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PoliticsRe: Babangida Will Not Be President - Abiola Family by backbelle: 10:40pm On May 04, 2010
I don't blame the igbos,that's why they never attain higher position.I advise them not to mind the presidency and go back to their spare parts.Ssshior!
Music/RadioRe: (tribute To Dagrin)drop Ur Favourite Line From Dagrin's Songs by backbelle: 8:37pm On Apr 23, 2010
Ta won eyan ba rimi won pemi lomo buruku.Won ni life ti mon live pe mi o ni pe ku.
Music/RadioUpdate On Barrack O'grin? by backbelle(op): 7:56pm On Apr 21, 2010
Pls,i would want an update on dagrin's health from time to time in other not to believe in rumours. God bless as u do.
Music/RadioRe: Queen Of Rap - Bouqui Or Sasha by backbelle: 7:15pm On Feb 04, 2010
Sasha is da queen.Like or hate her.
EducationHardwork Does Not Pay. by backbelle(op): 3:02pm On Jan 14, 2010
i can't emerging what the schooling in Nigeria is now turning into. hardworking students are not adequately given their Worth's in terms of grades and marks.guys have to sacrifice their girls or money for the lecturer,just to pave way for their success and the ladies has to leave their guys and sacrifice their body for the lecturer to test their microphones.is no news that most of those that claimed to have 1st class in schcool does not worth it and cannot even use their head to defend their paper.

sober reflection.

SORRY !!!
Music/RadioRe: Durella Snickers, N25000.k by backbelle(op): 5:29pm On Jan 13, 2010
i ain't feeling restress, mo dabi omo tuntun ti won se bi look at me yes!
HealthI Can Feel Somthing Is Rumbling In My Dk. by backbelle(op): 5:02pm On Jan 13, 2010
it's over a while now when i started feeling something is wrong with me which i never took seriou, not until i started dating girls.i couldn't last long on bed i.e i com very quick.a lady once asked me why i can't even last for 2 minutes on bed? and i was embarrassed. i had to go to a local doc. to xplain things and i was told it is staphylococcus or something.i bought some drugs from him but i could not feel the diff. please, i need your help.
thanks.
Music/RadioRe: Durella Snickers, N25000.k by backbelle(op): 4:46pm On Jan 13, 2010
@tosinaded, evrytime ni numi man dun but mio gbadun,bere lowo ibidun mo dangerous bi magun.
Music/RadioRe: Durella Snickers, N25000.k by backbelle(op): 3:52pm On Jan 13, 2010
am too much to handle,that's y i don't disclose my identity. u no dey look face?
Music/RadioRe: Durella Snickers, N25000.k by backbelle(op): 12:01pm On Jan 13, 2010
@tosinaded,
na me dey yan mattabisticaly? watin concern me concern terrorist.he b like say u no sabi wu i b 4 dis town,ok! anothr word from u,and i go,
Music/RadioDurella Snickers, N25000.k by backbelle(op): 8:47am On Jan 13, 2010
durella just roled out an advert of his snickers that goes for N25,000k.i think he should be more focus on how to get more sales of his album rather than venturing into this.
Jokes EtcRe: I Named My Dog Dele by backbelle: 3:48pm On Jan 12, 2010
name mine, farouk abdul muttallab.
Jokes EtcRe: Deliver Us From Akpan by backbelle: 2:17pm On Jan 12, 2010
my best joke so far on nairaland. wel don
Jokes EtcRe: Internal Memo by backbelle: 1:50pm On Jan 12, 2010
thank God is not from my father,to me or any of my relatives. on your own
Jokes EtcRe: Umoru And The Seven Virgins by backbelle: 1:37pm On Jan 12, 2010
jobless hands + wasted effort= !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
RomanceRe: I Love My Husband Dearly, But I Am Attracted To My Work Colleague ! by backbelle: 11:22am On Jan 12, 2010
is not that u won't find anyone u liked even after ur marriage but it takes one thing to overcome all that i.e SELF CONTROL.
RomanceRe: She Is Married But Still Wants Me. by backbelle: 12:35pm On Jan 08, 2010
run 4 ur life. simple!
CultureRe: How To Say I Love You In Different Languages by backbelle: 12:33pm On Jan 08, 2010
IN HAUSA. kai i get am 4 loff 4 u walahi.
PoliticsDid Marwa Deliver The Bomb To Dele Giwa? by backbelle(op): 12:05pm On Jan 08, 2010
On Sunday, Professor Taiyemiwo Ogunade gave a bombshell interview to the NATION newspaper in which he made startling revelations about those who killed Dele Giwa in 1986. In a subsequent chat with Saharareporters, he spoke specifically about the role of former military administrator of Lagos State Buba Marwa in the assassination of the journalist.
Dr. Ogunade disclosed that soldiers loyal to the slain General Mamman Vatsa identified Marwa as the person who delivered the parcel bomb that killed Giwa, the Newswatch magazine founder.

