Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence

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Author Topic: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence  (Read 5698 views)
otukpo (f)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #32 on: September 18, 2009, 01:36 PM »

Ribadu looks hungrier than every other person in that picture or is it because of the fasting?

If they are not feeding him well in America, he shld come back to Nigeria, at least we can feed him well here.
koolchicco
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #33 on: September 18, 2009, 01:36 PM »

Quote from: temmytanny on September 18, 2009, 01:27 PM
imagine the chief security officer of nigeria denying dat.dats wat he would say if osama bin laden comes and bomb nigeria


Hmm u dey about bombing Naija,when we no reach to bomb sef.E no go even take Osama more than 10mins to finish us.Na peppersoup na! Angry Grin
desgiezd (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #34 on: September 18, 2009, 01:36 PM »

This country will never cease to amaze me. Was it Ribadu's ghost all the newspapers that carried the story saw? Was it also his ghost that went to the morgue where Fawehinmi's body was kept and prayed there?

Onovoooooo, you can do better than this bare-faced lie!!
rasputinn (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #35 on: September 18, 2009, 01:37 PM »

Quote from: Dereformer on September 18, 2009, 01:35 PM
Those photographs are not real. It is a computer simulated design which super-imposed Ribadu's image in that position. It was done with utmost precision. In the original photograph, the man in Ribadu's position is Alhaji Olarenwaju.

I bet you I can design a photogragh with you on top of your neighbor's wife and it will be so real that you will even own up doing it Grin  

Take this to the joke section
otukpo (f)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #36 on: September 18, 2009, 01:39 PM »

Onovo is acting a script. Its like joing a cult, once u enter, u must play by the rules. Sorry for Onovo.
rasputinn (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #37 on: September 18, 2009, 01:40 PM »

Quote from: desgiezd on September 18, 2009, 01:36 PM
This country will never cease to amaze me. Was it Ribadu's ghost all the newspapers that carried the story saw? Was it also his ghost that went to the morgue where Fawehinmi's body was kept and prayed there?

Onovoooooo, you can do better than this bare-faced lie!!

Are you surprised,is it not in this same country,politicians have been shown live on national TV making gaffes only for them to say they were "quoted" out of context,tell me what quote has to do with somebody's live interview Huh Undecided Huh Shocked Grin
villous (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #38 on: September 18, 2009, 01:41 PM »

i think saddam should be choosen as our IG because he gave us a better idea of how an IG should look like
opepo (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #39 on: September 18, 2009, 01:41 PM »

good gracious! this onovo guy is a real bastard. givin us a bare faced lie.
ah, infact we dont have any kind of policing in his country no more, if this crazy IG can tell us such lies.
i hpe his relatives and especially his cildren can see how disgracefull thier patriach is.
Nezan (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #40 on: September 18, 2009, 01:42 PM »

9ja and security . . . . . .
villous (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #41 on: September 18, 2009, 01:42 PM »

Sometimes i come to realised that even our media in Nigeria belong to one party or the other
opepo (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #42 on: September 18, 2009, 01:46 PM »

Quote from: Dereformer on September 18, 2009, 01:35 PM
Those photographs are not real. It is a computer simulated design which super-imposed Ribadu's image in that position. It was done with utmost precision. In the original photograph, the man in Ribadu's position is Alhaji Olarenwaju.

I bet you I can design a photogragh with you on top of your neighbor's wife and it will be so real that you will even own up doing it Grin  



if that is te case then prove it by posting the original pictures so we all can see.
 if not, i advice you to please shut up!
villous (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #43 on: September 18, 2009, 01:47 PM »

I don‘t believe Ribadu came to Nigeria -IG
By Olalekan Adetayo
The Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Ogbonna Onovo, on Thursday, said he did not believe that,
 http://www.punchng.com/images/July/Monday/pix2009072718525860.jpg


yeye man he thought we are all comedian,
presido1
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #44 on: September 18, 2009, 01:48 PM »

Ribadu had arrived the house of the late legal icon, at about 6:45 pm Thursday in company of his lawyer Mr. Femi Falana to pay his last respects and to condole the family of the deceased.

