Dhury's Posts
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DONLEKAN:When arguments fail, abuse takes over. Dragging someone’s parents into a discussion only exposes your lack of maturity. |
HgAkpobomeEr:Any group that attacks security forces, kills civilians, enforces unlawful orders, and spreads fear through violence meets the definition of terrorism. Labeling IPOB as “freedom fighters” does not change this reality it merely excuses terrorism. |
Afriifa:historians, and security analysts can finally retire. Who needs facts when sweeping bigotry does the job faster? |
Calling for arrest over disputed speech is hypocritical and dangerous. Criminal justice is not a tool for silencing dissent, nor can “crimes against humanity” be declared by outrage. Law requires evidence and due process—not sectarian hysteria |
richmond500:The attribution of terrorist complicity to Muslims as a collective is analytically unsound , Terrorism is a criminal phenomenon enacted by discrete actors, not an expression of any religious traditions . the views or conduct of Sheikh Gumi cannot be generalized to indict an entire faith community. |
richmond500:The attribution of terrorist complicity to Muslims as a collective is analytically unsound and normatively indefensible. Terrorism is a criminal phenomenon , not an expression of any religious tradition. the views or conduct of Sheikh Gumi cannot be generalized to indict an entire faith community. |
LagosOrigin:The imputation that Gumi is complicit in or benefits from terrorism is both erroneous and perilous. I, in unwavering adherence to principles of peace, justice, and lawful conduct, repudiate such unfounded assertions. The promulgation of claims so devoid of substantiation constitutes a reckless act with potentially grave ramifications—thus, discretion and responsibility in speech are imperative. |
duduade:bonus for his wife and children. And they will be like; Wow we are lucky to have malami as our dad , husband for converting Nigeria wealth to us. They will even goes further asked ordinary Nigerians who are you, who's ur papa?do you know whose we are? |
Gov. Alex Otti’s Mandate Was Not to Pursue Dialogue or Release of Convicted National and International Terrorists. Your Excellency, Governor Alex Otti, Dialogue is important—but dialogue cannot replace justice, accountability, or the rule of law. Two years of “high-level discussions” without transparency raise serious concerns, especially when victims of violence linked to IPOB receive no urgency, no sympathy, and no justice. Being an indigene of Abia State does not place anyone above the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Origin confers rights, not immunity. If violent agitation is treated as an administrative issue to be managed politically, then justice becomes selective and the rule of law is weakened. Respect for the judiciary cannot be merely verbal while court matters are negotiated through executive backchannels. Once a case is before the courts, the courtroom—not politics—is the proper place for resolution. Condemning violence while engaging the leader of a group associated with killings, intimidation, and economic shutdowns sends a dangerous signal: that pressure and disorder attract negotiation, while law-abiding citizens are sidelined. Peace is not built on sentiment or ethnic solidarity. Peace is built when laws are enforced fairly, victims are acknowledged, and justice is seen to be done. Anything short of this risks encouraging future conflicts rather than resolving them. |
gentlesmithugo:you forget to add bishop kukah who visited high profile terrorist at sokoto prison |
chiagozien:You ignore Kanu bloodshed and cry louder over a judge doing his constitutional duty. When justice arrives, children of perdition call it oppression; when chaos reigns, they call it freedom. |
CyynthiaKiss:The incident in Sokoto remains under active investigation, and no credible evidence has been presented to support the allegation that the government deliberately targeted a mosque to manufacture a misleading narrative. Resorting to unverified conspiracy theories neither honors the victims nor contributes to meaningful progress. Furthermore, branding an entire nation as “evil” disregards the millions of innocent Nigerians who work tirelessly toward peace, unity, and stability. It would therefore be prudent to exercise greater caution and thoughtfulness before making such sweeping and unfounded remarks against Nigeria. |
Why arrested innocent igbo christian youths while bandits operate Free in the north |
nairalandankrah:And let’s stop pretending that “nobody knows his crime.” If there were no serious allegations, there wouldn’t be multiple court proceedings for years. Self-determination isn’t achieved through terror tactics Scotland, Catalonia all proved that. Nigeria must balance rights with responsibility. |
Dtruthspeaker:I my self was a masquerade victim |
