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Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government - Politics (3) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government (49423 Views)

Hadiza El-Rufai Remembers Daughter, Yasmin Who Died In London Apartment In 2011 / Hadiza, El-Rufai's Wife: This Is What Kaduna Stress Has Done To My Husband / El-Rufai: I'm The Governor Of The State; If I'm Not Abused, Who Will Be Abused? (2) (3) (4)

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Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by HarunaWest(m): 6:33am On May 29, 2020
MetaPhysical:


Even if you people are uncivilized up there are you also blind and deaf? Do you not see how things are done around the globe when a tragedy like this happen? She is indeed in government....she is just too illiterate to understand what "government" is.
The mistakes you guys keep making is the same..Any small thing around the Globe or in America...Face the fact dude,this Nigeria.
Government doesnt give an F over here..so stop comparing or complaining. The day we are ready for change, then we will start the revolution..

3 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by friday2011(m): 6:35am On May 29, 2020
Imagine, you are not part of governance...

You are madam, stop deceiving yourself...

There is no way you will be married to a governor and not have influence in some of his decisions.

Its like a wife saying she does not have a say in the family, its a big lie.

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by brain54(m): 6:36am On May 29, 2020
Scream:
So her "not being in government" has taken away her humanity?

People of goodwill should be concerned about the death of fellow citizens in the hands of criminals, you don't have to be an official of the government. Are we in US government for us to be concerned about the death of George Floyd in America?

She should be educated that we practice Democracy and the simplest definition is government of the people, by the and for the people? Is she not part of the people?

Also, the office of the First Lady doesn't exist in our constitution...whether she accepts it or not doesn't make her an official of the government.
that she didn't tweet about it does not mean she is not sympathetic as you put it...probably her principle to stay of political matters... not everyone likes politics. you can't force her. its her choice and decision

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Aystarz: 6:37am On May 29, 2020
Exc2000:



Only your poor unprotected family would get slaughtered as you wished for.. mine are well protected in a developed country, and the ones here are in a guarded estate.. if your father had dedicated more time working rather than doing petty stuff perhaps you might enjoy such luxury and secuirity without wailing on Madam Hadizas twitter handle, someone who is niether a firstlady, or lives in the government house

a fvcking private citizen

Gate man forming King Kong on Nairaland. We know your type grin

Let me rephrase : Your family, maybe your worthless dad who did a poor job on you (since you've brought him into the picture) , will get killed and then you will experience first hand what the people of Southern Kaduna are going through at this time. It's not a curse.

3 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by JAMO84: 6:38am On May 29, 2020
Joefat:


Mumu u..

You followed her on Twitter? That shows how jobless you're..
So because she posted having PhD means she obtained it.

Wake up man, PhD that dis mofos can get with a phone call!!

Once a again. Mumu u
Don't be uncouth. You can make your submission without any form of insult.

1 Like

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by ruggedtimi(m): 6:38am On May 29, 2020
JAMO84:
Where was your energy when thousands of Muslims were being killed? Maybe you're one of those who always say they deserve it for voting Buhari. Anytime Christians ran into any sort of problem, you people would leave the victims who need your support the most and be looking for who to blame.

I have never seen that lady comments on any sort of crisis before, she's not even the official first lady of Kaduna because her husband doesn't have one. She's not a hypocrite like you people who would rejoice over the killings of Muslims and get agitated over that of Christians.

For me, it's the same level of energy all the time, I totally condemn any sort of barbaric killings irrespective of religion or ethnicity. I do not tie insecurity of this country to any useless conspiracy theory that is baseless and without logic!!!



I AM DONE TALKING
the lady not commenting on crisis is none of my business...but her statement on Twitter relating to the recent masscre in South kaduna, damn it's f*cking sad.

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Exc2000: 6:39am On May 29, 2020
Aystarz:


Gate man forming king Kong on Nairaland. We know your type grin

Let me rephrase : Your family, maybe your worthless dad who did a poor job on you (since you've brought him into the picture) , will get killed and then you will experience first hand what the people of Southern Kaduna are going through the this time. It's not a curse.

