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PoliticsRe: 2027: Atiku Waking Retired Politicians – Keyamo Mocks ADC Coalition by Ironfaceman(m): 7:28pm On Aug 05, 2025
Atiku looks like he's going to be a problem in the coalition.

By now he ought to be canvassing for credible Southern candidate

Instead the cow is putting his head in the race.
CrimeRe: 21-year Lady Apologises To Her Mom Before She D!ed After Being Set Ablaze by Ironfaceman(m): 9:53pm On Aug 04, 2025
You are correct. South Africa ranks high on domestic violence.

Their black men see their women as properties they own. Hence when they date other African men that are kind they become vexed.





ghettochild:
The average South African guy is abusive. When they are dating a girl they have this mentality they own the girl. Hence why they go crazy killing or maiming their livers especially if the woman involved wants to end the abusive relations. It’s a death warrant for the lady involved…..
PoliticsRe: Ogun PDP, Ladi Adebutu Endorse President Tinubu For Second Term by Ironfaceman(m): 7:28pm On Aug 04, 2025
What is with all this endorsement up and down. No character at all.

Is Fubara also going to endorse emiloko.
PoliticsRe: If I Were His Son, I’d Advise Him, Wike Criticises Atiku Over Defections by Ironfaceman(m): 3:20pm On Aug 04, 2025
Wike is on point. Atiku has gone mad with his desire to be president.

Atiku knows for a fact that most platforms have zoned president to the South. But he still poking his head in the race. The man is mad.
PoliticsRe: Nasarawa’s ₦15 Billion Airport Joins Nigeria’s White Elephant Projects by Ironfaceman(op): 8:49am On Aug 04, 2025
grin grin cheesy. I swear. Withe way it is it fits prison format and then refund #13billion naira.


Omihanifa:
They should just convert the facility to a prison yard
LiteratureRe: "Middle class Nigerians now beg to feed, this worries me" – Chimamanda Adichie by Ironfaceman(m): 8:38am On Aug 04, 2025
grin grin grin. I reality like your submissions. There's truth in it.




agulion:
We Yoruba Muslims are the only ones enjoying Tinubu gvt, no hunger, everything is very ok in the country, all this propaganda by Abokis and ipob will not work
2 Likes
CrimeRe: Nigerian Who Work For Chinese Cybercrime Ring In Lagos Describes Systemic Fraud by Ironfaceman(op): 8:36am On Aug 04, 2025
You are on point. When people talk about cyber crime they think Nigeria. But with the recent development I know we are no where near there. Imagine leaving your country to set up shop in Nigeria. I take my hat off for the Chinese.




correctguy101:
I have always said this but some self loathing werey people think only Nigeria and Nigerians do such things. I feel it's mostly that our people too dey make noise. Show show don finish us. That's why e come be like say na we do fraud pass.

Not only Chinese o. If you hear about crime rings from Russia, the USA and even Europe, you go know say we dey learn work.

The first time I was scammed in my life, na eediots from the USA scam me. That's why I dey fear anything wey concern investment wey no be TB or MMFs and the likes. E better I go buy land build house sef. Anything else, my caution button go dey fully activated.

My own don become once bitten thrice shy o..
CrimeRe: Nigerian Who Work For Chinese Cybercrime Ring In Lagos Describes Systemic Fraud by Ironfaceman(op): 9:33pm On Aug 03, 2025
I don't know the guy but this is a follow up to my previous post


https://www.nairaland.com/8477295/court-jails-15-chinese-cybercrime




anslemarinze52:
Do you know the guy that was interviewed?
PoliticsRe: Nasarawa’s ₦15 Billion Airport Joins Nigeria’s White Elephant Projects by Ironfaceman(op): 9:29pm On Aug 03, 2025
APC killed this once blossoming country. It will take the Grace of God to fix this.

Buhari I hope you're are reading this. You failed. Short and simple.
PoliticsNasarawa’s ₦15 Billion Airport Joins Nigeria’s White Elephant Projects by Ironfaceman(op): 9:27pm On Aug 03, 2025
INVESTIGATION: Commissioned by Buhari, Nasarawa’s ₦15 billion airport joins Nigeria’s white elephant projects
On 24 February 2022, then-President Muhammadu Buhari commissioned the Lafia Cargo Airport. However, a PREMIUM TIMES investigation revealed that the president commissioned an incomplete facility.



