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I never know Atiku is now Okoro! ![]() But i thought you guys have the white haired cultist again, the werey no fit write POTUS Biden like Adadiora mma; Chimammda Adichie. No be to dey claim writer up & down. Oya Wole Soyinka write your letter on behalf of the certificate forger..... Timothy89: |
When you mandate thief wey need your help, you go give load wey big pass he head ![]() Don't you know there is no free support anywhere? That is why every one work hard to enter the big boys club so they don't use your head play kalokalo like them dey use Asiwaju head G-20 Summit! David Axelrod collect money to get Biden endorsement, only for POTUS Biden to abandon the werey for UNGA! Even India; small yansh, begin dey use Asiwaju catch fun! Go see how the small yansh; India dey give Canada wotowoto because Mordi is not goin to the West to see investment! Just like Bigkoko Group Inc. no dey go to the West to seek menial jobs rather to set up thriving businesses! zeuss: |
The letter that did far more harm to Asiwaju in Washington DC than everything Asiwaju is facing! Fear women, especially when they get a god mother! I tell you i get more fierce female protectors than male ones.... Infact, if i were to chose what to serve, na female goddess rather male goddess ![]() Once a princess in the Hyena clan give a heart felt cry, the queen mother must listen and off course they will use the male members of the clan to run the person street! Ex SCOTUS hand dey inside Asiwaju matter! They used Obama &David Axelrod to give him & Buhari power in 2015, but these two old useless men could not keep the simplest agreement...... fight corruption, stop killing of Christians in Nigeria, return Nigeria to at least GEJ ERA. Adichie's Letter to the Clan led by a female! AWARD-WINNING Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie has criticised the United States and other members of the international community for endorsing Nigeria’s president-elect Bola Ahmed Tinubu of the ruling All Progressives Party (APC), describing the process through which he emerged as unlawful..... Dear President Biden, Something remarkable happened on the morning of February 25, the day of the Nigerian presidential election. Many Nigerians went out to vote holding in their hearts a new sense of trust. Cautious trust, but still trust. Since the end of military rule in 1999, Nigerians have had little confidence in elections. To vote in a presidential election was to brace yourself for the inevitable aftermath: fraud. A law passed last year, the 2022 Electoral Act, changed everything. It gave legal backing to the electronic accreditation of voters and the electronic transmission of results, in a process determined by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC). The chair of the commission, Professor Mahmood Yakubu, assured Nigerians that votes would be counted in the presence of voters and recorded in a result sheet, and that a photo of the signed sheet would immediately be uploaded to a secure server. When rumors circulated about the commission not keeping its word, Yakubu firmly rebutted them. In a speech at Chatham House in London (a favorite influence-burnishing haunt of Nigerian politicians), he reiterated that the public would be able to view “polling-unit results as soon as they are finalized on election day.” Nigerians applauded him. If results were uploaded right after voting was concluded, then the ruling party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), which has been in power since 2015, would have no opportunity for manipulation. Technology would redeem Nigerian democracy. Results would no longer feature more votes than voters. Nigerians would no longer have their leaders chosen for them. Elections would, finally, capture the true voice of the people. And so trust and hope were born. By the evening of February 25, 2023, that trust had dissipated. Election workers had arrived hours late, or without basic election materials. There were reports of violence, of a shooting at a polling unit, and of political operatives stealing or destroying ballot boxes. Some law-enforcement officers seemed to have colluded in voter intimidation; in Lagos, a policeman stood idly by as an APC spokesperson threatened members of a particular ethnic group who he believed would vote for the opposition. Most egregious of all, the electoral commission reneged on its assurance to Nigerians. The presidential results were not uploaded in real time. Voters, understandably suspicious, reacted; videos from polling stations show voters shouting that results be uploaded right away. Many took cellphone photos of the result sheets. Curiously, many polling units were able to upload the results of the House and Senate elections, but not the presidential election. A relative who voted in Lagos told me, “We refused to leave the polling unit until the