Culled from: http://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-322965.0.html

But checking the clock on the wall show some minutes past 9 or some minutes to 1pm. I assume its the later as the day is still bright to be 1 or to 1pm for the first picture. Again is it not too bright to be be 6.45pm assuming he took the pictures immediately they arrived which is unlikely.
Am not saying he did not come to Nigeria but something smells from the two publications.
oyb (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #45 on: September 18, 2009, 01:50 PM »

onovo is rebranding the police. . .

they dont fight crime cause they don't notice it  Grin
opepo (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #46 on: September 18, 2009, 01:50 PM »

Quote from: villous on September 18, 2009, 01:42 PM
Sometimes i come to realised that even our media in Nigeria belong to one party or the other



are you just realising it? ofcourse thier loyalties lies somewhere(albeit with some politicians )and that is why the fredom of inormation  issue should be approached with caution.
villous (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #47 on: September 18, 2009, 01:55 PM »

OPEPO can you imagine saying that pictures is not real
villous (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #48 on: September 18, 2009, 01:58 PM »

am presently in a country know that people comes out in thousands to protest against there president in an intresting way today just 2 hour ago
wales (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #49 on: September 18, 2009, 02:02 PM »

The Inspector General of Police, Mr. Ogbonna Onovo, has said the former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, never visited the country to commiserate with the family of the late Gani Fawehinmi.

The declaration is coming even as people are insisting that they watched Ribadu on television, as he was condoling with the family of the late legal icon in his Ikeja, Lagos, and residence.

Besides visiting Gani’s family, Ribadu was also said to have demanded to see the corpse of the late Gani, a request that was also granted by the family. After visiting the morgue, where he spent some minutes, paying tribute to the late human rights activist, Ribadu left the country, leaving some Nigerians to wonder if he was not the same man the federal wanted badly.

The inspector general of police, who was on his first official assignment to Lagos, yesterday, since he assumed office about six weeks ago, still maintained that Ribadu never touched Nigerian soil during the period in question. The IGP, therefore, challenged journalists to show the pictures of the former EFCC chairman they snapped while he was in Gani’s residence ‘‘Who took his photograph when he came to Nigeria. I want you to show me the photograph you snapped him when he came to Nigeria,” he insisted.
On rampant kidnapping, which has become a booming business in the South-East, the IGP said policemen were not folding their arms. He added that security had been beefed up in the zone, especially in Anambra State.

He, however, outlined some of the challenges faced by the police in its effort to track down the kidnappers. One of such challenges, according to him, is the inability to get information on the identity, among others, of the owners of the SIM cards used by the kidnappers to communicate with the families of the victims.
Another one is lack of scientific equipment, which could provide photographs, addresses of users of the SIM card. According to him, these were made difficult by the fact that people buy SIM cards in the streets. He disclosed that the service providers are presently cooperating with the Police in this regard.




Other factors according to Onovo, is lack of cooperation from victims and members of their families. ’’We discovered that relatives of victims don’t cooperate with the Police. They are interested in paying ransom. If there is no ransom, there will be no kidnapping. We require the cooperation of the victims. There is need to re-orientate victims, so that they can give information to the Police when they are released,” he said.
He also stressed the need for banks to cooperate with the Police, by giving the kidnappers marked money. He explained that as part of the efforts to curb kidnapping and religious crisis, the Nigerian Police had established anti- terrorists Unit and trained some officers and men on terrorism.
The IG said he would pay attention to capacity building, which includes, training and retraining, welfare of officers and men of the Nigerian Police Force and intelligence –led policing.
He explained that policies and measures put in place by his predecessors that are relevant would be sustained and enhanced, while those that are not, would be dropped.
He commended the Lagos State Police Command for working hard to reduce crime rate in the state and urged the Police Commissioner, Mr. Marvel Akpoyibo, to “export” his strategies to other states.
He also commended the Lagos State government for its supports to the police command.
Earlier in his welcome address, Akpoyibo enumerated the achievement recorded by the state command and the challenges facing it.
He commended the past Commissioners of Police in the state for their efforts at combating crime, adding that he had evolved an intelligence-driven crime combating strategy.
Akpoyibo disclosed that bank robbery had reduced from 22 in 2007, to 13 in 2008, and 3 in 2009.
He said the number of Police deaths during encounters with armed robbers have drastically reduced from 59 in 2007, to 33 in 2008, and 6 in 2009.
According to the CP, a similar trend was recorded in car snatching.
He explained that in 2007, a total of 1,695 were snatched, 939 in 2008, and 516 in 2009.
Akpoyibo, however, appealed to the IG to assist the Command, by providing logistics and other things that would enable it achieve the zero-level tolerance for crime.