He said the revelation came from a confidential discussion he had with one of the military boys who came to the City University of New York (CUNY) to press the college to train Nigerian military officials in “Peace and Conflict Resolution”. He said that Vatsa gave a four-hour long testimony to the military tribunal that tried and later sentenced him to death for a phantom coup plot against former military dictator, Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida.

Saharareporters: Do you know who delivered the bomb that killed Dele Giwa?

Ogunade: I believe that Buba Marwa did it. Some Mamman Vatsa boys told the full story in New York during a visit to my college to lobby our college to accept to train Nigerian military officers. Ambassador Olusola was on that entourage. [My informant] told me Dele Giwa was killed because he was in possession of a tape containing Vatsa’s testimony before the military tribunal. For four hours, Vatsa requested to tell the full story about how the Babangida regime was operating and his knowledge of the workings of IBB’s mind. He pointed out that after Halilu Akilu and Col. A.K Togun of the military intelligence prepared the parcel it was handed over to Buba Marwa to deliver to Dele Giwa. Marwa is a well–known “IBB boy”. But I was the one who gave Dele Giwa the tape.

Saharareporters: How did you get the tape?

Ogunade: Vatsa had a copy made by his friends in the tribunal and smuggled out to me and I “loaned” it to Dele Giwa who got on the case immediately. I still don’t know how Dele Giwa found out that I had the tape till this day.

Saharareporters: Do you still have a copy?
Ogunade: Yes, but you know I left Nigeria hurriedly after the death of Dele Giwa. I left [the tape] with my aged mother, who did not know the value then. I won’t say more, let the military release that tape to the Nigerian public.

Saharareporters: Did Dele Giwa return the tape to you?

Ogunade: Yes, he returned it after 24 hours. Don’t forget that I loaned it to him; I think he went and played it to Babangida’s people and they eliminated him after they heard the tape.

Saharareporters: What about Gloria Okon? It’s been said that Dele Giwa’s discovery of her was the reason he was killed?

Ogunade: Gloria Okon is actually Chinyere, that’s her real name. She married Charles "Jeff" Chandler, the fellow who killed Nzeogwu and was killed a day later. Chinyere, Maryam and Princess Atta were young friends who hung out together. They all married into the military, because the military was a proud and respectable profession then. Charles Chandler, who was Tiv, married Chinyere who I think is from Imo State. IBB married Maryam from Asaba and Mamman Vatsa married the princess. So Chinyere became a widow and resorted to trading between UK and Nigeria. And then she was caught with drugs; Mamman Vatsa was the person who put Chinyere on the next available flight from Kano to London – and then claimed that she was dead by parading a dead woman picked out of the mortuary. Dele Giwa later found out that she was in London having delivered a baby by another man. He sent a French photographer to the place and they saw Maryam Babangida at the event. Kayode Soyinka brought back the photographs.
Dele was sitting across the table from Kayode examining the photos taken of “Gloria Okon” (Chinyere, Richard Chandler’s wife) at the naming ceremony in London. Maryam Babangida was there. And then a letter parcel was delivered to him and he said excitedly that it must be from “Mr. President” referring to the discussions he had with IBB days earlier. The bomb exploded and severed his lower abdomen; he died a few hours later.

Saharareporters: Did you ever meet Marwa again? And did you ask him about his involvement?