Only your poor dad would worried about getting killed.. mine is well protected... Poverty na bastard thats why you sound so pained and poor... hold your papa accountable for his laziness that caused you family predicament and stop blaming maddam hadiza for your generational misfortune

If your father and mother had gotten Education and worked hard like El Rufai and his Dr wife, maybe you wont be here wailing like a dolt


.

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by jeffizy(m): 6:40am On May 29, 2020
AnanseK:


What happened to choice my friend? Is it by force to have an opinion?
In her own rights, she's a leader.
Leader to other women, a source of encouragement to some others.
Yes, opinion is choice but empathy is also a good virtue.

1 Like

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by brain54(m): 6:43am On May 29, 2020
MetaPhysical:
There is a part of history of North Nigeria that many Southerners are unaware of but which if care is not taken would also repeat itself in South. It has to do with alcohol.

In the early days of colonialism spirits and liquor was imported for the whitemen consumption only. Many of them bootlegged the product and sold to natives. Observers soon picked up that liquor reacts differently in the whiteman system than it does with the blackman, when consumed in same quantity and under same conditions and similarity of physicallity. So they raised duties and price to limit the availability and distribution of it. At one point they requested legislation back in UK to forbid importation of spirit to the natives in Southern Nigeria. Bottlers and merchants back in England suffered loss of revenue. They lobbied and put pressure on their government not to restrict trade in liquor. So the importation resumed and availability and consumption of liquor in Southern Nigeria was no longer prohibited.

Its distribution slowly crept up to the North as the business boomed, particularly with RNC, which later became UAC as the sole distributor. As part of their negotiated peace and treaties with the English, Northern rulers drew a boundary for liquor trading and missionary work. Therefore the North had penal codes that made liquor consumption a crime. When missionary penetrated into some non-muslim parts in North, liquor also went along with it. Everywhere bible was received, liquor was also introduced.

Liquor is a weapon. It is a mind altering chemical that when consumed suppresses certain aspects of cognition usually used in processing and responding to impulses and circumstances in the immediate sorrounding and interactions. Therefore an alcohol consumer will concede ...or fail to recognize risks and threats sufficiently for self preservation....and thus in his vulnerable state is exploited. The colonials were ready to do battle and posess our lands, and in fact they fought wars in Lagos, in Ijebu, in Benin, in Sokoto, in Kano and in Bauchi but they also took many dispossessed us of many lands simply by using alcohol to alter our senses and put us in a position to be easily exploited with minimal or zero casualty.

Kaduna was the traditional land of the collective people we call Southern Kaduna today. Kaduna was leased from them when Colonials relocated their headquarters from Lokoja to Kaduna. Bible and alcohol were the two legacies they gained from colonial government. After colonials handed power to regional government, the fulanis in power began a programme of expansion to subdue and hold the North under their spiritual and political control. Gradually intoxication of the Kaduna majority ethnic groups (kajuru, gwari, and so on) took a new turn and trend. To cut the story short.....The majority number gradually became the minority in authority and with that they also lost vast areas of their ancestral homes. In 2015 or 2017 (can't remember which) Governor El Rufai sought to modify the alcohol consumption penal code that had always been in practice and it was meant to prohibit alcohol generally for everyone, muslim and non-muslim....but either by commission or ommission, the prohibition achieved the opposite. It is like telling a child i dont want to see you play ball outside because if you kick the ball and break someone's glass window I will have to pay for it. Meanwhile other children in the neighborhood gather everyday outside and play ball. Then you watch the child get impatient and with annoyance. So you say, okay Im going to just ban all children from playing ball outside. So you give the order. Guess what....those children will find a field somewhere else outside your sight and earshot. What the child does not see or hear also pacifies him into thinking no one else is playing ball and so he doesnt feel cheated...he calms. Southern Kaduna have been drinking alcohol before El Rufai was born.....he might ban it in Kaduna, for muslims.......he cannot enforce its ban on the Christians of Southern Kaduna. The effect is they will stay consumed and continue to lose their ancestral and tribal lands and chiefdoms. Alcohol did this to them.