INEC staff uploaded the presidential result. The poor guy kept trying and kept getting an ‘error’ message. There was no network problem. I had internet on my phone. My bank app was working. The Senate and House results were easily uploaded. So why couldn’t the presidential results be uploaded on the same system?” Some electoral workers in polling units claimed that they could not upload results because they didn’t have a password, an excuse that voters understood to be subterfuge. By the end of the day, it had become obvious that something was terribly amiss. No one was surprised when, by the morning of the 26th, social media became flooded with evidence of irregularities. Result sheets were now slowly being uploaded on the INEC portal, and could be viewed by the public. Voters compared their cellphone photos with the uploaded photos and saw alterations: numbers crossed out and rewritten; some originally written in black ink had been rewritten in blue, some blunderingly whited-out with Tipp-Ex. The election had been not only rigged, but done in such a shoddy, shabby manner that it insulted the intelligence of Nigerians. Nigerian democracy had long been a two-party structure—power alternating between the APC and the Peoples Democratic Party—until this year, when the Labour Party, led by Peter Obi, became a third force. Obi was different; he seemed honest and accessible, and his vision of anti-corruption and self-sufficiency gave rise to a movement of supporters who called themselves “Obi-dients.” Unusually large, enthusiastic crowds turned up for his rallies. The APC considered him an upstart who could not win, because his small party lacked traditional structures. It is ironic that many images of altered result sheets showed votes overwhelmingly being transferred from the Labour Party to the APC. As vote counting began at INEC, representatives of different political parties—except for the APC—protested. The results being counted, they said, did not reflect what they had documented at the polling units. There were too many discrepancies. “There is no point progressing in error, Mr. Chairman. We are racing to nowhere,” one party spokesperson said to Yakubu. “Let us get it right before we proceed with the collation.” But the INEC chair, opaque-faced and lordly, refused. The counting continued swiftly until, at 4:10 a.m. on March 1, the ruling party’s candidate, Bola Tinubu, was announced as president-elect. A subterranean silence reigned across the country. Few people celebrated. Many Nigerians were in shock. “Why,” my young cousin asked me, “did INEC not do what it said it would do?” It seemed truly perplexing that, in the context of a closely contested election in a low-trust society, the electoral commission would ignore so many glaring red flags in its rush to announce a winner. (It had the power to pause vote counting, to investigate irregularities—as it would do in the governorship elections two weeks later.) Rage is brewing, especially among young people. The discontent, the despair, the tension in the air have not been this palpable in years. How surprising then to see the U.S. State Department congratulate Tinubu on March 1. “We understand that many Nigerians and some of the parties have expressed frustration about the manner in which the process was conducted and the shortcomings of technical elements that were used for the first time in a presidential election cycle,” the spokesperson said. And yet the process was described as a “competitive election” that “represents a new period for Nigerian politics and democracy.” American intelligence surely cannot be so inept. A little homework and they would know what is manifestly obvious to me and so many others: The process was imperiled not by technical shortcomings but by deliberate manipulation. An editorial in The Washington Post echoed the State Department in intent if not in affect. In an oddly infantilizing tone, as though intended to mollify the simpleminded, we are told that “officials have asserted that technical glitches, not sabotage, were the issue,” that “much good” came from the Nigerian elections, which are worth celebrating because, among other things, “no one has blocked highways, as happened in Brazil after Jair Bolsonaro lost his reelection bid.” We are also told that “it is encouraging, first, that the losing candidates are pursuing their claims through the courts,” though any casual observer of Nigerian politics would know that courts are the usual recourse after any election. The editorial has the imaginative poverty so characteristic of international coverage of African issues—no reading of the country’s mood, no nuance or texture. But its intellectual laziness, unusual in such a rigorous newspaper, is astonishing. Since when does a respected paper unequivocally ascribe to benign malfunction something that may very well be malignant—just because government officials say