Which Way Naija,  Grin Grin Grin
 


* Mr Ogbonna Onovo (IGP).gif (18.39 KB, 228x250 )
franctony (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #50 on: September 18, 2009, 02:11 PM »

Quote from: villous on September 18, 2009, 01:47 PM
I don‘t believe Ribadu came to Nigeria -IG
By Olalekan Adetayo
The Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Ogbonna Onovo, on Thursday, said he did not believe that,
 



i dont think the police boss has lied about his comment on Ribadu's visit to nigeria.to say that he doesnt believe ribadu came to nigeria is quite different from "Ribadu has never come to Nigeria" as an average nigerian police would say. i think the man is only being careful with his statement as an experienced cop.

pls, i think Onovo deserves some level of respect as a responsible nigerian cop. the man has always been transparent and accountable all his days as a policeman.
travelxpat (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #51 on: September 18, 2009, 02:17 PM »

SHUT UP EVERYBODY ,YOU BLOODY CIVILIANS THAT IS NOT NUHU RIBADU ,THE PERSON  YOU ARE SEEING IS UHUN UDABIR THE FORMER CCFE CHAIRMAN, PLS DONT BE CONFUSED THEY BOTH LOOK ALIKE .
deezah (f)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #52 on: September 18, 2009, 02:22 PM »

Quote from: villous on September 18, 2009, 01:41 PM
i think saddam should be choosen as our IG because he gave us a better idea of how an IG should look like

Which Saddam? Saddam Hussein?? Are you frigging kidding me???

We are in trouble if someone can come into the country and the whole Nigerian Police force didnt know about it, with their IG saying he doesn't "think" Ribadu came into the country. He doesnt think?Huh!!! Good God Almighty!!!
chosen04 (f)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #53 on: September 18, 2009, 02:24 PM »

Quote from: Dereformer on September 18, 2009, 01:35 PM
Those photographs are not real. It is a computer simulated design which super-imposed Ribadu's image in that position. It was done with utmost precision. In the original photograph, the man in Ribadu's position is Alhaji Olarenwaju.

I bet you I can design a photogragh with you on top of your neighbor's wife and it will be so real that you will even own up doing it Grin  

   No wonder they are sooooooo many YAHOO GUYS like U in town.
deezah (f)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #54 on: September 18, 2009, 02:32 PM »

Quote from: deezah on September 18, 2009, 02:22 PM
Which Saddam? Saddam Hussein?? Are you frigging kidding me???

We are in trouble if someone can come into the country and the whole Nigerian Police force didnt know about it, with their IG saying he doesn't "think" Ribadu came into the country. He doesnt think?Huh!!! Good God Almighty!!!

Pardon me, he said "Believe" rather. He doesn't believe? Did Ribadu do him American wonder?? Or is it British wonder??