Built on a 1,000-hectare expanse of land, the Lafia Cargo Airport was touted as a transformative project for Nasarawa State’s solid minerals and agricultural sectors. But three years after its grand commissioning, the runway sees no aircraft, the terminal lies silent, and the entire facility stands abandoned, left to rot.

The crumbling perimeter fence, surrounded by overgrown grasses, tells the story of a facility forsaken by humans and now overtaken by rodents and reptiles. This is the tale of the ₦22 billion Lafia Cargo Airport.

When PREMIUM TIMES visited the site on a scorching afternoon in January, the plainclothes security officer at the gate appeared startled by the sight of a vehicle approaching—an indication that visits to the airport are far from routine.

This airport is not just another white elephant project; it represents a dashed hope for many who gave up their land in the belief that the airport would transform their lives.

“Of course, I was very excited that November morning in 2015 when His Excellency, Tanko Al-Makura, announced the airport project in Lafia,” said Mohammed Abubakar, a trader living less than a kilometre from the site.


To Mr Abubakar and many others in surrounding communities who sacrificed their land for the project, the abandoned airport symbolises wasted opportunity and broken promises. The former governor had pledged that the airport would bring jobs and economic growth worth their sacrifice.

On 24 February 2022, Mr Abubakar and his neighbours’ hopes were rekindled when then-President Muhammadu Buhari commissioned the airport. However, a PREMIUM TIMES investigation revealed that the president commissioned an incomplete facility.
“We were all happy about the development. That land belonged to us. I owned about seven hectares of it. We wanted development for our community and looked forward to the job opportunities the cargo airport would bring for our children,” the 63-year-old Mr Abubakar told PREMIUM TIMES. “It has been 11 years since the project was conceived and three years since the commissioning, yet the airport remains in a sorry state.”

The question on everyone’s lips: Why is the airport abandoned?

To answer that, PREMIUM TIMES visited the airport multiple times between January and July 2025 to assess its current status. We also accessed and reviewed public and private records to evaluate the financial elements of the airport project.

Image of the airport control tower(Photo -James Aparshe)


Background
In 2015, the administration of then-Governor Al-Makura signed an agreement with a Chinese firm, Tongyi Group Engineering, to construct the airport under a Public-Private Partnership (PPP). The firm was to provide 75 per cent of the total project cost.

However, the procurement process was mired in allegations of opacity, with the government failing to disclose the contract’s terms. Less than a year after the project began, the state government terminated the contract without explanation. It remains unclear how much the government paid or how much the firm invested.

PREMIUM TIMES submitted a Freedom of Information (FOI) request to the state government for the contract details, and a similar request was sent to the Chinese firm.

The state government ignored the request in violation of the FOI Act. However, Tongyi Group, through its solicitors, responded, stating that the contract had been terminated on 10 November 2016 and therefore declined to provide further details.

The fire service station remains a forgotten [Photo -James Aparshe]

“We are solicitors to Tongyi Group Limited, hereafter referred to as our client. The contract awarded to our client by the Nasarawa State Government for the construction of the Lafia Airport was terminated on 10th November 2016,” said Ali Akaba & Co, solicitors to Tongyi Group.
PREMIUM TIMES later discovered that the project had been re-awarded to Triacta Nigeria Limited, the same company responsible for the controversial Gusau International Airport. Again, the state government failed to disclose contract details or costs.

PREMIUM TIMES sent an FOI request to Triacta, requesting documentation on funding, contract agreements, and project scope. The company responded with a letter detailing its role in the project. It indicated that it had been fully paid for the contract and had completed the project.

According to Triacta, the initial contract was worth ₦6.45 billion for the construction of a 2.2km x 45m runway, a 150m x 30m taxiway, a 70m x 70m apron, access road and parking, crash road, and full perimeter fencing. However, the response made no mention of the previous contractor’s contributions.

After Mr Al-Makura left office in 2019, his successor, Abdullahi Sule, continued the project. The document shared with PREMIUM TIMES shows that Governor Sule revised the contract value from ₦6.5 billion to ₦11 billion, citing the inclusion of additional features not covered in the initial agreement.