Ogunade: Yes, Marwa was very active in the Nigerian embassy in New York. For a long time he was the “military attaché” to the Nigerian mission in New York while I was a professor of Black Studies at the City University of New York. He came to my college to sign a $30 million contract with the college so that members of the Nigerian military could attend a “Peace and Conflict Resolution program” and then be awarded a masters degree upon completion of the program. I fought bitterly against it, but the chair of the department, John Muyibi Amoda, badly wanted the money. I kept fighting and one day the college authorities acceded to my request. When I got home the college had dismissed me, but also I got a fax message saying the $30 million had been returned to Marwa. But between Marwa and Abacha they never returned that money to the Nigerian treasury. They shared it. I heard between him and Abacha, over $250 million was laundered through an account used by the New York mission of the Nigerian embassy. Marwa later set up an airline with his share of the loot. When he showed up to run for president I was the one who petitioned the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to investigate him. He confessed to money laundering in handwritten statements to the EFCC, but today he is the ambassador of Nigeria to South Africa. The police officer that investigated him, Ibrahim Magu, is permanently suspended from the police force after he was humiliated by the EFCC. It is a shameful country.

Saharareporters: What else did you do?

Ogunade: We helped start the Obama phenomenon in Chicago.

Saharareporters: How?

Ogunade: We fought and exposed Carol Mosley-Braun who was Abacha’s agent in the US Senate. She was removed from the US Senate because she took $5 million from Abacha to help cover his tracks in the US. We exposed her, which was how it became possible for the brilliant Obama to become the US president today. We set the stage for it.
PoliticsI Used To Take Briefcases Full Of Money To Obasanjo From Babangida by backbelle(op): 12:00pm On Jan 08, 2010
"There was a day Babangida sent me to Obasanjo at his farm. I used to take briefcases full of money to Obasanjo from Banangida. That was when corruption started, he cannot deny it." These statements were part of the revelations of the former Press Secretary to General Ibrahim Babangida, Major Debo Basorun, who escaped from Nigeria to save his life under the dictator's regime.

Those conversant with the politico-military situation in Nigeria in the late 1980s will remember the enigmatic Major Adebowale (Debo) Basorun, the military spokesman during the Ibrahim Babangida junta. Somehow, his path crossed with the military establishment he was serving at the time and the gadfly hightailed out of the country so that he could live to fight another day.

He had stunned not only the military establishment but also the country with his resignation, and when it was rejected, the irrepressible army officer went to court in a landmark suit to seek protection from harassment and intimidation by some top officials in the Nigerian Army, notably the Chief of Army Staff, General Sani Abacha, the then Director of Military Intelligence, Halilu Akilu, and the Director of Army Public Relations, Fred Chijuka.

Surprisingly, while the suit was still pending, Basorun fled the country in April 1989 to the United States through what later came to be known as the famous ‘NADECO route’ after several unsuccessful attempts to silence him.
Since his return to the country about two years ago after his close to 19-year sojourn in the U.S., the former Press and Public Affairs Officer (Military Press Secretary) to Babangida (then military president) had kept a safe distance from the media, with which he had related very closely in the past. But he recently broke his silence, which, according to him, is for purposes of putting the records straight as a prelude to the release of his memoirs.

As he revealed to Sunday Sun in this earth-shaking, no-holds-barred interview, indeed the first since his return, the events that led to his fleeing the country were not unconnected with the morbid suspicion that he held the key that could unravel the dastardly murder via parcel bomb of the founding editor-in-chief of the Newswatch Magazine, Mr Dele Giwa, in October 1986.
With nostalgia, he recalls the incidents that led to Giwa’s death and how he stumbled on some iron-cast evidence. He, however, looks forward to the day himself, Babangida and Akilu would be brought before the people’s court to answer all they know pertaining to the cruel murder of Giwa. That is if he is not assassinated before then, he says.

Like a man sold out to his beliefs, Basorun knew the path he would tread when he enlisted in the Nigerian Army at the outbreak of the civil war in 1967 as a Private in the Infantry Corps. He therefore had no qualms when he decided to dump his job in a multinational firm where he had just been promoted.

But what actually hastened his passion to wear the starched green khaki uniform, to the consternation of his friends and family members, was an altercation with a drunken soldier over a lady at a popular joint then in the Mushin area of Lagos State. While celebrating his promotion, he had bought some bottles of beer for the uniformed man, only for the latter, at the height of his stupor, to attempt to forcibly take away Debo’s girl as he made to leave the joint. The slightest resistance from the ‘bloody civilian’ attracted several ‘dirty’ slaps on his face, and before those at the joint could say jack, the drunken soldier had mobilised his colleagues and pandemonium broke out. Debo had to flee for his life.