BUT COME TO THINK OF IT, IS IT TRUE THAT THE PICTURES COULD HAVE BEEN DOCTORED, COS HONESTLY, RIBADU DOESNT LOOK LIKE HIMSELF THERE O. JUST WONDERING. Also, how come no Nigerian newspaper carried a picture of Ribadu at Gani's house? Still wondering o. There's more to this, i dare say.

dkings101
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #55 on: September 18, 2009, 02:34 PM »

Don't mind 9ja Police at the Airport, they are only naive and new travellers at the Airport to collect there BTA and make dem cry before boarding, stupid police force, They are the 1st organisation or Institution to be reform. if we have better police, life would be better for 9jas.
oge4real (f)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #56 on: September 18, 2009, 02:37 PM »

Maybe the IG and his cohorts were in trance when Ribadu came to Nigeria. Lips sealed
Allta (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #57 on: September 18, 2009, 02:38 PM »

Why would Ribadu lie on his Facebook that he visited Naija last Thursday(10th)? Nigerian Police are f.a.g.s!!! and the currect IG is a c.u.n.t! for rejecting the news. Can't they simply check with Airlines or even Nigerian Customs/Immigration Officials and carry out checks on Ribadu's immigration records, what about the Press that Ribadu addressed? Nigeria is all one big fantassy JOKE!!! Check out this write-up by Reuben Abati from Ribadu's Facebook's notes, so who is Lieing ,  RIBADU or NIGERIAN POLICE?

Quote
Gani's Death and Ribadu's Return
 15th September at 12:30
By Reuben Abati

There have been many remarkable even timeless moments in the lying-in-state ceremonies that have been organised in honour of the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi. In a piece titled "Gani: Radical to the End" (Friday, September 11), I have already drawn attention to some lessons that can be learnt from Gani's death and the manner of his exit, noting in the closing paragraph the truly moving visit to the departed's residence by a group of mendicants who described him as their friend and the champion of their interests. Since then, there have been equally moving tributes and reports, all so powerfully couched that they draw attention to the purpose of life, the nature of dying and bereavement, and what a man should die for. I have just read one particularly engaging interview in The Saturday Champion (September 12) granted by 76-year old Joseph Ekpo, who was Gani's barber for 38 years. Their last encounter was on August 7. The interviewer had asked Ekpo: "What was your last moment with Gani like?" Hear Ekpo: "The last time I was with him was last August, on the 7th to be precise. I went to do his hair-cut and he looked at me in the eyes and said, "I have tried."

When I finished, he held my right hand in his two hands, slapped the back and said "goodbye." When he was about entering, he looked back again and looked at my eyes, shook his head and went in. That day my spirit told me I may not see or barb him again.

When I stepped out, I told his wife who had brought my money that she should be patient to look after her husband. She nodded while I walked away and when I got to the gate, Daniel (Gani's receptionist) saw my wet eyes and asked what the matter was and I told him that I doubted if I would ever see or barb Gani again. True to my prediction, few days ago, they called and informed me of his death."

It is possible to conceptualise grief, but long before the bereaved begin the process of detachment from the dead and the necessary illusion that the dead may remain alive, grief is first experienced by the dying. Existing literature on death and dying offer glimpses into the psychology and sociology of dying, at the core of it all is the dying man or woman's own gradual adjustment to the fact of death. Death being the end of physical existence draws upon the individual's full emotions.

In Leo Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilych, a strong mimetic representation of thanatos, the final moment of that process is the dying man's acceptance of the fact of mortality, after a period of doubt, uncertainty, hope, and a struggle to cling to life. The Lord Jesus Christ on the Cross, after one of the most celebrated final moments in history, declared: "It is finished,  Father unto thy hands I commit my spirit." Gani, when his illness became public knowledge had vowed to fight cancer with all the energy at his disposal. In the end, he told his barber: "I have tried, Goodbye." The barber's reporting of their last encounter may not fully capture the weight of the moment but we get a sense of it. Death is the debt that all living things owe. The dying often worry about how they will be remembered and whether they have done the best with their lives. Victor Marshall calls it, "the writing of the last chapter."

The celebration of Gani's life and times in the past few days, has confirmed the truthfulness of his own declaration: "I have tried." In this is contained a sense of fulfilment, contentment and joy. In the expression of our grief, there has been an equal acceptance that Gani lived a meaningful life. There is something called "the way of death," and although there has been much confused theorizing about this, so much clarity has attended the grieving over Gani. There has been a frank telling of feelings and reactions. It is normal in African culture to celebrate good men and women in death and so has it been in Gani's case.