These new additions included paved shoulders for the runway, taxiway, and apron, an expanded 150m x 150m concrete apron, and runway strip grading. These adjustments were made on 4 January 2022, barely 40 days before President Buhari commissioned the airport.

In its response to PREMIUM TIMES, Triacta said the additional works awarded in January 2022 were completed except for the wearing course, which was to be executed after the installation of the lighting ducts and was not part of Triacta’s scope of work.

The firm also said the upward review of the contract sum was due to Nigeria’s persistent inflation and rising costs of key materials like diesel and bitumen.

How much did the government spend?

Despite repeated inquiries, the state government has refused to disclose the total cost of the project. In the absence of an official response, PREMIUM TIMES reviewed Nasarawa State’s budgets from 2016 to 2024.

The review revealed that the state government allocated billions of naira to the airport project.

The budgets show allocations of ₦5 billion each in 2015, 2016, and 2017 (totalling ₦15 billion), and ₦4 billion each in 2018 and 2019. In 2022, 2023, and 2024, the government allocated ₦1 billion, ₦35 million, and ₦900 million, respectively.

Tracing actual releases, PREMIUM TIMES confirmed that ₦15 billion had been disbursed for the abandoned project.

The control tower remains unfinished. The cargo section is partially damaged, and the nearby firefighting station has also deteriorated due to disuse and possible substandard construction.


Bailed out by the federal government

President Buhari not only commissioned an incomplete airport but also initiated steps for the federal government to assume control.

Under Nigeria’s constitution, airports fall under the exclusive legislative list —meaning that even when built by state governments, they are expected to be taken over and managed by the federal government, which reimburses the state.


In 2024, the National Assembly approved President Bola Tinubu’s request to reimburse Nasarawa State ₦9 billion. However, since the takeover, the airport has remained unused.

Wada Yahaya, Nasarawa’s former Commissioner for Works, Housing, and Transport, admitted that substantial work was needed before the facility could become operational.

“Plans are underway to extend the runway and address other outstanding areas before the federal government can fully take over,” Mr Yahaya told PREMIUM TIMES via phone.

Yet, Mr Al-Makura insists the airport was “over 90 per cent” completed before he left office.

“The airport was over 90 per cent completed in 2019. The remaining 10 per cent involved the control tower and air traffic services,” he told PREMIUM TIMES. “The airport has been used occasionally for official functions.”

He also promised to provide documentation to back his claims, but failed to honour a scheduled interview




https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/811473-investigation-commissioned-by-buhari-nasarawas-₦15-billion-airport-joins-nigerias-white-elephant-projects.html

CrimeRe: Nigerian Who Work For Chinese Cybercrime Ring In Lagos Describes Systemic Fraud by Ironfaceman(op): 6:29pm On Aug 03, 2025
Even after everything fell apart, one of the bosses promised to take us to China to work directly for them there. He said he would handle everything, our travel, documentation, even passports, and that once we started working, we’d receive a monthly salary. That was the information they shared with us
.


Chinese are really smart this last submission made me realise that corruption is not racist or tribalist. It gets want it want and how it wants it.
CrimeNigerian Who Work For Chinese Cybercrime Ring In Lagos Describes Systemic Fraud by Ironfaceman(op): 6:26pm On Aug 03, 2025
INTERVIEW: Nigerian Who Worked for Chinese Cybercrime Ring in Lagos Describes Systemic Fraud Operations, Hints at EFCC’s Complicity
Published 2nd Aug, 2025



On December 10, 2024, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) arrested 792 suspects for their involvement in cryptocurrency investment fraud and romance scams at their hideout, known as Big Leaf Building, on No. 7, Oyin Jolayemi Street, Victoria Island, Lagos State.

According to the EFCC, it arrested 148 Chinese nationals, 40 Filipinos, two Kazakhtans, one Pakistani, one Indonesian and some Nigerians. The EFCC said that the foreign nationals used the facility, which could easily be mistaken for the corporate headquarters of a financial establishment, to train their Nigerian accomplices on how to initiate romance and investment scams, and also used the identities of their Nigerian accomplices to perpetrate their criminal activities. FIJ spoke with a 26-year-old Nigerian who worked for these foreign nationals.

How did you get in?


So, one day I was on my own when a friend called me and told me he had found a job I could do. He said it involved working with people, and since he didn’t know much about it but knew I had some experience in trading cryptocurrency and forex, he reached out to me. He mentioned that if I got into the job, he could also get in through me.