But, indeed, the incident made an indelible impact on the young Basorun that when he joined the army, he was emotionally and psychologically prepared to confront whatever he considered an injustice. Little wonder years later, he overcame several efforts to undermine him by his superiors and juniors.

I left Nigeria through Republic of Benin
You do not need to commit any offence in the military to get into trouble. They can just slam you for some frivolous charges of disobedience to order and other sundry misdemeanours and that is it. And mine was not an exception. I had gone through all kinds of trouble and persecution and when I decided to resign, the army and the powers that be felt I knew too much. And I did really. So I resigned. But they did not accept my resignation, that was the problem. There was a circular or a directive in military jargon which says those of you working with a particular organization should resign whenever you want to join politics. So I quoted that in my resignation letter. ‘Sir, I’m resigning, luckily you said it, and I’m going to join politics.’ Now, because they never expected it, they said I could not resign and I asked why. Because if I got out they would not be able to nail me because I was pregnant with all kinds of secrets, they wanted me to remain so they could eventually get rid of me. So what I did was to find a way to save my skin. I left Nigeria through Republic of Benin.

Alao Aka-Bashorun represented me in court
There was a time we arrested the then President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Alao Aka-Bashorun. Most people would tell you that when we detained them I was the one that championed their cause. Along the line, I worked towards his release and we became close. So, I went to meet him, but he was scared. He asked me if I knew what I was getting into and I told him I just wanted to make an example of those people. At a point we filed a suit in court. The army objected but I said I had resigned. They reminded me of the consequences of my suing the army but I said I was ready for anything.

The day I could have killed everybody, including myself at a Lagos High Court
The case was being heard at Igbosere High Court in Lagos. When I was going to the court, I packed my passports, some of my belongings and I started rotating where I slept. I knew the army would be on my trail. Throughout the time of the case in court they were looking for me but I was always on the move, a step ahead. They disregarded many injunctions just to capture me. There was even a day they got an Air Force plane waiting at Ikeja, they went to the court; that day I would have killed myself, killed everybody.
I simply went to court with an ‘Uzzi’ on me. Femi Falana would confirm it if you ask him. I got the gun through dark sources. That day the army even brought an APC (Armoured Personnel Carrier) to make sure they grabbed me at the court premises. I told Femi (Falana) and Oga ( Aka-Bashorun) Bashorun, ‘these people were trying to get me.’ I therefore pulled off my agbada because nobody would search me. When oga Bashorun saw what I had under my agbada, he screamed and told me that I should not do anything. I would probably have killed twenty but I know eventually they would have killed me in return but I was determined not to go down alone. It was Ogbemudia who was the director of the legal services and he represented the army. That man went to tell Justice Thomas of what was happening. The Justice decided he would not do anything until the soldiers were cleared. That was how the planned tragedy was aborted that day.
It is like me coming to your office and you did not know I was armed and eventually I start shooting. You won’t have time to react.
After that, Oga Bashorun told me to hide and I did but at this time I sent messages out to let people know what was going on.

A soldier saved me from ‘capture him dead or alive’ signal
There was this friend of mine in whose house I slept one day. He told me to accompany him to a party at Ibadan. I did. That night, my friend’s wife fell ill and they being members of Celestial Church, the wife opted to go to their church at Abeokuta instead of the hospital. So as soon as we finished the party we were about coming through the express way and something told me we should go and see her at Abeokuta but the man said, no, that he saw her a day before that day. I got there and as soon as we drove into the premise, the woman was screaming and asked me, trembling, if I saw a person? I asked what person?

What actually happened was that the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) officers who were ordered to capture me whether dead or alive, listed the numbers of my vehicles, everything they knew about me, most likely the areas that I would frequent. A long time before then, when I was in Dodan barracks, Dimgba (Igwe) was in Concord (newspaper) then; there was this story about some of our boys who were caught at the border and were about to be charged with armed robbery. They were intelligent operatives stand-by at the border check points, but what these boys did was, they caught a smuggler and the smuggler was trying to negotiate with them and later they agreed on something or they would have seized the goods. But the man had connections with the press and went to Concord, and behold it was on the front page. When I got to the office I was told to get those guys arrested and brought back to me. The boys were brought back, locked up with the SSS.