So freedom of worship now means terrorizing innocent citizens in the name of tradition? This judgment ignores the security implications of hiding identities under masks. Human rights should protect the public too, not only the individual behind a masquerade. |
The two with F alphabet |
phorget:Criminals don’t fill application forms explaining their dress code. They’re everywhere including among those who think their tribe is spotless. |
phorget:Which “they”? Because last I checked, criminals come from every tribe—including yours. |
A commendable step, certainly. However, it is important to note that the scale of attacks and civilian casualties in Gaza far exceeds those in Nigeria. If the intention is truly the protection of human life, then such concern should not be selective. The decision to focus solely on Nigeria, while disregarding a far greater humanitarian tragedy elsewhere, inevitably raises suspicion. It compels one to question whether there are underlying motives or an unspoken agenda driving this sudden attention. |
Ironfaceman:Your disgrace to humanity. Your argument collapses under the weight of its own prejudice. To portray millions of individuals as inherently “dark” because of the violent actions of a minority is intellectually shallow and morally bankrupt. Every religion, culture, and society has its share of criminal acts and harmful traditions; these failures do not define the entire faith nor the collective identity of its adherents. Attempting to use isolated atrocities as justification for large-scale violence or as a basis to dehumanize an entire population is not only reckless but profoundly dangerous. Innocent people — Muslim, Jewish, Christian, Arab, and others — continue to suffer the consequences of conflicts they neither initiated nor endorsed. If you genuinely cared about justice or human dignity, you would condemn wrongdoing universally, rather than selectively weaponizing it to reinforce your own biases. What you have offered here is not insight but prejudice masquerading as analysis. |
If appointing Reno is suddenly an “endorsement of hate,” then by that logic, appointing Bianca—wife of a former Biafra warlord—would also need to be classified as an endorsement against whom, exactly? The argument collapses the moment it’s applied consistently. |
doncartel:A pardon and a Peace Prize? At this rate, we might as well nominate every world leader currently facing trial and call it a new global standard for excellence. |
So Bishop Kukah has proclaimed that Nigeria is a persecution-free paradise for Christians. Splendid. We now anxiously anticipate the cosmically indispensable pronouncement of Madam Nicki Minaj, Supreme Worldwide Rainbow Envoy, so that this entire geopolitical theatre may ascend to its final level of majestic ridiculousness. |
Nnamdi Kanu once dream he would become Biafra’s president. Instead, he ended up been Sokoto prison president. a missed prediction should make people rethink things. But many of his supporters still call him a “prophet.” Why? Because once people invest their emotions in a leader, it’s hard for them to admit he got it wrong. They’d rather twist the meaning than face the facts. And in a place where many feel unheard or marginalized, Kanu has become more than just a man—he’s a symbol. But here’s the real issue: Belief shouldn’t replace reality. Support shouldn’t cancel accountability. And no movement becomes stronger by ignoring the truth. Kanu’s story shows how deep political emotions can run—but it also reminds us that every society needs honest reflection, not blind hope.
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Shivisee1:I used to be surprised people supporting him until I saw a video where one man said we shouldn't be surprised because for this Nigeria even if Satan appears today in Nigeria he will have a large number of supporters .https://www.facebook.com/share/r/19wiFJz2Nh/ |
So Jonathan is now telling us that losing to Buhari pained him more than the Nigerians who died under his watch? Wow. No pain for the corruption, no pain for the ‘national cake’ his ministers shared, but election loss is the heartbreak? This country has suffered. |
Nnamdi Kanu's has happened to him. I hope people learn from them |
Jonathan went to Guinea-Bissau as a democracy ambassador and, boom, the government collapsed. Now he’s back — should we welcome him with cheers or quietly hide our own president before he ‘ambassadors’ another one out of office? |
Boko Haram beheading women over charms is pure wickedness and inhumanity. At this point, arguing whether it’s the parents or the government to blame doesn’t even matter the damage is already done. My only advice to our northern brothers is simple: please give birth to the number of children you can actually train, protect, and care for. Excess population without guidance is part of what keeps fueling this madness. |
seunoyeleyep:funny how the expert on religion only notices the bad Muslims. |
Stephen0mozzy:innocent kanu Said more than this |