Alcohol has become a status statement in the South and we have become engrossed in its consumption that we have an addiction, just like in Southern Kaduna, that our vulnerability grows rapidly and put us at risk of exploitation by the North. They are using weapons now to seed terror and intimidation, a time is coming that they will not need weapon....our intoxication is sufficient to yield to them while they slowly peel away our rights and force upon us a two class system...one law for them , a different law for us......just as they did to the Southern Kaduna.


In the Rufai household they probably mock the Southern Kadunas as drunks. They treat them as one for all we can see. Their mockery has crossed over to the web and lately voiced by their son Bello....who once promised gang rape and derided Igbo, with a repeat derision of Ipob few days ago in a tweet. Igbo people are not at the same level, academically or socially with a small boy whose father is an accidental achiever. So what could inform such a arrogance and filthy disregard. The state of mind! Alcohol has deeply altered our state of mind in South. Even when are not intoxicated, our reasoning habits are flawed....the toxins and poison in our blood keep us sedated and dispossed of fundamental responses to self-preservation. This applies to Yoruba, it applies to SS.

oga what's ur point exactly? how does ur write up relate to the post? when you meet a swordsman man draw your sword...do not recite poetry to one who is not a poet...

1 Like

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Aystarz: 6:43am On May 29, 2020
Exc2000:

stop blaming maddam hadiza for your generational misfortune

You can fvck off now, pauperized ewu. But remember now, your family will pay for the recklessness you have displayed on here today. Karma wills it and it will happen. Let us see how your god, Hadiza, would respond.

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Crochet: 6:43am On May 29, 2020
Hmmm
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Exc2000: 6:46am On May 29, 2020
Aystarz:


You can fvck off now, pauperized ewu. But remember now, your family will pay for the recklessness you have displayed on here today. Karma wills it and it will happen. Let us see how your god, Hadiza, would respond.

If you know anything about Karma, then you would already start preparing for you fathers funeral for wishing other peoples father death.... and believe me nothing wished on me doesnt go back to the sender in 7 folds... so RIP to him in advance wail in peace

.

3 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Aystarz: 6:47am On May 29, 2020
Exc2000:


[s]If you know anything about Karma, then you would already start preparing for you fathers funeral for wish other peoples father death.... and believe nothing wish on me doesnt go back to the sender in 7 folds... so RIP to him in advance wail in peace[/s]
I'm done with you boy. You can run along now.

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by fauda49(m): 6:48am On May 29, 2020
MetaPhysical:
There is a part of history of North Nigeria that many Southerners are unaware of but which if care is not taken would also repeat itself in South. It has to do with alcohol.

In the early days of colonialism spirits and liquor was imported for the whitemen consumption only. Many of them bootlegged the product and sold to natives. Observers soon picked up that liquor reacts differently in the whiteman system than it does with the blackman, when consumed in same quantity and under same conditions and similarity of physicallity. So they raised duties and price to limit the availability and distribution of it. At one point they requested legislation back in UK to forbid importation of spirit to the natives in Southern Nigeria. Bottlers and merchants back in England suffered loss of revenue. They lobbied and put pressure on their government not to restrict trade in liquor. So the importation resumed and availability and consumption of liquor in Southern Nigeria was no longer prohibited.

Its distribution slowly crept up to the North as the business boomed, particularly with RNC, which later became UAC as the sole distributor. As part of their negotiated peace and treaties with the English, Northern rulers drew a boundary for liquor trading and missionary work. Therefore the North had penal codes that made liquor consumption a crime. When missionary penetrated into some non-muslim parts in North, liquor also went along with it. Everywhere bible was received, liquor was also introduced.

Liquor is a weapon. It is a mind altering chemical that when consumed suppresses certain aspects of cognition usually used in processing and responding to impulses and circumstances in the immediate sorrounding and interactions. Therefore an alcohol consumer will concede ...or fail to recognize risks and threats sufficiently for self preservation....and thus in his vulnerable state is exploited. The colonials were ready to do battle and posess our lands, and in fact they fought wars in Lagos, in Ijebu, in Benin, in Sokoto, in Kano and in Bauchi but they also took many dispossessed us of many lands simply by using alcohol to alter our senses and put us in a position to be easily exploited with minimal or zero casualty.