Already, the manner of his exit has been successful. What is signposted is not our change of status: one of the byproducts of bereavement: wife to widow, child to orphan, end of association, loss of access, the severance of umbilical cords, but Gani's identity, our own identities, and Gani's role and his place in our national biography. His family has also had the opportunity of both internal dialogues with the deceased: following his corpse about, dressing him up nicely at every ocassion, suggesting even a possible commentary on Gani's fashion on the death-bed, and external dialogues with Gani's friends and associates. Sudden deaths present a different kind of challenge and the dialogue process may be somewhat complicated requiring more tears and counselling but Gani's death does not project the notion of death as an embarrassment but as triumph and conversation. More importantly, it confirms Chris Rawlings's contention that "Death is identity's gatekeeper." In mourning Gani, identities have been under close scrutiny in the last week; even more so, every other person is compelled to ask the questions: "What is death? What is life? What would you die for?"

To cite just one example in this regard, Chief Alex Akinyele, Gani's best man at his first wedding and a notable man in his own right, had, in commenting on Gani, asked one interviewer: "how do you think I too will be remembered?" And the young man had said something about Aleco being remembered for his humour. This is not a soft issue. It is part of the meaning of death that is, its capacity to inspire internal dialogues. By forcing such personal reflection on the part of the living, Gani's burial is serving a great purpose. Heroic death confronts us with our own failings and encourages us on the path of adjustment and redemption. The gain of living heroically and dying gloriously is that the living in mourning the dead may even find themselves envying the dead. But the more important part of it all is how other deaths mirror not just our own mortality, our humanism as well.

In this regard, perhaps an additional telling example has been that of Nuhu Ribadu, former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) who visited gani's home on Thursday. Ribadu has not been declared wanted by the Yar'çdua government but he is treated as an enemy and as a wanted man. They have forced him out of the police, and the man has chosen the option of voluntary exile. But still, he is accussed of undermining the government abroad and the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice has threatened that Ribadu could be charged for treasonable felony. If anyone were to advise Ribadu, given the fact that he had to proceed on exile when an attempt was made on his life, the appropriate thing to say would have been to ask him to remain in exile for now, and avoid being shot in the back by the powerful enemies he made in the course of his duties as Nigeria's anti-corruption czar.

"I'm afraid but I'm not reckless," Ribadu said. He certainly knows that whistleblowers are very unpopular with the corrupt elite; in other parts of the world, a bullet in the heart has been the gift for such persons. And yet in spite of all this, Ribadu came into the country last Thursday to pay tribute to the late Chief Gani Fawehinmi. He risked his life to honour the dead. Humanism. Friendship. The power of mentorship. This is also in part my point about identity. In mourning Gani, Ribadu teaches us newer lessons about courage and friendship and the likely continuity of Gani's heroism. Also the question: what would you die for? One evening newspaper soon carried a headline: Manhunt for Ribadu. If indeed the Security Services were planning to arrest Ribadu, they only succeeded in advertisng their incompetence.

Ribadu did not disguise as a woman to come into the country. He did not steal to the Gani home under the cover of the night. He addressed the press and even left Ikeja GRA to go to the mortuary to see Gani all of which took more than one hour. They didn't need to look for him. They just couldn't do anything to him. What has been played out is one simple moral tale: Ribadu in the course of his brief visit had the best protection: the protection of the ordinary people of Nigeria. At Gani's home and at the mortuary, the people hailed him, they wanted to touch him, they wanted to hear his voice. They mobbed his car damaging it in the process. They gave him a hero's reception. If anyone had tried to arrest him under such circusmtances, ordinary people would have resisted such nonsense. The people know their leaders: not the pretenders in the corridors of power but those who are committed to the transformation of Nigeria into a great country, As far as we can see, Nuhu Ribadu is counted among this progressive kind. Gani would be pleased with the manner and drama of Ribadu's brief return.
koolchicco
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #58 on: September 18, 2009, 02:39 PM »

Quote from: deezah on September 18, 2009, 02:32 PM
Pardon me, he said "Believe" rather. He doesn't believe? Did Ribadu do him American wonder?? Or is it British wonder??

