A racist Chinese man sat next to an Igbo man on a train in China and proceeded to cover his nose as if the Igbo man smelled bad. The Igbo man responded by returning the same energy. Even after the Chinese man stopped covering his nose, the Igbo man no gree make peace reign.
@it_Rutie Switzerland has no ocean.
Singapore has no rice fields.
Japan is not rich in mineral.
Saudi Arabia has very little forest.
Netherlands has no mountains.
Nigeria has everything but poorly managed by corrupt politicians/leaders
You guys.....
Check out these beauties 🥰🥰
They are freshed made and packed with all the love you could think of
First Frame is Kunun Aya (Tiger nut drink)
Second frame is soya milk
First frame 1k
Second frame 800
Do well to help me retweet for a wider audience 🙏🏽
So there’s an app called Outlier that gives people remote jobs. Some Nigerians got on it, made money and started making silly “content” telling other Nigerians to use vpn to mask their actual location. Now Outlier is banning Nigerians.
Why do we do this?
Tinubu's daughter is so insensitive, even if you want to compensate the family. It's shouldn't be now that the wound is still fresh, money doesn't solve all problems
“No amount of rice can compensate for the loss of my husband” – Wife of the beheaded teacher rejects 2 bags of rice, ₦500,000 donation from President Tinubu's daughter.
The tragic killing of a school teacher in Oyo State has sparked widespread outrage and grief across Nigeria, prompting citizens to question the government's response to the incident and the broader insecurity crisis affecting communities nationwide.
Recently, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu's daughter paid a
condolence visit to the wife of the late teacher, who was abducted alongside several schoolchildren by armed kidnappers, and donated two bags of rice and ₦500,000 to support the bereaved family.
While many have acknowledged the gesture as an act of compassion, it has also generated widespread criticism from Nigerians who believe that such assistance does not address the deeper issues surrounding the tragedy. Citizens insist that rice and cash donations cannot replace a husband, father, and breadwinner whose life was brutally cut short.
They argue that the nation's priority should be ensuring justice for the slain teacher, recovering his remains, and preventing similar incidents from occurring in the future. The fact that the teacher's body has not been recovered despite the passage of time has further fueled public anger, leaving his family unable to give him a proper and dignified burial. For his wife, children, relatives, colleagues, and community members, the pain remains fresh, compounded by the uncertainty surrounding the whereabouts of his remains.
Questions are being raised about the government's security response during the abduction, with many Nigerians asking why security forces were unable to rescue the victims before the teacher was killed. Critics argue that if the government possesses the resources to combat insurgency, banditry, and other forms of organized crime, then innocent citizens should not be left at the mercy of armed criminals.
Many Nigerians believe that the incident has become a painful symbol of the country's worsening insecurity, and that beyond sympathy visits and relief materials, citizens deserve lasting solutions that will guarantee safety in schools, communities, highways, and rural areas. “The issue is not rice,” one concerned citizen remarked.
“The issue is that a man lost his life, children were traumatized, and a family has been thrown into mourning. What Nigerians want is security, justice, and accountability.” As public frustration grows, many are calling on the Federal Government to intensify efforts to recover the late teacher's remains, bring those responsible for his death to justice, and implement stronger measures to protect schools and vulnerable communities from future attacks.
For the grieving family, the most painful reality remains unchanged: no amount of rice or financial assistance can erase the loss of a loved one whose life ended in such a heartbreaking manner. What they seek now is closure, justice, and the opportunity to lay him to rest with dignity.