I was interested, so I asked how much the pay was. He said it wasn’t certain yet, adding that I’d have to go to the company, go through an interview process, and get picked. I agreed, and the next day I went there.

What was the interview and onboarding process like?

The office was located across the street. It was on No.7, Oyin Jolayemi Street, Victoria Island. When I arrived there on November 14, I had my CV ready. There were about five of us who showed up around the same time. They gave us some snacks, and after a while, the department head, a Chinese man who was in charge, came in. He brought an interpreter so we could communicate, and he spoke to each of us.

He asked basic questions: Could we write? Could we speak good English? We answered yes. Then he asked about our previous jobs and our salary expectations. After that, he handed us a white sheet of paper listing the salary, bonuses, and other details. He explained how the job would work — we’d be paid based on daily performances, and if we stayed in the hostel they provided, N24,000 would be deducted from our salary for accommodation. The salary was N280,000 and the bonus was N40,000.

In reality, I worked from November 14 to 30 and was only paid N140,000. They didn’t pay me for my work in December due to the issues that arose later with the EFCC.

What was the job like?


Most of us ended up staying in the hostel. It was a large building at the front of the compound. Many of us started the job without fully knowing what was going on but as time went by, some of us started seeing it as fraud.

On the first and second days, they trained us on how to use their system. Then they gave us formats to go through and asked if we understood. Most people didn’t. But one of the guys we met there took the time to explain things clearly. He walked us through everything: how to get clients, how to build Instagram and Facebook accounts, and all the practical tasks of getting money out of the clients.

Our role was simply to follow instructions and deliver results not to ask too many questions. Once we completed our tasks and the payment process, we handed everything over.

What can you say about the work environment?


At first, the job was going well. The environment was professional, and the Chinese staff seemed focused on their business. I think they were working under someone because they had people they reported to. They expected us to be just as focused, but many the Nigerians made it difficult.

Some started misbehaving. They stole equipment, fought and caused trouble. As a result, the management became stricter. For example, people would work for just four or five days, get paid, and then quit. Some would go to another department and re-apply, trying to get paid again. But once the bosses realised this, they found a way to stop it.

They started issuing ID cards and recording everyone. Once your details were registered with one department, you couldn’t switch or re-apply elsewhere. This made things more controlled, but also limited our opportunities.

How were you paid?


Despite the challenges, they tried to fix issues as they came up. After the first month, they paid us. Not everyone was paid at the same time. They paid me on December 2. After that, they promised to pay their staff at the end of every month.

My shift was from 4 pm to 4 am. Others worked from 6 pm to 6 am or 8 am to 8 pm. There were food vendors around, even at night, and we were allowed to go outside to buy food. In fact, more vendors started showing up at night because of us. It was clear we were bringing business to the area. Everything seemed stable and safe.

Tell us about the EFCC raid

On December 10, the EFCC raided the place. I was asleep when the message came but I was not in the building. People were shouting that the EFCC was around.

This wasn’t the first time we’d heard such a warning. The first time, everyone went to the office, but the EFCC wasn’t actually there. So, we didn’t take it seriously at first. But this time, it was real.

What some other staff members and I heard was that the EFCC raided the company because they refused to bribe the EFCC. The reason was that they had bribed the EFCC several times and could not afford to pay what they were requesting. After the EFCC raid, they couldn’t pay us for the next eight days. People started complaining, demanding their salaries, but the management had disappeared. At one point, they even left our group chat, leaving us completely on our own.


Were you aware that what you were doing was fraud?

They provided all the materials we needed to work. They gave us pictures and assigned us specific tasks to carry out. I think the goal was to promote a system or platform, possibly related to cryptocurrency, using social media.

We worked on desktop computers, and they provided us with enough data to run the operations. Our job was to edit content, choose the right models (profiles) to use, and then post captions along with relevant hashtags to attract attention.

The target audience was primarily from the USA as the entire operation was focused on American victims.

Before starting the actual scamming process, there was a training period. During this time, we were taught how to pose as legitimate investors or professionals involved in jobs and investment opportunities.

The idea was to get people to invest in a crypto company — they even had a name for it, something like “Crypto Company Lady” or similar, though I can’t remember the exact name now.

