Open Apology Letter to the Obidient Movement
My Dear Obidient Family, I come before you today with a heavy heart, deep humility, and no excuses. Some time ago, in a moment of frustration and immaturity, I wrote and released a resignation letter as Director of Mobilization. In that letter, I allowed deep frustration & personal emotions to cloud my judgment. I made statements that subtly and unnecessarily dragged Peter Obi, a man I still respect for his vision, integrity, and sacrifice for this nation. That was wrong. It was childish, and beneath the standard I should have upheld, especially as someone who once held a leadership position in this movement.
I take full responsibility. No one forced me to write it. No one edited it. It came from me, and it was a mistake. I deleted the letter afterwards, but I know deletion does not erase the damage, the disappointment, or the loss of trust many of you felt. I understand why some of you no longer respect me the way you once did. You had every right to feel let down.
To Peter Obi himself (fondly called PO): Sir, I am sincerely sorry. My words were not a true reflection of the values of sacrifice, accountability, and constructive criticism that you preach. I failed in that moment. To every single Obidient, the ones who stayed grinding, the ones who defended the vision even when it was tough, the ones who felt betrayed by my actions, I am deeply sorry. You are the real heroes of this movement. Many of you are young people full of hope and fire for a better Nigeria. You didn’t deserve to see internal cracks turned into public drama. I let you down.
I am not writing this because I want something or a position in the movement as I’m enjoying private life. I am writing it because it is the right thing to do. Leadership is not only about when the road is sweet and smooth; it is also about owning up when you mess up. I own this fully. I am committed to rebuilding trust through consistent actions, not just words. But I also know trust is not demanded, it is earned back slowly, if at all. Thank you for reading this.
Whether you accept my apology or not, I respect your feelings and your right to hold me accountable. The love I have for a better Nigeria has not changed. You all know me. My respect for the Obidient spirit remains. I am sorry truly.
With humility and hope for forgiveness,
Your brother in this struggle,
Morris Monye.
Oya come let’s hug. 😊
@Wunmiiberry Is it that you ppl have stopped eating Eba and egusi??. Can't you discuss rice and beans? .. plantain and fried eggs fa. Before, we had different branches of twitter. Politics, music, religion.. now, it's just toto twitter.
Nobody has ever claimed or insinuated that Peter Obi is running for president to steal Nigeria’s money.
Not even his enemies.
That is a flex💪🏾
Happy Monday my people😊
@HighAsFvk@kena_ewuru Toh. She carry her doggy self goback village by bus. She spent almost a full year begging me.. "when I go black, I don't go back"
@IllimitableMan_ The insecurity you ppl are Farming on this app might just be what will break this country. One broken man at a time.. the way I d take look my galfrnd each time I close this app.
@RealSirMichael1@EstherUmoh10 Write jamb first. When you get to the university, you will learn that there is what they call "departmental uniform ".. there is more, but write jamb first
@socetyhatesjay You ppl don't understand. If you are used to staying alone and been orderly.. that one week you have a visitor stay with you, it's things like wet bathroom, unwashed plates, unmade bed..scattered remote controls that start to fuel your anger
In 2006, Atiku Abubakar’s camp registered two political parties as backup plans for his presidential bid.
P.M. News reported that the parties, Action Alliance (AA) and Advanced Congress of Democrats (ACD), were reportedly set up by loyalists amid fears that the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP), backed by President Olusegun Obasanjo, would block Atiku from clinching the 2007 ticket.
Approved by INEC, the move was to give Atiku an escape route if the PDP shut him out.
PETER OBI NEVER DO AM o