Kaduna was the traditional land of the collective people we call Southern Kaduna today. Kaduna was leased from them when Colonials relocated their headquarters from Lokoja to Kaduna. Bible and alcohol were the two legacies they gained from colonial government. After colonials handed power to regional government, the fulanis in power began a programme of expansion to subdue and hold the North under their spiritual and political control. Gradually intoxication of the Kaduna majority ethnic groups (kajuru, gwari, and so on) took a new turn and trend. To cut the story short.....The majority number gradually became the minority in authority and with that they also lost vast areas of their ancestral homes. In 2015 or 2017 (can't remember which) Governor El Rufai sought to modify the alcohol consumption penal code that had always been in practice and it was meant to prohibit alcohol generally for everyone, muslim and non-muslim....but either by commission or ommission, the prohibition achieved the opposite. It is like telling a child i dont want to see you play ball outside because if you kick the ball and break someone's glass window I will have to pay for it. Meanwhile other children in the neighborhood gather everyday outside and play ball. Then you watch the child get impatient and with annoyance. So you say, okay Im going to just ban all children from playing ball outside. So you give the order. Guess what....those children will find a field somewhere else outside your sight and earshot. What the child does not see or hear also pacifies him into thinking no one else is playing ball and so he doesnt feel cheated...he calms. Southern Kaduna have been drinking alcohol before El Rufai was born.....he might ban it in Kaduna, for muslims.......he cannot enforce its ban on the Christians of Southern Kaduna. The effect is they will stay consumed and continue to lose their ancestral and tribal lands and chiefdoms. Alcohol did this to them.

Alcohol has become a status statement in the South and we have become engrossed in its consumption that we have an addiction, just like in Southern Kaduna, that our vulnerability grows rapidly and put us at risk of exploitation by the North. They are using weapons now to seed terror and intimidation, a time is coming that they will not need weapon....our intoxication is sufficient to yield to them while they slowly peel away our rights and force upon us a two class system...one law for them , a different law for us......just as they did to the Southern Kaduna.


In the Rufai household they probably mock the Southern Kadunas as drunks. They treat them as one for all we can see. Their mockery has crossed over to the web and lately voiced by their son Bello....who once promised gang rape and derided Igbo, with a repeat derision of Ipob few days ago in a tweet. Igbo people are not at the same level, academically or socially with a small boy whose father is an accidental achiever. So what could inform such a arrogance and filthy disregard. The state of mind! Alcohol has deeply altered our state of mind in South. Even when are not intoxicated, our reasoning habits are flawed....the toxins and poison in our blood keep us sedated and dispossed of fundamental responses to self-preservation. This applies to Yoruba, it applies to SS.

YOU ARE A SMALL MINDED SIMPLETON. YOUR WRITING IS DEEPLY FLAWED. THE PROBLEM IS MORE THAN ALCOHOL GENERALISATION. WHO TOLD YOU MUSLIMS NORTHERNERS DONT DRRINK ALCOHOL? MOST OF THEM ARE HYPOCRITES AND CLOSET DRUNK.
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by adenigga(m): 6:49am On May 29, 2020
MetaPhysical:


Even if you people are uncivilized up there are you also blind and deaf? Do you not see how things are done around the globe when a tragedy like this happen? She is indeed in government....she is just too illiterate to understand what "government" is.

Hadiza be like........

1 Like

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by mechanics(m): 6:57am On May 29, 2020
Hahahahah, but she can defend her son on twitter o.

1 Like

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by gbemishile: 6:58am On May 29, 2020
Stupid people everywhere
So her tweeting is an issue now.
U guys are plin stupid
If u are pained with tge killings,simply file outvin ur numbers and protest just like that in the US.agreed u will send only ur tweets cus u care not in the US,but this killings happened here in Nigeria,but u wish for a woman who is not even part of the govt to tweet about it.

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Karlifate: 6:58am On May 29, 2020
JAMO84:
Illiterate! That lady has PhD. I follow her on Twitter, she's one of the most educated women in this country.
Even that MURIC leader; Professor Ishaq Akintola has PhD too.

