HERE IS THE SUMMARY
In 2024, Kariyai Daukoru, then a 400-level Petroleum Engineering student at Igbinedion University and a father of three, applied for an aviation scholarship program announced by Bayelsa businessman Dr. Eruani Azibapu.
According to Kariyai, the program was advertised as an opportunity for the brightest Bayelsa youths to be trained in the United States as pilots and aircraft engineers. He claims participants were told that successful candidates would be flown to the US and that partnerships existed with organizations and institutions that would make the process seamless.
A total of 776 people reportedly applied for the program. After a screening exercise and examination involving 155 candidates, Kariyai says only two people met the required pass mark: himself and another candidate, Yebei Ebilate.
Following their success, Kariyai alleges that they were publicly presented as beneficiaries of the scholarship and that announcements were made suggesting they would travel to the United States within days.
However, he claims the promised trip never happened.
According to his account, they were later informed that they would first have to undergo a six-month probationary period working under the Azikel Group before being allowed to travel. Kariyai says he and the other candidate objected because they had applied for a scholarship program, not employment, but felt pressured to accept after allegedly being told that refusing would mean forfeiting the opportunity.
Kariyai claims he subsequently put his university education and personal business activities on hold in order to comply with the requirements of the program. He alleges that what was presented as a temporary probation period eventually stretched to approximately sixteen months.
During that time, he says they carried out various duties related to aviation operations, administration, and other assignments. He further alleges that they were repeatedly assured that arrangements for their overseas training were still being processed.
As months passed without any progress, Kariyai says he and his colleague began seeking answers from management. According to him, multiple letters requesting clarification were ignored, while officials allegedly distanced themselves from responsibility for the program.
He further claims that investigations carried out by himself revealed that some of the international partnerships and arrangements that had allegedly been referenced during the promotion of the scholarship could not be verified. He states that inquiries he made to foreign organizations produced responses that contradicted what participants had been led to believe.
According to Kariyai, these developments convinced him that the scholarship program was never intended to achieve the objectives that had been publicly advertised.
Believing he had been misled, he filed a lawsuit against Dr. Eruani Azibapu at the Bayelsa State High Court in February 2026.
Kariyai alleges that after filing the suit, he became the target of a campaign aimed at discrediting him. He claims statements were circulated portraying him as dishonest and attempting to undermine his credibility.
He also alleges that criminal complaints were later filed against him over social media posts connected to the dispute. According to his account, he was arrested, detained, and spent several months in custody while the legal battle continued.
Kariyai further claims that pressure was placed on him to withdraw his lawsuit and abandon his claims against Dr. Eruani. Despite this, he says he chose to continue pursuing the matter through the courts.
Throughout his statement, Kariyai maintains that he is not seeking sympathy but accountability. He argues that the case goes beyond his personal experience and raises broader questions about how scholarship programs are administered and whether young people can rely on public promises made by influential individual
It is humbling to consider that if we harness just 1 millionth of the Sun’s power for AI, that will be much more than a million times the intelligence of all of humanity
@romeocza It wouldn’t cost you anything to do a little research or watch the video completely. Who is dvmb now? You’ll carry your ignorance with boldness. I’ve never seen someone support Tinubu and sound smart at the same time
Those who rejoice in illegality often have something questionable about them if you look closely.
My unfortunate elder brother from the Southwest, Sayilaw, it is quite unfortunate that you rejoiced when I was kidnapped simply because I made a video responding to your claim on a podcast that Nigeria is better today than it was 10 years ago.
In that video, I asked a simple question: if Nigeria is safer and better today, why did you relocate your family abroad instead of leaving them here?
Rather than engage with the argument, you chose to celebrate my disappearance. That, unfortunately, says a lot about your character.
However, as has always been my principle, I do not engage in personal attacks or drag individuals unless it concerns the betterment of Nigeria.
My only concern is building a better Nigeria—a Nigeria where citizens will not feel the need to send their families abroad for safety and opportunities while returning home to defend bad governance.
Remember, nothing lasts forever.
In my time and in my generation, I still believe Nigeria will be great again.
Justice can never be cracked.