Once a connection was made and the victim showed interest, we would then complete the initial setup. If the handler instructed us to move to a new target or “game”, we’d do so — always using the company name and following a well-organised system.

What happened after the EFCC raid?

Before the raid, they had actually planned to move us to a new location. They had bought another house nearby and were renovating it to provide better water and living conditions. But the EFCC incident disrupted everything.

After the raid, we were all stranded. Many of us had spent all our money to get there. It was then that I realised how far people had come just for this job. And when the crisis hit, most couldn’t go back home because they had no money left.

Everything from inside the building, all the machines, equipment, and belongings, was being moved out. They used the same white buses that used to shuttle us from the hostel to the company. Now, those buses were being loaded with the items and the Chinese people were using them to transport everything away.

I don’t know where they took it, or what the reason was behind the move. I didn’t hear any official explanation or argument.


How did you escape?
That day, I was lucky not to be around. Because I worked at night, I could not have been in the building.


What do you know about the company?

From what I understand, they have a main company based in China and it’s staffed only by Chinese people.

That’s why they came to Nigeria: because of the language barrier. They believed that if Nigerians worked for them, communication with English-speaking clients would be easier, and the job would run more smoothly.

When I was working with them, one of the managers even said that people in China weren’t performing better than we were. It just felt like we were catching up in terms of speed and efficiency. But the company’s operation in China was much bigger and more advanced than the setup we had here.

Even after everything fell apart, one of the bosses promised to take us to China to work directly for them there. He said he would handle everything, our travel, documentation, even passports, and that once we started working, we’d receive a monthly salary. That was the information they shared with us.

https://fij.ng/article/interview-nigerian-who-worked-for-chinese-cybercrime-ring-in-lagos-describes-systemic-fraud-operations-hints-at-efccs-complicity/

CrimeRe: From Football Star To Mass Murderer. by Ironfaceman(op): 10:30am On Aug 03, 2025
The Tamura guy is evil. What stops him from killing himself only and spare us the tragedy

So you are not OK but you are well enough to buy a gun.

God will punish that evil soul.







Datbadtguy:
Tamura’s story shows how untreated mental illness and likely CTE can destroy even a promising athlete. His violent act wasn’t random, it was the result of brain damage and failed support systems.
Christianity EtcRe: You're An Old Time Christian If You Know Any 10 Of These Songs by Ironfaceman(m): 10:15am On Aug 03, 2025
So nostalgic. Those where the days of the prophetic moving. Now things are a bit, commercial.

Great list and God bless you for the effort.
CrimeRe: From Football Star To Mass Murderer. by Ironfaceman(op): 4:00pm On Aug 02, 2025
What a day in America. The blood farm is just too big.

America and guns.
CrimeFrom Football Star To Mass Murderer. by Ironfaceman(op): 3:59pm On Aug 02, 2025
NYC shooting suspect showed promise on the football field years before turn to violence
High school classmates and a coach remembered Shane Tamura as a talented running back. Recently, though, he was apparently plagued by psychological issues
Ten years ago, the place where Shane Devon Tamura shined brightest was on the football field, clad in a green helmet and uniform as a clutch running back for his Los Angeles-area high school.

Fresh off a game-clinching touchdown for Granada Hills Charter School in September 2015, the senior varsity player told a local news outlet that the team’s success was all about staying “disciplined.”

“Just hold our heads up high,” Tamura said, “and then a good result is going to come.”

But in recent years, Tamura was apparently plagued by psychological issues and displayed troubling behavior. He experienced two mental health incidents in 2022 and 2024, according to law enforcement officials briefed on the investigation. In the fall of 2023, he was arrested at a Las Vegas casino on suspicion of criminal trespassing, according to court records.

Then, in midtown Manhattan on Monday, Tamura’s apparent downward spiral reached a horrific climax. He opened fire inside a high-rise on Park Avenue, killing four people, including a New York City police officer. Tamura, 27, ultimately turned an AR-style rifle on himself and fired a fatal shot into his chest, according to the NYPD commissioner.

In a note left behind at the scene, Tamura repeatedly mentioned “CTE” — chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a brain condition caused by injuries to the head. Authorities say Tamura intended to target the corporate headquarters of the National Football League.


Tamura’s shooting spree baffled people who knew him best as a promising young athlete.