Paper qualification is NOT equal to wisdom.

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by janedonez(m): 7:13am On May 29, 2020
OUR DARLING MOMMY.[/b]
The mother of the nation.
A woman that says the truth without minding whose ox is gored!
A woman of virtue.
A woman blessed among millions.
God bless you Hajia Aisha!
Nuff said![/quote] this is the only good thing in the life of Buhari. Beauty, brain, charism and flair.

1 Like

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by asanwafo: 7:13am On May 29, 2020
MetaPhysical:
There is a part of history of North Nigeria that many Southerners are unaware of but which if care is not taken would also repeat itself in South. It has to do with alcohol.

In the early days of colonialism spirits and liquor was imported for the whitemen consumption only. Many of them bootlegged the product and sold to natives. Observers soon picked up that liquor reacts differently in the whiteman system than it does with the blackman, when consumed in same quantity and under same conditions and similarity of physicallity. So they raised duties and price to limit the availability and distribution of it. At one point they requested legislation back in UK to forbid importation of spirit to the natives in Southern Nigeria. Bottlers and merchants back in England suffered loss of revenue. They lobbied and put pressure on their government not to restrict trade in liquor. So the importation resumed and availability and consumption of liquor in Southern Nigeria was no longer prohibited.

Its distribution slowly crept up to the North as the business boomed, particularly with RNC, which later became UAC as the sole distributor. As part of their negotiated peace and treaties with the English, Northern rulers drew a boundary for liquor trading and missionary work. Therefore the North had penal codes that made liquor consumption a crime. When missionary penetrated into some non-muslim parts in North, liquor also went along with it. Everywhere bible was received, liquor was also introduced.

Liquor is a weapon. It is a mind altering chemical that when consumed suppresses certain aspects of cognition usually used in processing and responding to impulses and circumstances in the immediate sorrounding and interactions. Therefore an alcohol consumer will concede ...or fail to recognize risks and threats sufficiently for self preservation....and thus in his vulnerable state is exploited. The colonials were ready to do battle and posess our lands, and in fact they fought wars in Lagos, in Ijebu, in Benin, in Sokoto, in Kano and in Bauchi but they also took many dispossessed us of many lands simply by using alcohol to alter our senses and put us in a position to be easily exploited with minimal or zero casualty.

Kaduna was the traditional land of the collective people we call Southern Kaduna today. Kaduna was leased from them when Colonials relocated their headquarters from Lokoja to Kaduna. Bible and alcohol were the two legacies they gained from colonial government. After colonials handed power to regional government, the fulanis in power began a programme of expansion to subdue and hold the North under their spiritual and political control. Gradually intoxication of the Kaduna majority ethnic groups (kajuru, gwari, and so on) took a new turn and trend. To cut the story short.....The majority number gradually became the minority in authority and with that they also lost vast areas of their ancestral homes. In 2015 or 2017 (can't remember which) Governor El Rufai sought to modify the alcohol consumption penal code that had always been in practice and it was meant to prohibit alcohol generally for everyone, muslim and non-muslim....but either by commission or ommission, the prohibition achieved the opposite. It is like telling a child i dont want to see you play ball outside because if you kick the ball and break someone's glass window I will have to pay for it. Meanwhile other children in the neighborhood gather everyday outside and play ball. Then you watch the child get impatient and with annoyance. So you say, okay Im going to just ban all children from playing ball outside. So you give the order. Guess what....those children will find a field somewhere else outside your sight and earshot. What the child does not see or hear also pacifies him into thinking no one else is playing ball and so he doesnt feel cheated...he calms. Southern Kaduna have been drinking alcohol before El Rufai was born.....he might ban it in Kaduna, for muslims.......he cannot enforce its ban on the Christians of Southern Kaduna. The effect is they will stay consumed and continue to lose their ancestral and tribal lands and chiefdoms. Alcohol did this to them.