God bless Nigeria. 🇳🇬
Dear South Africans,
Remember we did this for you and today you hurt Nigerians
Is this how to appreciate those that suffered for your freedom

In 1976, Nigeria established the Southern Africa Relief Fund (SARF) to support anti-apartheid liberation struggles. Under the military administration of General Olusegun Obasanjo, all Nigerian civil servants and public officers were mandated to contribute 2% of their monthly salaries to the fund, which became popularly known as the "Mandela Tax". [1, 2]
The grassroots and public initiative was highly successful: [1, 2]
•Initial Government Support: General Obasanjo's administration contributed $3.7 million to SARF, alongside personal donations of $3,000 from the General himself and $1,500 from each cabinet member. [1]
•Public Participation: Civil servants forfeited 2% of their salaries, and students actively skipped lunches to donate their allowances. [1]
•Fundraising Milestone: In just six months, popular contributions reached $10.5 million by June 1977.[1]
•Broader Aid: These funds were utilized to bring relief to victims of the apartheid regime, finance educational opportunities, and support the general welfare of liberation movements. This contribution was part of an estimated $61 billion that Nigeria spent between 1960 and 1995 toward the anti-apartheid struggle. [1, 2, 3]
@compoundinnaira Can you name like three stocks you think would be a good investment rn.
What do you think about the ngx-group stock that fell from 183-130, is there potential in it?
What platform would you advise for better rates. I use Cowrywise but the charges are too much
in May i
> was never sad, never depressed
> participated in no hackathon
> did not get accepted for base batches
> earned a couple $ from Open Source
> continued Open Source
> continued building @_Cardra
> created very little contents
> got 359 followers
> moved into a new house 🎉🥳
> was busy with the house i became less active
> had a very nice birthday
> got clearer skin
> got onboarded into @Web3Bridge alumni
> got my github copilot
> went back to studying the bible a bit
no job yet
but Thank you Jesus
June >>>
Dear President BOLA AHMED TINUBU
😭😭😭
If the government has provided 1000 forest guards in the oyo community.
What about borno? Zamfara? Osun? Kebbi?
Niger delta, NIGERIA?
At this point, the entire country needs security.
THE BACKDOOR IS OPEN: How APC is Entering INEC's Secret Database
The lie that INEC is independent has finally been exposed. It did not happen because a whistleblower spoke out or because of a big investigation. It happened because APC operatives are now so proud of their power that they do not even care about hiding their tracks.
To mock actor Emeka Ike because he transferred his voter registration from Imo State to Abuja, an APC apologist, Lere went online to share screenshots. But he made a big mistake. He did not just share a rumor; he shared clear screenshots taken from inside the secret, password-protected backend database of INEC.
For an ordinary person, the pictures look like normal registration slips. But if you look closely at the top of the browser tab, the web address shows https://t.co/Ne2YNhFv0f.
Let this sink in very well. This cvradmin is not a public website. It is not the place where you and I go to check our voter cards. It is the highly restricted, internal database meant ONLY for INEC ICT officials and data managers. Yet, an APC member has the password to enter inside, see a citizen's secret tracking number, check his private details, and look at internal system steps.
This shows us two scary things: First, it means INEC has completely sold out. They have handed over their secret passwords to APC boys so they can spy on citizens' data whenever they want. Second, it means INEC’s computer security is totally broken. Their database has an open door where politicians can easily enter to pack, track, and change the data of over 90 million Nigerian voters.
If you think this is just a fight between big politicians, you are wrong. If the ruling party can sit in their house, log into INEC’s backend, and track who is transferring their PVC, exactly when they applied, and where they are moving to, then no opposition strategy is safe. Your privacy as a citizen does not exist.
This explains the magic numbers we always see during elections. When a political party has access to the computer backend, they can trace where voters are moving to. They can target specific transfers and reject them, stop registrations in areas where people do not like them, and fix the election results long before the election day. By using private data to bully people, they have proved what Nigerians have been saying all along: INEC and APC are using the exact same server room.
This is a big crime under the Nigeria Data Protection Act and it threatens our national security. INEC cannot just release one useless press statement to blame "glitch." The Data Protection Commission must launch a proper investigation immediately to find out the exact INEC staff whose password was used to leak this file. Also, the INEC insiders who gave out the password and the politicians who used it must be arrested and sent to jail under the Cybercrimes Act.
The battle for Nigerian democracy is no longer just about guarding ballot boxes at the polling units. The real war is now inside the INEC computers. If INEC has given its keys to the ruling party, then a free and fair election in Nigeria is a total lie. INEC Chairman must tell the nation the truth: Why is APC managing your backend?
Congrats to PSG. I really wanted arsenal to win but damn! they were the better team.
Good to see this team do twice in a row what Messi, Neymar and Mbappe couldn’t do once.
Ousman Dembele is a menace. Give that man the ball again ⚽️🏆
Prediction: They will rig the election by splitting Obi’s vote with Goodluck and if you complain they’ll ask you what do they have to benefit.
can’t believe goodluck let himself be used by this same people. I wonder what they’ve got on him.