“There was never anything that would even correlate to this type of story,” said Anthony Michael Leon, who played with Tamura on the Granada Hills varsity football team in their senior year. “The Shane Tamura that we knew — the 17-, 18-year-old kid who went to our school — was nothing like this.”

Big things’ ahead


Shane Devon Tamura was born on Jan. 19, 1998, in Las Vegas, though his family eventually wound up in California. Tamura attended at least two Los Angeles-area high schools. He started out at Golden Valley High School, in the suburb of Santa Clarita, and then transferred to Granada Hills Charter, in the San Fernando Valley.

In interviews, former teammates and coaches described Tamura as a talented running back who kept his focus on the field and moved swiftly. In late March 2015, Golden Valley High coach Dan Kelley told The Los Angeles Times that he was “looking for big things” from Tamura.

Lucas Leppke, one of Tamura’s teammates at Golden Valley, said they met at a football camp before the eighth grade and played together through high school, making mutual friends.

“He was our guy” on the field, Leppke said.

Tamura’s older brother, Terry, also played on the school’s team. The brothers’ parents attended every game growing up, Leppke said, and Shane was known for being polite to the other players’ parents.

“My mom did the team meals and she remembers every time he interacted he was like, ‘Yes, ma’am,' ‘no, ma’am,’ ‘thank you,’” Leppke said.

During his junior year, Tamura was having trouble academically, serious enough that he wasn’t going to be eligible to play, according to Caleb Clarke, a classmate. Tamura tried to return to football by playing “summer ball” after his grades improved, but Tamura didn’t like that he wasn’t going to be the starting running back, Clarke said.

“He was a great athlete,” Clarke said. He remembered thinking that Tamura had “so much going for him” and, once he started doing better at school, “he could be somebody great.”

Tamura transferred to Granada Hills Charter after that. At his new school, Tamura continued to impress on the gridiron. Walter Roby, who coached Tamura there, said he was a “great player” who was “real elusive, real agile.”

“He came in, worked hard, kept his nose down,” Roby added. “He was a quiet kid, well mannered, very coachable. Whatever needed to be done, he would do.”


It’s not clear whether Tamura graduated from high school. In a statement, Granada Hills Charter said he “attended the 2015 Fall Semester and has had no connection with the school since his withdrawal a decade ago.” Tamura does not appear to have played football beyond high school.

Clarke and Leppke said they kept up with Tamura on social media in more recent years, although he rarely posted. In one of his last Instagram posts, in April 2024, Tamura is seen wagering at a gambling table at the Red Rock Casino Resort and Spa in Las Vegas.

Tamura captioned the post: “Wanted dead or alive.”





https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/nyc-shooting-suspect-showed-promise-football-field-abrupt-turn-violenc-rcna221929

BusinessRe: African Ambassadors Economic Forum Washington DC, 2025: Leading With Vision, Bui by Ironfaceman(m): 8:40am On Aug 02, 2025
Waste of time and resources majority of the their are corrupt.

Or are from a corrupt foundation. So I don't see how this funfair will put food on the table of the oppressed.
PoliticsRe: It Will Be Tough To Beat Tinubu In 2027 – Senator Olujimi by Ironfaceman(m): 4:50am On Aug 01, 2025
For a fellow thief it will be tough because you have all the money.

But the hungry man, it won't be, Nigerians have rejected. Emiloko.
CelebritiesRe: Skit Maker Shank Buys Brand-new Mercedes Amg Gle 63 S Coupe Worth Over $100k by Ironfaceman(m): 6:04pm On Jul 31, 2025
Teacher no teach me nonsense. Fela comes to mind




KayCee92:
You mean bear the "brunt"
CelebritiesRe: Skit Maker Shank Buys Brand-new Mercedes Amg Gle 63 S Coupe Worth Over $100k by Ironfaceman(m): 6:03pm On Jul 31, 2025
Skit wey we do we no see the money. E be like say na the new format be dis grin


OlaMiki:
leave them let them be deceiving themselves , proceed of crime being launder under the disguise of social media /skit maker
PoliticsRe: Adewale Adeniyi: Tinubu Extends Tenure Of Customs Comptroller-General by Ironfaceman(m): 1:21pm On Jul 31, 2025
Buhari did the same do I guess is a tribal thing. But how will tribalism favor us.
CelebritiesRe: How Naira Marley Surprised Me On My Birthday – Angela Okorie by Ironfaceman(m): 11:26am On Jul 31, 2025
So if I arrest you today and charge you to court can you defend your claim.





cjfavour:
You’re deceiving and lying to yourself. We all knows the truth about the guy so stop all these.
CelebritiesRe: How Naira Marley Surprised Me On My Birthday – Angela Okorie by Ironfaceman(m): 8:27am On Jul 31, 2025
Naira Marley is a case of paying for goods you didn't order. Because of his song people ascribe all manner of nonsense to him.