Alcohol has become a status statement in the South and we have become engrossed in its consumption that we have an addiction, just like in Southern Kaduna, that our vulnerability grows rapidly and put us at risk of exploitation by the North. They are using weapons now to seed terror and intimidation, a time is coming that they will not need weapon....our intoxication is sufficient to yield to them while they slowly peel away our rights and force upon us a two class system...one law for them , a different law for us......just as they did to the Southern Kaduna.


In the Rufai household they probably mock the Southern Kadunas as drunks. They treat them as one for all we can see. Their mockery has crossed over to the web and lately voiced by their son Bello....who once promised gang rape and derided Igbo, with a repeat derision of Ipob few days ago in a tweet. Igbo people are not at the same level, academically or socially with a small boy whose father is an accidental achiever. So what could inform such a arrogance and filthy disregard. The state of mind! Alcohol has deeply altered our state of mind in South. Even when are not intoxicated, our reasoning habits are flawed....the toxins and poison in our blood keep us sedated and dispossed of fundamental responses to self-preservation. This applies to Yoruba, it applies to SS.

See What u ended up writing. Ethnic bigot
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Microwhy: 7:17am On May 29, 2020
Scream:
So her "not being in government" has taken away her humanity?

People of goodwill should be concerned about the death of fellow citizens in the hands of criminals, you don't have to be an official of the government. Are we in US government for us to be concerned about the death of George Floyd in America?

She should be educated that we practice Democracy and the simplest definition is government of the people, by the and for the people? Is she not part of the people?

Also, the office of the First Lady doesn't exist in our constitution...whether she accepts it or not doesn't make her an official of the government.
Even if she condemn the act, you guys will still rain insult on her. Not everybody have thick skin against cyber bullying. It affect some adversely.

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by bkool7(m): 7:18am On May 29, 2020
Though you are not duty bound to be concern but as a citizen of Kaduna and an influential one at that, you ought to use your position whether in government or not to better the lives of your people.
You can't be celebrating in the midst of people dying

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by Microwhy: 7:19am On May 29, 2020
MetaPhysical:


Even if you people are uncivilized up there are you also blind and deaf? Do you not see how things are done around the globe when a tragedy like this happen? She is indeed in government....she is just too illiterate to understand what "government" is.
What is civilization?

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by bkool7(m): 7:22am On May 29, 2020
brain54:

that she didn't tweet about it does not mean she is not sympathetic as you put it...probably her principle to stay of political matters... not everyone likes politics. you can't force her. its her choice and decision

But it's a wrong choice and decision

2 Likes

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by ofiko123(m): 7:23am On May 29, 2020
She has a point though.. She is not part of the Government..

1 Like

Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by rash47(m): 7:24am On May 29, 2020
brain54:

oga what's ur point exactly? how does ur write up relate to the post? when you meet a swordsman man draw your sword...do not recite poetry to one who is not a poet...

That was a deep dialectic of our political journey as a country, understandable only if you are an observer .
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by brain54(m): 7:26am On May 29, 2020
rash47:


That was a deep dialectic of our political journey as a country, understandable only if you are an observer .
not relevant to the post.
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by chila99: 7:28am On May 29, 2020
i wanted to comment on that but i felt they is no need. is like he consumed some liquor before commenting on the post.
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by chila99: 7:33am On May 29, 2020
leave that guy, he does not have clue of what he is talking about.
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by brain54(m): 7:33am On May 29, 2020
bkool7:


But it's a wrong choice and decision
you cannot conclude that way...its her right and decision to speak or not to speak... because her husband is into politics don't mean she should be a politician or be interested into politics. even if she supports his ambition... that she didn't comment don't mean she ain't sympathetic... if you chase every dog that barks on the road...then you won't get to your destination.
Re: Hadiza El-Rufai: I'm Married To A Governor; I'm Not Part Of Government by mu2sa2: 7:35am On May 29, 2020
See how unthinking people are masturbating over a simple issue! This woman has expressed her opinion, which in itself shows she's independent- minded. If she doesn't want to say a thing about governance, what's the offence in that? After all, even in a criminal trial a defendant isn't bound to say a word. Kudos Hadiza El- Rufai, PhD; patriotic nigerians love you, so ignore the gibberish ranting of ipob brats, their brain has been reset by their fugitive porn actor messiah.

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