After locking them up, my job was completed. There were about 18 or 28 of them. After this, I thought justice was taking its course. Then suddenly one day, at the first gate, because there were three gates before you get into the barrack, I was told there was a woman waiting to see me. I was surprised because they couldn’t have stopped this woman at the gate if she was my wife. The woman was speaking in Yoruba and only the Yoruba soldiers among them were able to translate what she was saying, that she wanted to see me. Well, I didn’t want a strange woman coming into my office, so I went downstairs to see her at the gate. I was talking through the gate with her. She said she was looking for Bashorun and I asked her where she came from. From Ekiti, she answered. Because she was an illiterate, she couldn’t read my name which was on my tag.

After a few minutes, I told her I was the person she was looking for, let her in and asked what she wanted to tell me. She said her son was one of those arrested at the border and that the Hausa boys were being released and that the remaining ones in the cell southerners. This woman’s son had nobody to turn to other than his mother. He sent a message to the mother that there was a Yoruba man in the other barrack and they should come and beg me to help him. I said I could not promise her anything but that if it was true only southerners were still being held, I would know how to take up the case. She left, but wanted to know when to come back. I told her not to come, that I would do my best. After my findings, I realized it was true, that the director of SSS, one Gwarzo, a Kano guy actually had had the Hausa guys released from their lock-up. I called him on the phone and asked him what was happening to these boys, brought from Idi-Iroko border. I told him I learnt he was releasing the Hausa boys and leaving the southerners. He said, oh Bashorun you have come with your tribalism because, we used to get into each other’s face all the time. I said well, I knew the number of boys brought into detention and their names. Where are they now?, I asked.
About fifteen minutes later he called back and asked for the Yoruba boy’s name who sought my assistance and he released him. That was the man who saved me from the gallows.
After his release he came to me and I advised him to be more behaved. There was a day Babangida sent me to Obasanjo at his farm. I used to take briefcases full of money to Obasanjo from Banangida. That was when corruption started, he cannot deny it.

…He intercepted the signal, hid it in his shirt and pretended to be ill
That boy I assisted was posted to Obasanjo and on one of the days I visited Obasanjo, this boy still remembered me and came to me, greeted me but I couldn’t remember his face. He reminded me and since then each time I went to Obasanjo, he was always there. He treated me well. After a while I didn’t see him until this trouble broke out. He had been redeployed from Obasanjo’s personal security to their SSS headquarters in Ogun state.



Read more: wwwagainstbabangida.com
Music/RadioRe: Fresh: Beef - Dagrin Diss Track. by backbelle: 3:40pm On Jan 07, 2010
na by force person dey popular? dagrin did not yab ajasa b4 people sabi am,y d unecesary beef.rubishhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
CelebritiesRe: Most Richest Dude In 2face Or D'banj by backbelle: 2:28pm On Jan 07, 2010
does one has to b a prof. b4 makin contributions? if e easy y una no tell oyibo say make him speak yoruba.
RomanceRe: Closed by backbelle: 2:00pm On Jan 07, 2010
if u cnt wait till maturity stage,then do anythin 2 mke ur eye red,i mean mke ur eyes dirty. with that,u can jinger ur swagger then, u can aproach any girl and light her.
RomanceRe: My Cousin And I Are Havin An Affair by backbelle: 1:49pm On Jan 07, 2010
religiously k as a muslim bt i cnt do it as a muslim.period!
RomanceRe: Music You Love To Play When Making Love by backbelle: 1:08pm On Jan 07, 2010
mo ngbona felifeli D'BANJ or give them what they want DAGRIN
CelebritiesRe: Most Pretty Nigerian Actress by backbelle: 11:44am On Jan 07, 2010
gbogbo big girls.
CelebritiesRe: Most Fluent English Speaking Nigerian Actor by backbelle: 11:36am On Jan 07, 2010
sam loko efe
Music/RadioRe: The Best Yoruba Rapper-dagrin Or Ajasa by backbelle: 11:33am On Jan 07, 2010
so sick,frizzle DAGRIN omo onile,
e se pele pele,eye yo kele kele,
ninu eshin ayo kele elo le bio lele
tooba fe ki won sha e ba ki o wa fi ori bale.


DAGRIN. KASSKIANI WALAHI!

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