Forgetting that it's show biz.
This life may we not carry the load that is not ours.
PoliticsRe: Comment On Flood In Adamawa: Fintiri Replies Atiku by Ironfaceman(m): 9:50pm On Jul 30, 2025
grin grin grin. You funny oh. The Meat weh aboki go don chop finish.






Goodlady:
Make them share theeat that hippopotamus 🦛 wey flood carry reach every state. It be like say it sweet.
PoliticsRe: Peter Obi Denies Joining PDP by Ironfaceman(m): 7:29pm On Jul 30, 2025
This can only be the work of miscreants trying to heat up the cyber space.


ADC Ti take over.
PoliticsRe: Tinubu Will Lose 2027 Polls Before 12 Noon On Election Day - Ex-Rep Kazuare by Ironfaceman(m): 7:21pm On Jul 30, 2025
Insha Allah. This is good news. To hear and see this evil regime gone forever.
CelebritiesRe: Two Tiktokers Remanded For Accusing Mohbad’s Widow, Wunmi Of Murder by Ironfaceman(m): 7:57am On Jul 30, 2025
Very good false accusation is still an offence. No they will have to prove their nonsense theory.
PoliticsRe: Eti-Osa LGA Changes Some Street Names In Lagos by Ironfaceman(m): 11:29pm On Jul 29, 2025
Not only pepper farm, what about. Spanish lily.

Old man I see you're lost in denial. People like you could have been emancipated mentally if only you took your history lessons seriously but instead you relied on the words of village drunks who can not read or write.

Read about the great Benin empire and know the exploits of the oba of Esigie and how his military garrison conquered yorubas even unto dahomey.

Then you'll know where I come from


















Konquest:
STOP the disinformation you're spewing with confidence young man! A lot of you read too much disinformation from Wikipedia which is susceptible to vandalisms, BUT actual history remains. This is NOT to say that there is no historical links between Benin Kingdom and Yorubaland (Ife, Eko or Lagos Island, etc). Till date, the Yoruba folks call the Island "Eko" in private or public convos and the media reports NOT Lagos. A person can be in Ikeja or Ibeju-Lekki and say to another person in the Yoruba language that he is going to Eko which simply means Lagos Island. In addition, "Ipinle Eko" simply means "Lagos State."

"Eko" is just the shortened form of "Ereko" or pepper farm because the Island was used as a pepper farm centuries back by the descendants of Olofin Ogunfunminire a Prince of Ife who migrated from Ife and was the first to settle on Iddo Island extending to Eko or Lagos Island. The current White Cap Chief of Lagos Island are the direct landowners and direct descendants of Olofin Ogunfunminire (through his biological sons) an Awori man. The Aworis are spread directly across 17 LGAs out of the 20 LGAs of Lagos State right into Ogun State and are a major subgroup of the Yoruba people whose Yorubaland extends from Nigeria to Benin Republic and the Atakpame region of Togo. The Ijebus ancestrally own 3 LGAs in Lagos State namely Epe, Ikorodu, and Ibeju-Lekki with Ajah also being of Ijebu descent and the Ijebus who are ALSO a major subgroup of the Yoruba folks extend from Lagos State right into Ijebuland in Ogun State from where they were originally carved out from to create Lagos State on May 27, 1967 alongside 11 other new states by General Yakubu Gowon's military regime based on the original recommendations of the Ijaw nationalist leader, Chief Harold Dappa-Biriye from Bonny Island and the Rivers leaders of thought according to a 1998 interview Dappa-Biriye granted to Guardian newspaper.

Therefore NOBODY on Eko (Lagos Island) knows it as a Bini word. The word is purely of Yoruba origin and I know this because I have links to Lagos Island through my maternal lineage. Period.

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