so? There is a kind of cordial condescension in both the State Department’s and The Washington Post’s responses to the election. That the bar for what is acceptable has been so lowered can only be read as contempt. I hope, President Biden, that you do not personally share this cordial condescension. You have spoken of the importance of a “global community for democracy,” and the need to stand up for “justice and the rule of law.” A global community for democracy cannot thrive in the face of apathy from its most powerful member. Why would the United States, which prioritizes the rule of law, endorse a president-elect who has emerged from an unlawful process? Compromised is a ubiquitous word in Nigeria’s political landscape—it is used to mean “bribed” but also “corrupted,” more generally. “They have been compromised,” Nigerians will say, to explain so much that is wrong, from infrastructure failures to unpaid pensions. Many believe that the INEC chair has been “compromised,” but there is no evidence of the astronomical U.S.-dollar amounts he is rumored to have received from the president-elect. The extremely wealthy Tinubu is himself known to be an enthusiastic participant in the art of “compromising”; some Nigerians call him a “drug baron” because, in 1993, he forfeited to the United States government $460,000 of his income that a Chicago court determined to be proceeds from heroin trafficking. Tinubu has strongly denied all charges of corruption. I hope it will not surprise you, President Biden, if I argue that the American response to the Nigerian election also bears the faint taint of that word, compromised, because it is so removed from the actual situation in Nigeria as to be disingenuous. Has the United States once again decided that what matters in Africa is not democracy but stability? (Perhaps you could tell British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who quickly congratulated Tinubu, that an illegitimate government in a country full of frustrated young people does not portend stability.) Or is it about that ever-effulgent nemesis China, as so much of U.S. foreign policy now invariably seems to be? The battle for influence in Africa will not be won by supporting the same undemocratic processes for which China is criticized. This Nigerian election was supposed to be different, and the U.S. response cannot—must not—be business as usual. The Nigerian youth, long politically quiescent, have awoken. About 70 percent of Nigerians are under 30 and many voted for the first time in this election. Nigerian politicians exhibit a stupefying ability to tell barefaced lies, so to participate in political life has long required a suspension of conscience. But young people have had enough. They want transparency and truth; they want basic necessities, minimal corruption, competent political leaders, and an environment that can foster their generation’s potential. This election is also about the continent. Nigeria is a symbolic crucible of Africa’s future, and a transparent election will rouse millions of other young Africans who are watching, and who long, too, for the substance and not the hollow form of democracy. If people have confidence in the democratic process, it engenders hope, and nothing is more essential to the human spirit than hope. Today, election results are still being uploaded on the INEC server. Bizarrely, many contradict the results announced by INEC. The opposition parties are challenging the election in court. But there is reason to worry about whether they will get a fair ruling. INEC has not fully complied with court orders to release election materials. The credibility of the Nigerian Supreme Court has been strained by its recent judgments in political cases, or so-called judicial coronations, such as one in which the court declared the winner of the election for governor of Imo State a candidate who had come in fourth place. Lawlessness has consequences. Every day Nigerians are coming out into the streets to protest the election. APC, uneasy about its soiled “victory,” is sounding shrill and desperate, as though still in campaign mode. It has accused the opposition party of treason, an unintelligent smear easily disproved but disquieting nonetheless, because false accusations are often used to justify malicious state actions. I supported Peter Obi, the Labour Party candidate, and hoped he would win, as polls predicted, but I was prepared to accept any result, because we had been assured that technology would guard the sanctity of votes. The smoldering disillusionment felt by many Nigerians is not so much because their candidate did not win as because the election they had dared to trust was, in the end, so unacceptably and unforgivably flawed. Congratulating its outcome, President Biden, tarnishes America’s self-proclaimed commitment to democracy. Please do not give the sheen of legitimacy to an illegitimate process. The United States should be what it says it is. Sincerely, Chimamanda Adichie