BUT COME TO THINK OF IT, IS IT TRUE THAT THE PICTURES COULD HAVE BEEN DOCTORED, COS HONESTLY, RIBADU DOESNT LOOK LIKE HIMSELF THERE O. JUST WONDERING. Also, how come no Nigerian newspaper carried a picture of Ribadu at Gani's house? Still wondering o. There's more to this, i dare say.



I asked same question b4 yet no response/answer. Undecided
mekuslogan
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #59 on: September 18, 2009, 02:41 PM »

What is the evidence that:

1. The photo was taken after Gani's death (never mind the seemingly superimposed Gani potrait)
2. That it was not doctored (Ribadu looks like a HIV victim here)?

The so-called Nadeco route through which he allegedly came is now well known. Ribadu, if ever he was close to Nigeria, must have flown to the neighbouring country before walking into Nigeria
Onovo should ask for the plane manifests for all the planes that flew into the country boardering the Nadeco route with a period of one month
Or they should work with the UK police to prove if Ribadu did leave the UK within the last one month en route any West African country

It is not Rocket Science to figure that Ribadu never set foot in Nigeria; he is not that elusive talk less of being a magician.
Warfy Boy (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #60 on: September 18, 2009, 02:42 PM »

i laf, i laf @ d same time shed tears for nigeria. A whole IG open im mouth talk say Ribaba kno enter dis country

THAT MEANS,  na only God dey protect us for dis country, the IG n al the police r useless
dove24u (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #61 on: September 18, 2009, 02:43 PM »

Quote from: deezah on September 18, 2009, 02:32 PM
Pardon me, he said "Believe" rather. He doesn't believe? Did Ribadu do him American wonder?? Or is it British wonder??

BUT COME TO THINK OF IT, IS IT TRUE THAT THE PICTURES COULD HAVE BEEN DOCTORED, COS HONESTLY, RIBADU DOESNT LOOK LIKE HIMSELF THERE O. JUST WONDERING. Also, how come no Nigerian newspaper carried a picture of Ribadu at Gani's house? Still wondering o. There's more to this, i dare say.


Shocked Shocked Shocked
franctony (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #62 on: September 18, 2009, 02:47 PM »

@oge4real
you and your wonderful statement again on this thread. i promise i must track you down Grin Grin Grin
Allta (m)
Re: Ribadu's Visit To Gani Fawehinmi- Photo Evidence
« #63 on: September 18, 2009, 02:48 PM »

Quote from: mekuslogan on September 18, 2009, 02:41 PM
The so-called Nadeco route through which he allegedly came is now well known. Ribadu, if ever he was close to Nigeria, must have flown to the neighbouring country before walking into Nigeria
Onovo should ask for the plane manifests for all the planes that flew into the country boardering the Nadeco route with a period of one month
Or they should work with the UK police to prove if Ribadu did leave the UK within the last one month en route any West African country

It is not Rocket Science to figure that Ribadu never set foot in Nigeria; he is not that elusive talk less of being a magician.

Thank You jare, The Nigerian Police should put an end to all this by showing evidences from UK Govt. that Ribadu never left UK enroute to (West) Africa and also evidences from Airlines that he didn't take any Nadeco Route into Naija. If there are no enough security cameras to identify anyone at various point of entry into the country. I would not dispute if someone said to me Bin Laden is living in Lekki self.

Seriously, we have SSS, we have an investigative department/unit for Naija, make dem all produce evidence and not just blab. Shiiiiooooo!!!!
 16 Killed In Nigerian Cartoons Riots  Police Demotes Ribadu- Ex Efcc Boss  Update on the Ekiti Rerun Election: Segun Oni (PDP) declared Winner !  Page 2
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