🚀 SidraChain Update
Building stronger security, cross-chain features, and strategic partnerships. Big announcements coming soon!Stay tuned for major announcements and updates that will strengthen community value and scalability.
#sidrabank@maljefairi#SidraChain#SidraFamily
@PiNetwork_info Welcome development however, the issue of Tentative Approval lingers on many Pioneers myself inclusive, we pray that resolved soonest possible!
@barauijibrin We need to know what efforts you are making to curb the menace of insecurity that is happening within the Kano North Senatorial District and what efforts are you making towards completing the construction of Kano-Gwarzo-Dayi Road.
@maljafeiri Mashaa-Allah we are grateful for your concern on the community, we urge this respected TEAM to do more about returning our claimed coins that disappeared from our wallets during that system's glitch. We believe you will do it!
@Sidra_App Mashaa-Allah we are glad to hear about this long awaited update. However, next we long to hear is the resurfacing of our claimed coins that were taken away just of a sudden by the system. We hope this will be resolved soonest possible, please!
Which Side You Are, Just Show Your Love ?
1. RePost For $SDA
2. Like For $PI
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Official channel 👇
https://t.co/vD5YuOkdlI
#SidraFamily#SidraChain#SidraDEX $ICE #ETH#Bitcoin
@sidrachain Dear @SidraChain team.
Many users,including myself,have noticed issues with Sidra balances being removed,especially for mining.
Also,the swapping feature has not been working for everyone since 20 Nov.Some users can swap,while others cannot,even with the same conditions.
It seems like our missing balance on the app is directly related to how the chain has been misbehaving lately. I'm hoping to get some clarity on this issue; the inconsistencies are quite concerning. It feels like the entire system has been experiencing some serious glitches. Is anyone else experiencing similar issues with their balance and the chain's erratic behavior? We need to understand what's going on.
🧠 Decentralization isn’t a buzzword. It’s a blueprint.
This image breaks it down perfectly 👇
🔓 Open Mainnet
🌍 Global Nodes
🗳️ Community Consensus
⚖️ DAO Governance
📜 Smart Contracts
📈 Market Integration
🧑💻 Developer Freedom
🛡️ Legal Autonomy
This is how real networks are built —
not shortcuts, not hype, not overnight pumps.
The future of blockchain belongs to ecosystems that:
• empower users
• reward builders
• scale globally
• stay compliant
• and remain decentralized
If you’re still judging projects by price alone,
you’re already late.
📌 Save this.
🔁 Repost for awareness.
💬 Which pillar matters most to you?
#Decentralization #Blockchain #Web3 #CryptoEducation #FutureTech #BuildInPublic #OpenNetwork
EXPOSED: TINUBU'S TAX REFORMS TURNED INTO SECRET FRAUD!
Nigerians are already crushed under skyrocketing costs, yet Tinubu's regime is ramming through brutal new taxes to squeeze the poor dry. They preach "pay your taxes" nonstop, but hide the truth: ZERO transparency or accountability!Worse?
A bombshell just dropped in the House of Reps. Hon. Abdussamad Dasuki (PDP-Sokoto) spent THREE DAYS comparing the tax laws lawmakers debated & passed vs. the gazetted versions signed by Tinubu.
Key clauses changed without approval – expanding arrest powers, enforcement, reporting rules. This is a MASSIVE constitutional breach, usurping NASS powers!
Dasuki: "I voted here, but what's gazetted is COMPLETELY DIFFERENT!" Reps launched probe; lawyers call it illegal mockery of democracy.While elites dodge, they're rigging laws in secret to milk masses harder. This isn't reform – it's THEFT by stealth! Wake up, Nigeria!
#TinubuTaxScam
HERE IS WHAT EVERY NIGERIAN NEEDS TO KNOW ABOUT THE TAX ALTERATIONS, THE LEGAL IMPLICATIONS, AND WHAT THEY MEAN FOR EVERY TAXPAYER
Nigeria’s 2025 tax laws were passed by the National Assembly. However, a month away from implementation, key provisions were discovered to be different from what the National Assembly approved.
These are substantive changes that expanded government powers, removed oversight, and altered the obligations of taxpayers.
In a democracy, what the National Assembly passes is what becomes law. When something different appears afterward, it raises serious legal and constitutional concerns.
One of the most significant changes is the introduction of arrest powers that were not approved by the National Assembly. What lawmakers agreed to was that tax authorities could investigate suspected tax violations. Investigation simply means checking records, reviewing documents, and asking questions. What appeared in the gazetted law goes much further. It allows tax authorities to cause the arrest of any person they merely suspect of a tax violation, using law-enforcement agencies.
This matters because investigating a tax issue and arresting someone are not the same thing. One is about sorting out paperwork and resolving compliance issues. The other is about taking away a person’s freedom. The altered law quietly allows that jump to happen before a court has even looked at the matter. That is a serious shift in power, and it was not part of what the National Assembly passed. Under the gazetted law, a tax issue can now lead to arrest and detention before a judge reviews the case.
Another major change is that tax authorities can now seize and sell movable property without first obtaining a High Court order. In Nigeria, courts exist to protect citizens from abuse and to ensure that property is not taken arbitrarily. Property rights require judicial oversight. By removing the need for court approval, the new law removes neutral control. When this is combined with the new arrest powers, it means a taxpayer can be arrested on suspicion and lose property without a judge approving either action.
Another troubling alteration is the removal of oversight by the National Assembly. In the version passed by NASS, the tax authority was required to submit quarterly & annual reports to the National Assembly and to appear before the NASS when summoned. These provisions were removed in the gazetted law. This means the National Assembly lost its ability to monitor a powerful agency, while the agency gained authority without accountability. Oversight is a core democratic safeguard. Removing it weakens checks and balances.
The alterations also quietly widened the tax net. Reporting requirements were changed from annual to quarterly, income thresholds were lowered, and the scope of who falls under federal tax administration was expanded. The effect is that more Nigerians and more businesses are pulled into the tax system, reporting becomes more frequent, and compliance burdens increase, especially for small businesses. Major policy shifts like this should be debated openly and transparently, not inserted quietly after passage.
Another significant change is that taxes in the oil and gas sector, must now be calculated and paid in U.S. dollars. Nigeria is already facing serious foreign-exchange pressure. Dollar-denominated taxes increase costs, create barriers, and place additional strain on businesses operating locally. This is not a minor technical adjustment. It is a substantive policy change with real economic consequences.
Access to justice has also been made more difficult. To challenge a tax decision, taxpayers are now required to deposit 20% of the disputed amount before they can go to court. For many Nigerians, this makes it impossible to challenge wrongful tax assessments. When access to justice depends on how much money someone has, rights become theoretical. A right that cannot be exercised is not a real right.