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I really feel for the christian Yorubans, they are the real definition of Tolerant! Imagine when MC Oluomo becomes gov of Lagos! fkelly: |
It appears Asiwaju didn't keep to previous terms he entered into with the Big boys in Washington DC in 2014 before they helped him & Buhari wrest power from GEJ. Especially to mama DC aka Hillary Clinton. And now they want to really take everything from him, including his integrity after office (Removal from office). It appears someone inside POTUS Biden Govt really want to deal with Asiwaju! But they are not Jews na. Becuase na only Jews dey treat Bleep up like this! My 3rd mind told me it's little Adichie and her god mother; ex-SCOTUS H Clinton! That old gag of a Washington DC; Clinton, could be a bitch when she wants and almost every male politician in DC, except ex-POTUS Trump, is scared of entering her trap! It appears Asiwaju entered into the hyena clan led by a female. They are going to really Bleep him up! What is more tearful when they take your integrity and make you an Int'l pariah. This picture really captures it. Even India; small yansh, dey use Asiwaju denge ![]() Honestly i know the moment Adichie penned that open letter to her clique in DC, that Asiwaju would get it hot. HE Peter Obi is every woman dream. Soft spoken like he can not hurt a fly..... you know those kind of niggas. . Scandal free. Promiscuous free. Violent free. Corruption free. Fiscally responsible. Serves his own god, at least go to church. Identifies with community & humanitarian causes, Doesn't smoke or do drugs etc. The exact opposite of Asiwaju. When his mandate was stolen by a violent, drug mule, it naturally attracted sympathy from almost everyone. But na babes carry the thing for head. The hyena clan in DC led by ex SCOTUS H Clinton na im dey plot Asiwaju matter. That's why other members of the clan dey stay far away from Asiwaju, make them no collect too. David Axelrod wey try to run small show for Asiwaju unto the UNGA meeting, don collect wotowoto from the Hyena clan in DC. Na women dey run Asiwaju street! ![]() Angela Liu na one of them, including that pretty judge! FBI dossiers go soon begin dey fly! Certainly not a good time to be an Asiwaju!
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Na those white whiskers go make sense for Atiku to use hot water peel off.... Criple CJN! Hoilgbegiri: |
An election he clearly lost..... and also knowing that he has forged all sorts of documents, right from his youngs days when him and others fom his Ronu clan were trading heroine in the States, yet he has the effrontery to wan to rule Nigerians by force. Asiwaju ntorrrrr! |
You go explain tire. Wetin go be go be. Infact, Atiku don collect the originals of every bullets he need, go attend the Press Conference but as una too fear fulani so i explain you and e-rats like you to blame Obidiients Movement, HE Peter Obi & Igbos at large. I hear say una don add Edo people too! As a full blood Igbo man well breed with Edo innuendos, i trust my Etsako people to treat una foolishness sharp sharp! They no be like Igbos wey dey wan try carry everyone along!Draslo: |
THE foolishness of Asiwaju is so glaring. What stop him from running a G.C.E and using LASU to get these papers? But Trust Nigerian big man to always believe he has the judiciary at his pocket! No wonder that smelly, old retired supreme court witch can open her mouth waaa and vomit nonsense..... Make Wike pray, Atiku no enter there, that cancer he dey suffer from go turn cercan for am! |
Wrong! Against all odds and popular advisory from foreign Intelligience Agencies, Asiwaju was indirectly asked to stand down or else face consequences. These are all the consequences, which he will face until he leaves there. They know he is a weak person, with no real balls to do the needful needed for power sustenance, except off course paying agberos & e-rats! The Niger Order to attack was to be his saving grace, but true to prediction he buckled under pressure! Now, they all laugh at him! Atiku got a FREE gift from Dxs. And he is using it wonderfully! Asiwaju was foolish to trust the DXS chief. That is mistake number one! sukkot: |
If Asiwaju refused to do the needful, Nigerian youths should get ready to hit the street and go drag him out! Ruling me & my family is not a turn by turn thing. I never had an agreement with anyone to rule me and my family in a turn by turn way! If Asiwaju wants Emilokan, he should fight for Oduduwa Republic and rule them with his Agberos and e-rats. T-Thanks! |
