selfies with their kids every week.
They just quietly renew the car insurance at 2 a.m.
Skip their own doctor’s appointment so the school fees can be cleared, and still say I’m fine when you ask how work was.
That’s the love no one talks about.
A major cheat code in life: Master the art of strategic incompetence. Some tasks you don't want to be good at. Be bad at them and watch them get reassigned. Not everything needs your excellence. Some things need your exit.
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola said it is 'clear' that there is a genocide in Palestine.
He went on to say that seeing images from Sudan, Palestine and Ukraine 'hurts' him.
https://t.co/Nzi5VvRBJH
"Fergie loved me, he used to always pair me with Roy Keane" 👊
When Mikel John Obi went to Manchester United trials as a 16-year-old and trained with the first team...
THAT IS UNBELIEVABLE 🔥
Benfica goalkeeper Anatoliy Trubin scores a 98th minute goal to keep Jose Mourinho's Benfica in the competition 💥
📺 @tntsports & @discoveryplus
In 2003, Lawrence Agada, the general cashier of Sheraton Hotel, donated two generators (₦5.9 million) and 500 plastic chairs to Christ Embassy Church, where he also served as an assistant pastor. In March that year, he was accused of funding the donations with ₦39 million he stole from his employer.
According to a Newswatch report:
▶️ Agada confessed to stealing ₦39 million, admitting that part of the money was used to finance the church donations.
▶️ Two months after the scandal broke, Christ Embassy returned the generators and chairs. The recovered items were kept at the Ikeja Police Headquarters, where the case was being handled. But the matter did not end there.
▶️ Despite the return of the items, Sheraton’s director of security, Hezy Imonivwerha, petitioned the police, claiming Agada had confessed to channelling additional funds to the church through payments made to specific pastors.
▶️ The church disputed this account. Its solicitor, Chris Ebare, said Agada told him that several Sheraton staff members benefited from the stolen money, which he claimed to have shared among them.
▶️ Ebare said Agada was pressured to name only the church as a beneficiary because it was able to return the items donated to it.
▶️ He also questioned the ₦39 million figure, alleging that Agada confessed under duress after he was detained at the hotel for two weeks.
▶️ Following the public disclosure of the theft, Sheraton’s French finance director, Sakis Karagunznen, resigned and left Nigeria.
According to a P.M. News report:
▶️ In June 2003, Agada was arraigned before an Ikeja Magistrate’s Court. In his confessional statement tendered in court, he admitted to stealing the money and said it was used for the development of Christ Embassy.