This brings me back to my plea some days back. No response yet but I believe it will come.
Please support me via my Buy Me a Coffee wishlist:
https://t.co/p9wDJqKuMV
No amount is small.
Every contribution brings me one brick closer to getting the tool and one bring closer to freedom.
Thank you 🙏🙏🙏
@Lyn9SA@tiggeroma007@KarineOmry
Thousands have read Nothing But The Truth.
Thousands more have followed the Leave No Man Behind movement grow across 5 continents.
Now, for one Saturday, there's a room. Live, not recorded, three hours to actually ask the questions the book couldn't answer in person.
Understanding False Allegations: What You Need To Know.
Saturday 19 September. 100 places. If we fill every one, I'm personally taking this to every press outlet I can reach, ten days after International Falsely Accused Day on 9 September, while the country's already talking about this.
Early bird tickets, £17.50, until 31 July. Book here: https://t.co/NutdRolaio
@Lyn9SA@IFAD9S@FalseAccusedUK@AAFAI_org@m0wpg@PeaceAn40962730
Day #1,145
Ama is an irredeemable nuisance. He is a relative of OGB, our cell's perennial troublemaker. It leaves me wondering whether madness somehow runs in their family tree.
This Ama is a man of about seventy or more who came into prison recently and discovered this “long-lost” cousin, OGB, in our cell.
He is said to be very rich, a father and grandfather to many, but sincerely, without meaning to be disrespectful, he is an embarrassment to all things fatherhood. His name and the word “responsible” should never be used together in the same sentence.
This might be a shocker, but alcohol is quite easily accessible here without one needing to resort to DIY hands-on brewing with all its troublesome science.
So Ama would drink senselessly. Then talks, curses, and disturbs the full cell and won't let anyone sleep by day or night. And many of us have had it up to our necks with him but still no one is daring to do anything.
The average person here worships money or the idea of having money (not the person with the money). It’s so bad that I had to confront and tell them how valueless they are to their faces today. I used a simple analogy that if a pig was to be rich and come in here, they'd bow to it without minding.
In fact, if the pig separated itself from its money and stood aside, they'd stop bowing to the pig, turn, and start bowing to the pile of cash instead.
So it is never the person with the money that they worship, just the money with the person.
The music they constantly sing when someone attempts to check him is: “He's a big man. Do you know who he is or how much money he is worth? He has huge hotels… This, that…” Blah Blah blah.
All such prideful nonsense used to assert one is a big man. As if I give a hoot. But they clearly do and that's fine. It is a free world. But now how they exercise that freedom is beginning to affect my peace.
Therefore that amount of freedom was due for a review. Accordingly a meeting was called at night between the twenty of us original cell members. Our visitors, the five lodgers, only listened but had no right to utter a word.
When it was my turn to speak, I quoted prison law, invoking our law book, and asked the provost to exercise his provostly powers to ban Ama from drinking or being given drinks by any cell member. I argued that it was lawful and the right thing to do.
He did.
A one week drinking ban was placed on him. No cell member is to give to, buy for, or allow an outsider to give him drinks.
Hopefully we can have a little respite from his nuisance while it lasts.
Tomorrow is Sunday. Doing heavy reading and studying now. Wish my days had 28 hours.
Goodnight Diary.
#DiaryOfANigerianPrisoner
July 11, 2026.
'FASO are extremely heartbroken that Ann Widdecombe has died, and in such a horrific manner
She joined us on Falsely Accused Day 2023
We will not forget her or her support, for all those falsely accused'
Margaret Gardener, FASO CEO
Yup! Another toxic feminist—always trying to make the female’s situation sound worse than a man’s.
@MollyOShah Wanna try an experiment? Go get raped. And then go get falsely accused of rape. Come back and tell us which one is worse! Wait…women don’t suffer as much as a man when accused of rape.
Of course each situation is horrific!! But don’t you ever fucking belittle the man’s experience of being falsely accused. Take your BS and preach it to yourself. Real women don’t say that and real women speak up against toxic women like you!
@prolifefrenchie@DelusionPosting Man is falsely accused of rape, but not indicted.
Friends and family believe the woman, ostracizing the man.
His job fires him. Nobody else will hire him.
He despairs.
He kills himself.
@prolifefrenchie@DelusionPosting You see, rape victims have a support network. Everybody hates rapists and cares for the victim.
The man falsely accused usually has his support network stripped away. He’s left alone, hated for something he didn’t do.
That’s before prison.
False accusations are worse.
It does nothing to actual victims of rape. Credibility is not a right. It's earned.
The presumption of innocence until proven guilty is a right.
Accusing someone of a crime in an effort to get the community or the justice system to act on the accusation by penalizing the accused means taking on the burden of proof that the accusation is true.
The victim of a false allegation is the accused.
The fallout of his experience can affect his loved ones.
If it's affecting other accusers who have been deemed victims of actual crimes, then the community has been handling criminal allegations wrong for a while already.
@DelusionPosting Her sentence still doesn't justify falsely accusing people. Getting murdered is worse than being robbed. But both are crimes and both should be punished.
The kind of person I look up to. She wasn't interested in advancing herself or people pleasing and presumably never got the titles and recognition she deserved because she did not spend her time making the right noises to the right people.
Just a tragic and entirely undeserved ending to a life spent standing up for what she knew to be right, whoever it offended. She is with God now, and suspect that like me, that was all that mattered to her in the life she led and the choices she made.
In a time where lies have become the new truth and so many in high places are complete pretenders, what a wonderful breath of fresh air she always was.
Ann Widdecombe gave a speech at Falsely Accused Day in central London a couple of years ago, and it was as forthright, fair and robust as you might expect. She held the gathered throng rapt, and I was delighted to have a chat with her afterwards
Ann had a clear passion for justice, from the state of the family courts to the treatment of prisoners, as might be imagined given that she was Prisons Minister from 1995 to 1997
It is appalling to hear the news that her death appears to be homicide, and in her own home. At the age of 78, we do sometimes hear 'after a short illness' and the like, but no one expects this. She regularly wrote of her fondness for her Dartmoor home and its cosy comforts on her Substack account
To the end she was appearing regularly on Mike @Iromg Graham's show, being a spokesperson for Reform, and opining on every socio-political subject going. A shocking and upsetting end to a life well lived
Ann agreed to be interviewed at her home for my film, "We Believe You", she was a great champion of real equality - men's rights to the fore.
Her piece didn't match the film as I had hoped, but we saw her indomitable sense of justice.
RIP Ann.
https://t.co/nugEe55Eqb