Asiwaju fall full time into Hausa-fulani plan through Atiku! Everything Atiku is using was given to him pro bono by Buhari who had a more serious agreement with Atiku than the one he had with Asiwaju. The signs are all there!Its only in Asiwaju time, INEC chairman lack the skill to rig wonderfully! ;I know the moment Asiwaju shouted Emilokan, na to use Plan B, C, D, E until it become clear that it's anyone but Asiwaju! But Agreement na Agreement! Ronu big crook disgraced politel, diplomatically and fully from all fronts until Awolowo option becomes more attractive. How much is a bottle of Snipr poison again? |
Enaharo = Edo or Delta Atiku = Huasa Fulani Party = PDP... But watch and see the shameless cowards and their e-rats blame HE Peter Obi and the Igbos! ![]() This is Ronu vs Hausa-fulani vs Edo since their skulls don't want to see it as Quests for Good Governance vs Quests for Corruption & Old Order! |
3RD Party vendors without names! Ndi ara! See wetin corn turn a matured to! Tufiakwaaaa |
Hey bro you came late to the party! Meet David Hundeyin by CSU Junction for real updates...... in the exact words used by CSU staff who deposited before Honorable Judge Jeffrey. All these your posts makes you look foolish! |
This is the reason why he pleaded "Grievous & irreparable harm" so he can leave the US!!! Long before now, my buddy at the States Department already told me he committed identity theft! How Reno the jobless scavenger? iwaeda: |
You quotes Reno, a known ass licker with no known job for the past 9 years, but dinigrate David who have a known job! Very soon you guys will run mad on the street! Bye bro! Have a good day with this pics showing Mr. Tinubu or Mrs. Tinubu! tolue42:
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You don't live with whites, you may not have even left Nigeria for even the most pitiable Western Country... Now let me tell you how they politely insult you.. I was in a Tech conference for Senior business men sometime early this year, and i think we are only two or three black persons, and me the only African; the rest been Afro Brits or American. Hear what one chap from Germany asked me, Hi ****** You good? Yea. Yea... Some interactions over coffee, the our tech works etc. then the modafacka shoot his shoot: " How did you come over here?" Hahhahahahhahaha!! I told him i simply vanished from my village using voodoo. That if he is smart and worship my ancestors i can also ask my ancestor to lend him some powers to vanish from Europe and enjoy himself in the Bahamas with out the luxury of a plane ticket! I continued, with all seriousness. You know, Africans are so primitive that they can not afford plane tickets or to be top business executives or owning a Company in Europe! The bitch quickly saw the foolishness of his question and was apologizing through out the meetings! I dont blame him much because he is only used to Black Africans arriving in Europe through the Mediterranean and without papers, or always appearing backward, poor and pitiable! This also how Messr Carl sounded. But i guess you won't understand! ![]() tolue42: |
Its called "Misrepresentation" the usual word for forgery! |
You go explain tire, no evidence! Even the white haired cultist dare not mention Atiku na e-rat like you? As Nigeria dey like this na only Igbos & South south fit drag any body they fancy, no be for those wey dey do anywhere belly face!alanto: |
Hhahahahhaha while they try to hid the fact that Atiku have destroyed Asiwaju completely, Asiwaju himself via his media aid is complaining that Atiku is not nice for exposing Asiwaju because according to Temitope, Asiwaju & Atiku are friends ![]() Killerofpigs: |
Off course, cocaine no dey my head to block my ear drum. Sorry, not looking good for ASIWAJU, na where we dey now! Killerofpigs: |
Werey are you guys too poor or stupid to write UNN in same Nigeria you live? People paid to get out these damaging information about Asiwaju. So all the money una collect na to smoke or drink? E-rats!!!! ![]() Zxcvbnmghtr: |
Give him the Obi treatment; Ignore him! Well, if nobody answer am, the werey will turn his anger to Jesus Christ! Poor nice, forgiving Jesus Christ! Imagine say na Muhammad or Allah the werey give am about in that way, by now, na ashes for remain for the goat!Mastersure: |
While the online e-rats give themselves hope, Asiwaju is regretting the day he aspired to become Nigerian president! |
Bigkoko Transcontinental Gruppen Filial ~ European Member of the Bigkoko Group Inc. is leading a group of Swedish Companies by first quarter 2024 to establish a series of smart resort facilities & villages along the coast line! Trust me me you will wow a lot when you see the development blueprints! Totally Green, Cashless & Contactless to use our facility. From Owazza & Azumini in Abia state, to Ukanufu in Akwa Ibom State. A total of 10 interconnected smart resort towns & facilities named after the greatest populist politician Nigeria have ever witnessed! With 20 pounds we became Odogwu of Africa!!!!! Bigkoko Transcontinental Gruppen Filial, member of Swedish Business Association, member of Swedish Technology Companies & Covered by Technology Services Agreement.
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This what a non law enforcement agency have revealed. Now image what the FBI dossiers would reveal? slivertongue: |
If Tinubu refused to leave, he should be forced by whatever legitimate means to leave..... Including a total shut down of the economy. You can not be a forger and aspire to lead 200+ millions who fortunately enough, more than 80% are not forgers! |
Below are the words by Messr Carl Westberg. Kindly read the bolded words. You should be worried as that is the telltale sign that you are been profiled for something you have no clue about. Forgery according to Messr Carl, speaking in codes meant for only Messr Afolabi, suggests that Forgery is a Nigerian thing! Recently i had the opportunity of a connecting flight through Schipol Int'l Airport Amsterdam. I know the rigorous checks meted out on me, and trust me i understand bits of Dutch & German, currently learning Swedish. I clearly heard what they were saying. I can only attribute their more than enough due diligence to the fact that it was using my Nigerian Passport, rather than my other one. You see, Bola Ahmed Adekunle Abibat Tinubu HAS DONE far worse, more than Buhari, international image damage than you can ever imagine! The man simply forged everything, anything to gain admission in the US. Now, there are more damning documents which AA out of respect for the office of the President will not release because, after Tinubu there will be a Nigeria. Now you know why other world leaders treats him like a dirty pig he is! Running the Nigerian branch of the Chougary crime cartel is different from running Nigeria. We clearly depend on the whims & caprice of international partners. Mmesoma the little bright girl didnt commit half of what this here forger did before all hell was let loose on the poor girl! Here what Messr Carl has to say. From what the following suggests, Messr/Miss Tinubu lawyer, Messr Afolabi Oluwole was tacitly forcing CSU to authenticate the diploma which they have obviously refused because crime pays no one, regardless of the money used to influence you. “I’m not aware of any instance where CSU had been requested to certify a document. Mr. Wole Afolabi who was acting for President Tinubu insisted that the documents must be certified. Mr. Wole Afolabi is President Tinubu’s lawyer. Mr. Afolabi and Mr. Orr communicated by email. “I don’t recall seeing the emails. I don’t know if Jason Carter approved of the certification. Apart from Jason Carter I do not know anyone else who was involved in the process. “I went into Mr. Tinubu’s student’s file and produced the documents to Mr. Orr. I didn’t know that the documents would be certified. I don’t get involved in legal matters. “Mr. Tinubu requested that the documents be released to Mr. Afolabi for ‘legal proceedings’ The signature on the consent form is similar to the signature we have on record for Mr. Tinubu. “All of the certified documents came from CSU’s files. Nothing was handed over to us by Mr. Afolabi except for the FERPA form. CSU had never certified documents for anyone before. It must have been made because there was more of a Nigerian thing. “The documents were released in pursuance of a FERPA request. I believe Mr. Afolabi requested that the documents be certified. I’m not aware if the stamp affixed by Mr. Orr to the documents was an official document. It is not part of CSU practice. “Mr. Orr later departed from CSU after these documents were certified.I don’t know if his departure was connected to the certification of the documents; but I don’t think it was |
More damaging revealments is coming........ Oluwole international Iragbiji branch!ochejoseph: |
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